152 results on '"Rudolf Schwarz"'
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2. Strahlentherapie nichtresektabler Knochentumoren
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Stephanie E. Combs, Katharina Sommer, and Rudolf Schwarz
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- 2022
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3. Zero incidence of factor VIII inhibitors and successful haemostatic response in previously factor VIII‐treated patients with haemophilia A switching to turoctocog alfa in a noninterventional study
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Roger E. G. Schutgens, Annie Borel Derlon, Sohan Dey, Barbara Faganel Kotnik, Olga Katsarou, Carmen Escuriola Ettingshausen, Irina Matytsina, Paula F. Ypma, and Rudolf Schwarz
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Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Haemophilia A ,Hemophilia A ,Haemophilia ,Bethesda unit ,Hemostatics ,hemic and lymphatic diseases ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,Clinical endpoint ,Humans ,Prospective Studies ,Dosing ,Genetics (clinical) ,Factor VIII ,Drug Substitution ,business.industry ,Incidence ,Incidence (epidemiology) ,Hematology ,General Medicine ,Turoctocog alfa ,medicine.disease ,Confidence interval ,business - Abstract
Introduction Turoctocog alfa (NovoEight® ) is a B-domain-truncated recombinant factor VIII (FVIII) approved for patients with haemophilia A. Aim To investigate the long-term safety and efficacy of turoctocog alfa in routine clinical practice. Methods Guardian 5 was a prospective, multinational, non-interventional, post-authorisation safety study. Male previously treated patients (> 150 exposure days [EDs]) of any age with severe/moderately severe haemophilia A (FVIII ≤ 2%) and a negative inhibitor test prior to first dosing (independent of FVIII-inhibitor history) were included to receive prophylaxis or on-demand treatment. The primary endpoint was the proportion of patients developing FVIII inhibitors (≥.6 Bethesda Units [BU]) after baseline visit, measured as per routine practice of each study site during clinic visits. Secondary endpoints included haemostatic effect, annualised bleeding rate (ABR), and adverse reactions assessment. The study concluded when 50 patients reached 100 EDs/patient minimum. Results Seventy patients were screened and 68 exposed to turoctocog alfa; 63 (92.6%) were on prophylaxis and five received on-demand treatment. Six (8.8%) patients reported a history of positive inhibitors. During the study, patients were exposed to turoctocog alfa for a mean (standard deviation) of 131.9 (99.0) days/patient. Fifty-five of 58 patients who completed the study were tested for FVIII inhibitors; no positive tests were reported. Overall success rate of turoctocog alfa for treatment of bleeds was 87.3%. Among patients receiving prophylaxis, median (range) ABR was 1.97 (.0-25.5) bleeds/year; estimated ABR (negative binomial model) was 3.65 (95% confidence interval: 2.53-5.25). Conclusion Turoctocog alfa was safe and efficacious for haemophilia A treatment in routine clinical practice.
