0 used to describe a time near the end of an organization's or product's development:
The company has 157 drugs in development, including eight in late-stage development.
The firm is looking for younger, riskier start-up companies instead of its traditional late-stage investments.
Very few studies, however, have addressed the existential concerns of families of late-stage dementia patients.
The late-stage garden, using the abstract emotion of an infant or young child, provides peace, safety, nurture and security.
The author was consulted by a married woman with late-stage cancer who was bemoaning the fact that her husband 'cannot boil an egg'.
On the use of changes in dihedral angle to decode late-stage textural evolution in cumulates.
While a worthwhile goal, it is often impossible to tease apart the etiology of multiple symptoms in late-stage cancer.
In advanced late-stage disease, drug treatment often becomes ineffective and associated with increasing adverse effects.
In each of the chapters, significant attention is paid to both early- and late-stage diagenesis, processes that are often largely overlooked by other mainstream texts.
However, an important pure shear component or late-stage pure-shear regime, unambiguously indicated by quartz c-axis fabrics, has often obscured the sense of shear.