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Mayo Clinic Research Advances Diagnostics to Lead COVID-19 Pandemic Response - Insights

When COVID-19 spread across the U.S. in early March, Mayo Clinic’s Advanced Diagnostic Laboratory urgently responded.

Research Archives - Page 26 of 33 - Insights

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Oncology - Insights

Learn more about our pediatric oncology testing, which was carefully developed by a team of experts to provide efficient, actionable answers.

Zooming in on Cancer Suspects - Insights

Genetic testing is like security-camera video footage of a break-in, providing essential clues to identify a culprit. In certain cancers, the "culprit" might be a rearrangement in a person's DNA, which genomic testing can capture. Mayo...

Gynecological cancer - Insights

Find out how our gynecological cancer panels evaluate genes with relevance to diagnosing and treating uterine, ovarian, and endometrial cancers.

Myeloid neoplasms - Insights

Learn about our full suite of leukemia testing protocols, including includes flow cytometry, chromosome, FISH, and molecular testing.

Stories - Insights

Beyond the test result Mayo Clinic Laboratories combines the expertise of world-renowned laboratorians and physicians to provide answers for patients’

Solutions for Common Service Recovery Challenges - Insights

Despite our best efforts, customer service failures do happen, but good service recovery tools can turn failures into positive customer experiences.

Mass spectrometry-based assay detects viral antigens directly from clinical specimens - Insights

In a newly published study, a team from Mayo Clinic’s Advanced Diagnostics Laboratory has developed a mass spectrometry-based assay that’s able to detect COVID-19 (SARS-CoV-2) pathogens from human proteins with, remarkably, 98% sensitivity...

Rare Lyme disease-causing bacteria spotted on routine blood films - Insights

It’s been understood for some time that an infection of B. mayonii, a rare species of bacterium, results in high levels of spirochetes in the peripheral blood. But actually being able to visualize them on a routine peripheral blood smear...