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- 2021
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4. Types of deviation and review criteria in pretreatment central quality control of tumor bed boost in medulloblastoma—an analysis of the German Radiotherapy Quality Control Panel in the SIOP PNET5 MB trial
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Beate Timmermann, Christiane Matuschek, Annett Braesigk, Silke Frick, Stefan Rutkowski, Ralf Kitzing, Stefan Dietzsch, Kristin Gurtner, Julia Remmele, Denise Obrecht, Nicolas U. Gerber, Rolf-Dieter Kortmann, Karin Dieckmann, Tina Schlender, Montserrat Pazos, Martin Benesch, V. Lewitzki, Damien C. Weber, Clemens Seidel, Karolina Jablonska, Dirk Geismar, Martin Mynarek, Semi Harrabi, Albrecht Glück, Rudolf Schwarz, University of Zurich, and Dietzsch, Stefan
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Quality Control ,medicine.medical_specialty ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Medizin ,Planning target volume ,610 Medicine & health ,Protocol Deviation ,Germany ,2741 Radiology, Nuclear Medicine and Imaging ,Humans ,Medicine ,Radiology, Nuclear Medicine and imaging ,Tumor bed ,Medical physics ,Cerebellar Neoplasms ,Protocol (science) ,Medulloblastoma ,business.industry ,Radiotherapy Planning, Computer-Assisted ,medicine.disease ,Radiation therapy ,Clinical trial ,Oncology ,10036 Medical Clinic ,Radiation Oncology ,2730 Oncology ,business ,Quality assurance - Abstract
Purpose In Germany, Austria, and Switzerland, pretreatment radiotherapy quality control (RT-QC) for tumor bed boost (TB) in non-metastatic medulloblastoma (MB) was not mandatory but was recommended for patients enrolled in the SIOP PNET5 MB trial between 2014 and 2018. This individual case review (ICR) analysis aimed to evaluate types of deviations in the initial plan proposals and develop uniform review criteria for TB boost. Patients and methods A total of 78 patients were registered in this trial, of whom a subgroup of 65 patients were available for evaluation of the TB treatment plans. Dose uniformity was evaluated according to the definitions of the protocol. Additional RT-QC criteria for standardized review of target contours were elaborated and data evaluated accordingly. Results Of 65 initial TB plan proposals, 27 (41.5%) revealed deviations of target volume delineation. Deviations according to the dose uniformity criteria were present in 14 (21.5%) TB plans. In 25 (38.5%) cases a modification of the RT plan was recommended. Rejection of the TB plans was rather related to unacceptable target volume delineation than to insufficient dose uniformity. Conclusion In this analysis of pretreatment RT-QC, protocol deviations were present in a high proportion of initial TB plan proposals. These findings emphasize the importance of pretreatment RT-QC in clinical trials for MB. Based on these data, a proposal for RT-QC criteria for tumor bed boost in non-metastatic MB was developed.
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- 2021
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5. Impact of Adherence to Multidisciplinary Recommendations for Adjuvant Treatment in Radical Prostatectomy Patients With High Risk of Recurrence
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Markus Graefen, Sophie Knipper, Rudolf Schwarz, Hartwig Huland, Guido Sauter, Thomas Steuber, Tobias Maurer, Lars Budäus, Hans Heinzer, Derya Tilki, Katharina Boehm, Philipp Mandel, and Maryam Sadat-Khonsari
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Male ,Biochemical recurrence ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Urology ,medicine.medical_treatment ,030232 urology & nephrology ,Kaplan-Meier Estimate ,Disease-Free Survival ,03 medical and health sciences ,Prostate cancer ,0302 clinical medicine ,Risk Factors ,Multidisciplinary approach ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,Humans ,Lymph node ,Aged ,Proportional Hazards Models ,Prostatectomy ,Salvage Therapy ,Adjuvant radiotherapy ,Proportional hazards model ,business.industry ,Prostate ,Prostatic Neoplasms ,Middle Aged ,Prostate-Specific Antigen ,medicine.disease ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Oncology ,030220 oncology & carcinogenesis ,Patient Compliance ,Kallikreins ,Radiotherapy, Adjuvant ,Neoplasm Recurrence, Local ,business ,Adjuvant ,Follow-Up Studies - Abstract
The purpose of this study was to investigate adherence to recommended adjuvant radiotherapy (aRT) in radical prostatectomy (RP) patients with adverse pathologic features and to analyse the outcome of patients who followed or denied this recommendation.We included 1140 consecutive RP patients (2006-2015) with non-organ confined (pT3) prostate cancer and either positive surgical margins (R1) and/or lymph node involvement (pN1) and non-detectable postoperative prostate-specific antigen who received multidisciplinary aRT recommendations. Patients were stratified into adherence versus non-adherence to recommendations. Additionally, subgroups within pathologic criteria (pT3R1N0, pT3R0N1, pT3R1N1) were analyzed. Kaplan-Meier, as well as multivariable Cox regression analyses were used to assess biochemical recurrence (BCR)-free survival, metastasis-free survival, cancer-specific survival, and overall survival.Overall, 508 (44.6%) patients were non-adherent. Of those, 273 (53.6%) did not receive any RT, and 235 (46.4%) received salvage RT. At 8 years, BCR-free survival was 57.7 versus 20.1%, metastasis-free survival was 76.5 versus 75.4%, cancer-specific survival was 91.7 versus 87.4%, and overall survival was 80.4 versus 75.8% in adherent versus non-adherent patients, respectively (P .001). In multivariable Cox regression predicting BCR, metastatic progression, cancer-specific mortality, and overall mortality, non-adherence to aRT recommendation represented an independent predictor (hazard ratio [HR], 3.8; 95% confidence interval [CI], 3.1-4.5; HR, 1.6; 95% CI, 1.2-2.2; HR, 2.8; 95% CI, 1.5-5.3; and HR, 1.8; 95% CI, 1.2-2.8, respectively).Only about 55% of patients followed our multidisciplinary recommendations. Adherent patients were significantly less likely to experience BCR, metastatic progression, cancer-specific mortality, and overall mortality. Thus, patients with high risk of recurrence may be advised about the possibility of improved oncologic outcomes in case of adherence to aRT recommendations.
