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Nova · Professor Researcher · re-ranking top 20…
Emma E. Furth

Emma E. Furth

Verified

University of Pennsylvania · Rehabilitation Medicine

Active 1978–2024

h-index72
Citations24.7k
Papers463158 last 5y
Funding$26k
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Research topics

  • Biology
  • Genetics
  • Cancer research
  • Microbiology
  • Cell biology
  • Computational biology
  • Ecology
  • Internal medicine
  • Evolutionary biology
  • Biochemistry
  • Medicine
  • Immunology
  • Radiology
  • Oncology
  • Chemistry

Selected publications

  • Niche-DE: niche-differential gene expression analysis in spatial transcriptomics data identifies context-dependent cell-cell interactions

    Genome biology · 2024 · 48 citations

    • Biology
    • Computational biology
    • Evolutionary biology

    Existing methods for analysis of spatial transcriptomic data focus on delineating the global gene expression variations of cell types across the tissue, rather than local gene expression changes driven by cell-cell interactions. We propose a new statistical procedure called niche-differential expression (niche-DE) analysis that identifies cell-type-specific niche-associated genes, which are differentially expressed within a specific cell type in the context of specific spatial niches. We further develop niche-LR, a method to reveal ligand-receptor signaling mechanisms that underlie niche-differential gene expression patterns. Niche-DE and niche-LR are applicable to low-resolution spot-based spatial transcriptomics data and data that is single-cell or subcellular in resolution.

  • Stiff matrix induces exosome secretion to promote tumour growth

    Nature Cell Biology · 2023 · 219 citations

    • Cell biology
    • Chemistry
    • Biology
  • Enterococci enhance Clostridioides difficile pathogenesis

    Nature · 2022 · 216 citations

    • Microbiology
    • Biology
    • Immunology
  • Variability in biopsy quality informs translational research applications in hepatocellular carcinoma

    Scientific Reports · 2021 · 11 citations

    • Medicine
    • Internal medicine
    • Radiology

    In the era of precision medicine, biopsies are playing an increasingly central role in cancer research and treatment paradigms; however, patient outcomes and analyses of biopsy quality, as well as impact on downstream clinical and research applications, remain underreported. Herein, we report biopsy safety and quality outcomes for percutaneous core biopsies of hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) performed as part of a prospective clinical trial. Patients with a clinical diagnosis of HCC were enrolled in a prospective cohort study for the genetic, proteomic, and metabolomic profiling of HCC at two academic medical centers from April 2016 to July 2020. Under image guidance, 18G core biopsies were obtained using coaxial technique at the time of locoregional therapy. The primary outcome was biopsy quality, defined as tumor fraction in the core biopsy. 56 HCC lesions from 50 patients underwent 60 biopsy events with a median of 8 core biopsies per procedure (interquartile range, IQR, 7-10). Malignancy was identified in 45/56 (80.4%, 4 without pathology) biopsy events, including HCC (40/56, 71.4%) and cholangiocarcinoma (CCA) or combined HCC-CCA (5/56, 8.9%). Biopsy quality was highly variable with a median of 40% tumor in each biopsy core (IQR 10-75). Only 43/56 (76.8%) and 23/56 (41.1%) samples met quality thresholds for genomic or metabolomic/proteomic profiling, respectively, requiring expansion of the clinical trial. Overall and major complication rates were 5/60 (8.3%) and 3/60 (5.0%), respectively. Despite uniform biopsy protocol, biopsy quality varied widely with up to 59% of samples to be inadequate for intended purpose. This finding has important consequences for clinical trial design and highlights the need for quality control prior to applications in which the presence of benign cell types may substantially alter findings.

Recent grants

Frequent coauthors

  • Robert H. Vonderheide

    99 shared
  • Franz Fogt

    68 shared
  • Katelyn T. Byrne

    66 shared
  • Alexander O. Vortmeyer

    Neurological Surgery

    65 shared
  • M. Sanders

    University of Amsterdam

    64 shared
  • Christopher J. Hartmann

    United States Army Medical Research Institute of Infectious Diseases

    64 shared
  • Julius Deren

    64 shared
  • Robert D. Odze

    64 shared
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