Mina L Xu
@MinaXu7
Physician, Professor of Pathology at Yale University School of Medicine, Director of Hematopathology, (tweets/retweets are not medical advice)
ID:709901632775925762
16-03-2016 00:38:33
323 Tweets
933 Followers
380 Following
Thrilled to announce I've been selected as the Tom and Joan Steitz RNA Fellow 2024! Had an incredible time celebrating RNA science here Yale Center for RNA Science and Medicine and learn from pylelab Thank you for all your tremendous supports Rong Fan Mina L Xu and Prof. Jun Lu!
medicine.yale.edu/rnacenter/joan…
An evening session at #USCAP2024 on Tuesday from 7:10-7:30 PM features Mina L Xu, Professor of #Pathology Yale School of Medicine, presenting on, “Diagnostic Challenges in Hematopathology.” Dr. Xu is our Director of #Hematopathology . USCAP
Really looking forward to visiting Yale Cancer Center/Yale Pathology and connecting with Mina L Xu, Rong Fan and many other new colleagues!
T cell lymphoma mutations power adoptive T cell therapies! Excited to see this published! A true collaboration with friend and colleague @koleroybal and our students @jay__daniels and #julie_garcia .
nature.com/articles/s4158…
.Mina L Xu and Yale School of Medicine student, Samuel Liburd, present innovative prediction modeling of CAR T Cell Therapy for Diffuse Large B-Cell #Lymphoma at #ASH23 . Smilow Cancer Hospital Yale Pathology Yale New Haven Hosp YaleHematology
Join us starting at 5:30pm PST/8:30pm EST in Halls
G-H, as 19 of our experts in #hematology present during today's Poster Session at #ASH23 Smilow Cancer Hospital YaleHematology Mina L Xu Ramzi Hamouche John Vaughn, MD, MS Noffar Bar Satoko Ito, MD PhD Scott Huntington Jessica M. Stempel Franz Ketzer Christina Waldron
Our manuscript has been accepted at AJPA The American Journal of Pathology.
We were surprised that a marker primarily associated with aggressive B-cell lymphomas (PLK1) is also expressed in the LP-cells (NLPHD).
sciencedirect.com/science/articl…
Our findings are a combined effort of 8 academic institutions. Mina L Xu Girish Venkataraman Kedar Inamdar John Reneau Lymphoma Papers Jaya Balakrishna MD Nathanael Bailey Vidae UIC Pathology American Society for Investigative Pathology The American Journal of Pathology
Did you ever wonder why our marrow is located inside of our *bones*, #MedTwitter ? There’s no a priori anatomical reason it should be sited there. Blood cells could form in our spleens & livers, as they do during our fetal lives; or elsewhere, as in some animals. Let’s discuss! /1