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- 2020
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6. MEDB-50. Assessment of cellular radiosensitivity and DNA repair in medulloblastoma cell lines and patient-derivded xenograft slice cultures
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Simon Feyerabend, Thorsten Rieckmann, Britta Riepen, Agnes Oetting, Sabrina Christiansen, Melanie Schoof, Annika Hardt, Sabrina Köcher, Julia Neumann, Rudolf Schwarz, Norman Mack, Benjamin Schwalm, Aniello Federico, Till Milde, Marcel Kool, Ulrich Schüller, Stefan Rutkowski, Cordula Petersen, Kai Rothkamm, Martin Mynarek, and Nina Struve
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Cancer Research ,Oncology ,Neurology (clinical) - Abstract
Medulloblastoma (WHO grade 4) is the most common malignant brain tumor of childhood. Despite the high importance of radiotherapy for disease control, the mechanisms underlying response and resistance to radiotherapy are incompletely understood. Therefore, we assessed the radiosensitivity and DNA repair capacity of medulloblastoma cell lines in-vitro and of patient-derived xenograft (PDX) models ex-vivo. Cell survival after irradiation of seven medulloblastoma cell lines displaying different subgroups was assessed via colony formation assay (DAOY, UW228, UW473, SJMM4, ONS-76, HDMB-03, D283). The ONS-76 and the mouse SJMM4 cell line were the most radioresistant strains (surviving fraction after 6 Gy (SF6): 0.33 and 0.31, respectively), followed by UW473, UW 228 and DAOY cells (SF6 0.16-0.21). The non-WNT/non-SHH-activated cell lines HDMB-03 and D283 cells demonstrated profoundly higher cellular radiosensitivity (SF6
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- 2022
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7. Construir una iglesia (Vom Bau der Kirche) SCHWARZ, Rudolf
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Esteban Fernández-Cobián and Rudolf Schwarz
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Este libro se escribió en la hora más oscura de Alemania, pero por primera vez arroja luz sobre la cuestión de la construcción de iglesias e ilumina todo el problema de la arquitectura en sí mismo. Rudolf Schwarz, el gran constructor de iglesias alemán, es uno de los pensadores más profundos de nuestro tiempo. Su libro, a pesar de su claridad, no es fácil de leer, pero quien se tome la molestia de estudiarlo con detenimiento obtendrá una visión real de los problemas discutidos
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- 2021
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8. Management of vertebral radiotherapy dose in paediatric patients with cancer: consensus recommendations from the SIOPE radiotherapy working group
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Geert O. Janssens, Beate Timmermann, Lorenza Gandola, Yasmin Lassen-Ramshad, Henriette Magelssen, Enrica Seravalli, Brian V. Balgobind, Raquel Davila Fajardo, Anne Laprie, Gillian A Whitfield, Patrick Melchior, Rudolf Schwarz, Laetitia Padovani, Barbora Ondrová, Klaus Seiersen, Monica Ramos Albiac, Stefan Dietzsch, Thankamma Ajithkumar, Rolf D. Kortmann, Karin Dieckmann, Tom Boterberg, Delphine Dumont Lecomte, Christian Carrie, Nicola Thorp, Henry Mandeville, Giovanni Scarzello, Claire Alapetite, Stéphanie Bolle, Bianca A.W. Hoeben, Alison Cameron, Marry M. van den Heuvel-Eibrink, Barbara Rombi, Hoeben B.A., Carrie C., Timmermann B., Mandeville H.C., Gandola L., Dieckmann K., Ramos Albiac M., Magelssen H., Lassen-Ramshad Y., Ondrova B., Ajithkumar T., Alapetite C., Balgobind B.V., Bolle S., Cameron A.L., Davila Fajardo R., Dietzsch S., Dumont Lecomte D., van den Heuvel-Eibrink M.M., Kortmann R.D., Laprie A., Melchior P., Padovani L., Rombi B., Scarzello G., Schwarz R., Seiersen K., Seravalli E., Thorp N., Whitfield G.A., Boterberg T., and Janssens G.O.
