Stephen E. Strup
University of Kentucky
91 Papers
585 Citations
Stephen E. Strup is an academic researcher from University of Kentucky. The author has contributed to research in topics: Medicine & Prostate cancer. The author has an hindex of 27, co-authored 86 publications. Previous affiliations of Stephen E. Strup include Veterans Health Administration & Thomas Jefferson University.
Chat about Author
Papers
Retroperitoneal laparoscopic cryoablation of small renal tumors: intermediate results.
TL;DR: Laroscopic renal cryoablation appears to be an effective tool for ablation of small renal lesions in patients with significant comorbidities with up to 3 years of follow-up.
122
Hand-assisted laparoscopic partial nephrectomy.
TL;DR: This work describes the operative technique and the available results of hand-assisted laparoscopic partial nephrectomy for resection of the mass with negative margins and control of bleeding in selected renal masses.
94
Association of Clinical and Radiographic Features with Perinephric “Sticky” Fat
TL;DR: Despite the small sample size, multiple possible factors associated with perinephric sticky fat were identified and may provide guidance for future investigation of this phenomenon.
71
Durable efficacy of early postoperative radiation therapy for high-risk pT3N0 prostate cancer: the importance of radiation dose
Richard K. Valicenti,Leonard G. Gomella,Mohammed Ismail,S. Grant Mulholland,Stephen E. Strup,Robert O. Petersen,Benjamin W. Corn,J.D Lu,J.D Lu +8 more
TL;DR: The data suggest that RT doses of 64.8 Gy or more appear superior to prevent future biochemical failures in patients with high-risk pT3N0 prostate cancer and a prospective randomized study evaluating a postoperative RT dose response is warranted.
70
Loss of FHIT expression in transitional cell carcinoma of the urinary bladder.
Raffaele Baffa,Leonard G. Gomella,Andrea Vecchione,Pierfrancesco Bassi,Koshi Mimori,John Sedor,Coleen M. Calviello,Marina Paola Gardiman,Corrado Minimo,Stephen E. Strup,Peter McCue,Albert J. Kovatich,Francesco Pagano,Kay Huebner,Carlo M. Croce +14 more
TL;DR: Results suggested that loss of Fhit expression may be as important in the development of bladder cancer as it is for other neoplasms caused by environmental carcinogens.