Martin S. Karpeh
Stony Brook University
87 Papers
963 Citations
Martin S. Karpeh is an academic researcher from Stony Brook University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Cancer & Medicine. The author has an hindex of 45, co-authored 84 publications. Previous affiliations of Martin S. Karpeh include Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center & Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center.
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Papers
Examination of Intersectionality and the Pipeline for Black Academic Surgeons.
Ajaratu Keshinro,Paris D. Butler,Oluwadamilola M. Fayanju,Dineo Khabele,Erika A. Newman,Wendy R. Greene,Akuezunkpa Ude Welcome,Kathie-Ann Joseph,Anthony Stallion,Leah M. Backhus,Spiros G. Frangos,Charles DiMaggio,Russell S. Berman,Rian M. Hasson,Luz Rodriguez,Steven C. Stain,Marko Bukur,Michael G. Klein,Ronda Henry-Tillman,Linda Barry,Tawakalitu O. Oseni,Colin A. Martin,Crystal Johnson-Mann,Randi N. Smith,Martin S. Karpeh,Cassandra White,Patricia L. Turner,Carla M. Pugh,Andrea Hayes-Jordan,Cherisse Berry +29 more
TL;DR: Findings of this study show that the underrepresentation of Black physicians at every stage in surgical training pipeline persists, and Black men are especially affected.
Peritoneal lavage cytology in gastric cancer: an independent predictor of outcome
TL;DR: Patients with positive lavage cytology are stage IV, even in the absence of macroscopic peritoneal disease, which is a rapid technique for identifying the subset of M0 patients who are unlikely to benefit from resection alone.
Port site metastasis after diagnostic laparoscopy for upper gastrointestinal tract malignancies: an uncommon entity.
Margo Shoup,Murray F. Brennan,Martin S. Karpeh,Susan M Gillern,Ross L. McMahon,Kevin C. Conlon +5 more
TL;DR: Port site implantation after diagnostic laparoscopy for upper GI malignancy is uncommon, does not seem to be different from open incision site recurrence, and occurs in the setting of advanced disease.
Proximal Gastric Cancers Resected via a Transabdominal-Only Approach: Results and Comparisons to Distal Adenocarcinoma of the Stomach
TL;DR: It appears that PGCs are inherently more aggressive than are DGCs, and the site of the primary tumor appears to affect outcome, with a trend toward a worse outcome as the tumor moves proximally.
A Case-Series Study of p53 Nuclear Overexpression in Early-Stage Stomach Cancer
Zuo-Feng Zhang,Martin S. Karpeh,Gregory Lauwers,Arturo M. Marrero,Pollack D,Carlos Cordon-Cardo,Colin B. Begg +6 more
TL;DR: There is no such study correlating risk factors with p53-transformed phenotypes in gastric cancer, and identification of pS3 nuclear accumulation by IHC assays has been reported to correlate well with TP53 mutations as determined by DNA sequencing analysis in a variety of tumors.