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Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Lordosis ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Medizin ,Kyphosis ,Review ,Scoliosis ,Pediatrics ,030218 nuclear medicine & medical imaging ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Neoplasms ,Journal Article ,medicine ,Humans ,Radiotherapy dose ,Child ,conformal radiotherapy, primary ossification vertebral body ,Ossification ,business.industry ,Cancer ,Radiotherapy Dosage ,medicine.disease ,Hypoplasia ,Radiation therapy ,Oncology ,Child, Preschool ,030220 oncology & carcinogenesis ,Radiation Oncology ,Female ,Radiology ,Radiotherapy, Conformal ,medicine.symptom ,business ,Rare cancers Radboud Institute for Health Sciences [Radboudumc 9] - Abstract
Item does not contain fulltext Inhomogeneities in radiotherapy dose distributions covering the vertebrae in children can produce long-term spinal problems, including kyphosis, lordosis, scoliosis, and hypoplasia. In the published literature, many often interrelated variables have been reported to affect the extent of potential radiotherapy damage to the spine. Articles published in the 2D and 3D radiotherapy era instructed radiation oncologists to avoid dose inhomogeneity over growing vertebrae. However, in the present era of highly conformal radiotherapy, steep dose gradients over at-risk structures can be generated and thus less harm is caused to patients. In this report, paediatric radiation oncologists from leading centres in 11 European countries have produced recommendations on how to approach dose coverage for target volumes that are adjacent to vertebrae to minimise the risk of long-term spinal problems. Based on available information, it is advised that homogeneous vertebral radiotherapy doses should be delivered in children who have not yet finished the pubertal growth spurt. If dose fall-off within vertebrae cannot be avoided, acceptable dose gradients for different age groups are detailed here. Vertebral delineation should include all primary ossification centres and growth plates, and therefore include at least the vertebral body and arch. For partial spinal radiotherapy, the number of irradiated vertebrae should be restricted as much as achievable, particularly at the thoracic level in young children (
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- 2019
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9. Ewing sarcoma
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Bree R. Eaton, Line Claude, Daniel J. Indelicato, Ralph Vatner, Brian Yeh, Rudolf Schwarz, and Nadia Laack
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Survival Rate ,Oncology ,Pediatrics, Perinatology and Child Health ,Humans ,Bone Neoplasms ,Sarcoma, Ewing ,Hematology ,Child ,Prognosis ,Combined Modality Therapy - Abstract
Ewing sarcoma is a rare tumor that requires complex multidisciplinary management. This report describes the general management and standard radiotherapy guidelines in both North America (Children's Oncology Group) and Europe (International Society of Pediatric Oncology). Standard treatment involves multiagent induction chemotherapy followed by local treatment with surgery, definitive radiation, or a combination of surgery and radiation followed by additional chemotherapy and consolidation local treatment to metastatic sites. The data supporting the role of chemotherapy, surgery, and radiation and specific radiation therapy guidelines are presented.
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- 2021
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10. Head and Neck Cancer Patients Under (Chemo-) Radiotherapy Undergoing NUTritional Intervention: Results From the Prospective Randomized HEADNUT-Trial
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Sophie Brackrock, Cedric Oliver Carl, G. Matnjani, Tessa Lorenz, Eva Culmann, A. Kruell, Laura Magdalena Kutz, J. Abel, Rudolf Schwarz, L. Lehmann, Linda Krause, Cordula Petersen, F. Greinert, A. Loeser, J. von Grundherr, L. Wegert, and M. Sommer
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Cancer Research ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Chemo-radiotherapy ,Radiation ,Side effect ,business.industry ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Head and neck cancer ,medicine.disease ,Radiation therapy ,Malnutrition ,Oncology ,Weight loss ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,Radiology, Nuclear Medicine and imaging ,Mass index ,medicine.symptom ,business ,Bioelectrical impedance analysis - Abstract
PURPOSE/OBJECTIVE(S) Patients with squamous cell carcinoma of the head and neck (HNSCC) under (chemo-)radiotherapy are at high risk of malnutrition. There are no studies investigating the influence of nutritional status on an altered side effect spectrum and only very few studies examining bioelectric impedance analysis (BIA) and its impact as a prognostic indicator in patients with HNSCC undergoing (chemo-)radiotherapy. Our prospective, randomized, and controlled HEADNUT-trial presented here aimed at preventing increasing malnutrition under radiotherapy or concurrent chemoradiotherapy through specialized and individualized nutritional counseling. Additionally, we investigated whether parameters from BIA were suitable indicators for (threatening) malnutrition and inspected their prognostic effect on (clinical) outcome. MATERIALS/METHODS Between October 2018 and October 2020, 61 patients were randomized into an intervention and control group. Questionnaires (MUST, NRS-2002, and Nutriscore), clinical examinations, laboratory analyses, and BIA were used to assess nutritional status for all patients at the beginning and end of therapy as well as every 2 weeks during therapy. The intervention consisted of an individualized nutritional counseling every 2 weeks during therapy. RESULTS Median baseline BMI for all participants was 23.8 (14.5-37.2) kg/m² and dropped to 22.9 (16.8-33) kg/m² after therapy (P < 0.001). In all patients, median baseline fat-free mass index (FFMI) was 18.1 (14-24.7) kg/m² and decreased to 17.8 (13.4-21.6) kg/m² till the end of therapy (P < 0.001). Compliant patients with a BMI < 22 kg/m² presented with less weight loss in the intervention group compared to the control (P = 0.015, CI: 0.33-2.95). At baseline, MUST was the only screening-test which showed both good sensitivity (86%) and specificity (88%) in detecting malnutrition. Median follow-up was 15 (1-26) months. 2-year overall survival rate was 70% in the control and 79% in the intervention group (log-rank P = 0.79). Pretherapeutic phase angle, posttherapeutic FFMI and albumin level were prognostic indicators for overall survival (log-rank P = 0.002, P = 0.008 and P = 0.016). CONCLUSION Malnutrition negatively impacts patients' outcome under (chemo-)radiotherapy. Baseline phase angle, posttherapeutic FFMI and albumin level are proposed as reliable indicators for overall survival.
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- 2021
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11. MEDB-16. Persistent radiological lesions at the end of primary therapy in childhood medulloblastoma: residual lesion or active residual tumor?
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Lena Schömig, Denise Obrecht, Martin Mynarek, Brigitte Bison, Rudolf Schwarz, Torsten Pietsch, Stefan Rutkowski, and Martin Benesch
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Cancer Research ,Oncology ,Neurology (clinical) - Abstract
BACKGROUND: Magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) of patients with medulloblastoma (MB) often shows persistent residual findings after primary treatment. Criteria for characterizing these lesions and consensus on further therapeutic approaches are not established. MATERIAL AND METHODS: Eighty-four patients ≥4 years with centrally reviewed residual lesions on MRI at the end of primary therapy with initial surgery between 2000 and 2018 were identified. Data were extracted from the German HIT-MED database. RESULTS: Median age at initial diagnosis was 9.3 (4.0-20.8) years. 91.7% were histologically classified as CMB, 7.1% as LC/AMB and 1.2% as DMB. The majority (65.5%) of the evaluated cohort was assigned to molecular subgroup 4, 24.1% to group 3, 6.8% to WNT, 3.4% to SHH. Median follow-up for survivors was 5.96 (1.41-16.67) years. Univariate analysis revealed that patients showing an overall partial response (PR) to primary therapy have a significantly lower risk of progression of residual lesions compared to patients with stable disease (SD) (5-year PFS [PR]: 62.5±7,0; 5-year PFS [SD]: 35.9±12.8; 5-year OS [PR]: 85.6±5.1; 5-year OS [SD]: 54.1±13.7; p=0.02 [PFS], p=0.04 [OS]). Additionally, patients with multiple residual lesions (M+ and R+) were at higher risk of progression (5-year PFS [R+ only]: 72.4±12.0, 5-year PFS [R+/M+]: 22.9±17.9; p=0.02 [PFS]). Further procedures after the end of primary therapy (additional resections, chemotherapy, radiotherapy) did not impact on PFS and OS. These results were confirmed by multivariate Cox regression. For molecular or histological type no significant effect was found, presumably due to small cohort. CONCLUSION: PFS in patients with residual lesions at the end of primary treatment depends on the overall response to primary therapy. Additional procedures do not seem to be superior compared to watch-and-wait strategies. Decisions regarding further therapies should be scrutinized on a case-by-case basis. Further identification of biomarkers is warranted.
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- 2022
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12. MEDB-51. Impact of residual tumor on outcomes in children and adolescents with medulloblastoma in the German HIT-cohort
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Stella Wolgast, Denise Obrecht, Martin Mynarek, Brigitte Bison, Rudolf Schwarz, Torsten Pietsch, Rolf-Dieter Kortmann, Monika Warmuth-Metz, and Stefan Rutkowski
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Cancer Research ,Oncology ,Neurology (clinical) - Abstract
INTRODUCTION: To date, a historical threshold of 1.5cm2 extent of resection (EOR) of the primary tumor is used for risk stratification in pediatric medulloblastoma (MB). METHODS: Data of n=348 patients with MB included into the German HIT-MED studies and registries from 2000-2017 were retrospectively analyzed. Kaplan-Meier statistics and Cox regressions were calculated to determine the influence of EOR, histological and molecular subtype, MYC/N-amplification and presence of metastases at first diagnosis on overall and progression-free survival (OS/PFS). ROC curves were calculated aiming at identifying a new EOR cut-off. RESULTS: Median age at diagnosis was 6.8 [0.1-20.5] years. After initial surgery, residual tumor (R) ≥1.5cm2 was present in 129/348 patients (37%). 57% presented with additional metastases. In most cases, classic histology was found (71%, DMB/MBEN: 20%, LC/AMB: 9%). Molecular subtype was nonWNT/nonSHH in 68% (Group 4: 37%, Group 3: 31%), WNT in 6% and SHH-activated types in 26% of evaluated cases (n=208). MYC/MYCN-amplification was present in 5 and 4%, respectively. 41/348 patients received additional surgery, resulting in 73% GTR (not reported: n=22). EOR had no significant impact on OS/PFS (GTR: 5y-OS/PFS 69.9±3.4/57.6±3.7%, STR: 5y-OS/PFS 71.4±4.1/56.2±4.5%, p=0.6/0.8; Cox: p=0.2/0.4; median follow-up 8.4 [0.1-18.0] years). ROC curves did not identify a significantly improved limit for outcome-relevant EOR cut-off. Analyses confirmed less favorable OS/PFS for patients with metastatic disease (p=0.04/p
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- 2022
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13. PO-1006 Nutritional intervention in head and neck cancer patients undergoing (chemo-)radiotherapy
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F. Greinert, J. Abel, M. Sommer, Anastassia Löser, Rudolf Schwarz, Laura Magdalena Kutz, Linda Krause, Anna Finger, Andreas Krüll, Sophie Brackrock, Cordula Petersen, G. Matnjani, and Cedric Oliver Carl
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Chemo-radiotherapy ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Oncology ,business.industry ,Intervention (counseling) ,Head and neck cancer ,medicine ,Radiology, Nuclear Medicine and imaging ,Hematology ,medicine.disease ,business ,Surgery - Published
- 2021
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14. Head and neck cancer patients under (chemo-)radiotherapy undergoing nutritional intervention: Results from the prospective randomized HEADNUT-trial
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Tessa Lorenz, Anastassia Löser, Gesa Matnjani, Julia von Grundherr, M. Sommer, J. Abel, F. Greinert, Cedric Oliver Carl, Luisa Wegert, Loreen Lehmann, Eva Culmann, Rudolf Schwarz, Andreas Krüll, Laura Magdalena Kutz, Anna Finger, Sophie Brackrock, Cordula Petersen, and Linda Krause
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medicine.medical_specialty ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Nutritional Status ,030218 nuclear medicine & medical imaging ,law.invention ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Randomized controlled trial ,law ,Internal medicine ,Intervention (counseling) ,medicine ,Humans ,Radiology, Nuclear Medicine and imaging ,Prospective Studies ,Chemo-radiotherapy ,business.industry ,Head and neck cancer ,Malnutrition ,Hematology ,medicine.disease ,Clinical trial ,Radiation therapy ,Oncology ,Head and Neck Neoplasms ,030220 oncology & carcinogenesis ,Carcinoma, Squamous Cell ,business ,Bioelectrical impedance analysis - Abstract
Purpose/objective Patients with squamous cell carcinoma of the head and neck undergoing (chemo-)radiotherapy are at high risk of malnutrition. Nevertheless, there is still a lack of prospective, randomized trials investigating the influence of nutritional status on therapy-related toxicity and patients’ outcome. Materials and methods Between October 2018 and October 2020, 61 patients were randomized into an intervention and control group. Questionnaires (MUST, NRS-2002, and Nutriscore), clinical examinations, laboratory analyses, and bioelectrical impedance analysis (BIA) were used to assess nutritional status for all patients at the beginning and end of therapy as well as every 2 weeks during therapy. The intervention consisted of an individualized nutritional counseling every 2 weeks during therapy. Results Median baseline BMI for all participants was 23.8 (14.5–37.2) kg/m2 and dropped to 22.9 (16.8–33) kg/m2 after therapy (p Conclusions Malnutrition negatively impacts patients’ outcome under (chemo-)radiotherapy. Baseline phase angle, posttherapeutic FFMI and albumin level are proposed as reliable indicators for overall survival. This study was registered within the German Clinical Trials Register (DRKS00016862).
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- 2020
15. Proton Beam Therapy for Children With Neuroblastoma: Experiences From the Prospective KiProReg Registry
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Danny, Jazmati, Sarina, Butzer, Barbara, Hero, Dalia, Ahmad Khalil, Julien, Merta, Christian, Bäumer, Gina, Plum, Jörg, Fuchs, Friederike, Koerber, Theresa, Steinmeier, Sarah, Peters, Jerome, Doyen, Theresa, Thole, Matthias, Schmidt, Christoph, Blase, Stephan, Tippelt, Angelika, Eggert, Rudolf, Schwarz, Thorsten, Simon, and Beate, Timmermann
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neuroblastoma ,Oncology ,proton beam therapy (PBT) ,childhood cancer ,radiotherapy—adverse effects ,pediatric radiation oncology ,retroperitoneal tumor ,survival ,Original Research - Abstract
Objective Radiotherapy (RT) is an integral part of the interdisciplinary treatment of patients with high-risk neuroblastoma (NB). With the continuous improvements of outcome, the interest in local treatment strategies that reduce treatment-related side effects while achieving optimal oncological results is growing. Proton beam therapy (PBT) represents a promising alternative to conventional photon irradiation with regard to the reduction of treatment burden. Method Retrospective analysis of children with high or intermediate risk NB receiving PBT of the primary tumor site during first-line therapy between 2015 and 2020 was performed. Data from the prospective in-house registry Standard Protonentherapie WPE – Kinder- (KiProReg) with respect to tumor control and treatment toxicity were analyzed. Adverse events were classified according to CTCAE Version 4 (V4.0) before, during, and after PBT. Results In total, 44 patients (24 male, 20 female) with high (n = 39) or intermediate risk NB (n = 5) were included in the analysis. Median age was 3.4 years (range, 1.4–9.9 years). PBT doses ranged from 21.0 to 39.6 Gray (Gy) (median 36.0 Gy). Five patients received PBT to the MIBG-avid residual at the primary tumor site at time of PBT according to the NB-2004 protocol. In 39 patients radiation was given to the pre-operative tumor bed with or without an additional boost in case of residual tumor. After a median follow-up (FU) of 27.6 months, eight patients developed progression, either local recurrence (n = 1) or distant metastases (n = 7). Four patients died due to tumor progression. At three years, the estimated local control, distant metastatic free survival, progression free survival, and overall survival was 97.7, 84.1, 81.8, and 90.9%, respectively. During radiation, seven patients experienced higher-grade (CTCAE ≥ °3) hematologic toxicity. No other higher grade acute toxicity occurred. After PBT, one patient developed transient myelitis while receiving immunotherapy. No higher grade long-term toxicity was observed up to date. Conclusion PBT was a well tolerated and effective local treatment in children with high and intermediate risk NB. The role of RT in an intensive multidisciplinary treatment regimen remains to be studied in the future in order to better define timing, doses, target volumes, and general need for RT in a particularly sensitive cohort of patients.
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- 2020
16. The Consultation in the Process of Distance Education
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Rudolf Schwarz
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Medical education ,Process (engineering) ,Computer science ,Distance education - Published
- 2020
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17. Therapie bei isoliertem PSA-Anstieg
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Felix Preisser, Markus Graefen, Hartwig Huland, Rudolf Schwarz, Patrick J. Bastian, Thorsten Schlomm, and Jens Hansen
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business.industry ,Medicine ,business - Published
- 2020
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18. Rivaroxaban compared with standard anticoagulants for the treatment of acute venous thromboembolism in children: a randomised, controlled, phase 3 trial
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Christoph Male, Anthonie W A Lensing, Joseph S Palumbo, Riten Kumar, Ildar Nurmeev, Kerry Hege, Damien Bonnet, Philip Connor, Hélène L Hooimeijer, Marcela Torres, Anthony K C Chan, Gili Kenet, Susanne Holzhauer, Amparo Santamaría, Pascal Amedro, Elizabeth Chalmers, Paolo Simioni, Rukhmi V Bhat, Donald L Yee, Olga Lvova, Jan Beyer-Westendorf, Tina T Biss, Ida Martinelli, Paola Saracco, Marjolein Peters, Krisztián Kállay, Cynthia A Gauger, M Patricia Massicotte, Guy Young, Akos F Pap, Madhurima Majumder, William T Smith, Jürgen F Heubach, Scott D Berkowitz, Kirstin Thelen, Dagmar Kubitza, Mark Crowther, Martin H Prins, Paul Monagle, Angelo C. Molinari, Ulrike Nowak Göttl, Juan Chain, Jeremy Robertson, Katharina Thom, Werner Streif, Rudolf Schwarz, Klaus Schmitt, Gernot Grangl, An Van Damme, Philip Maes, Veerle Labarque, Antonio Petrilli, Sandra Loggeto, Estela Azeka, Leonardo Brandao, Doan Le, Christine Sabapathy, Paola Giordano, Runhui Wu, Jie Ding, Wenyan Huang, Jianhua Mao, Päivi Lähteenmäki, Stephane Decramer, Toralf Bernig, Martin Chada, Godfrey Chan, Krisztian Kally, Beatrice Nolan, Shoshana Revel-Vilk, Hannah Tamary, Carina Levin, Daniela Tormene, Maria Abbattista, Andrea Artoni, Takanari Ikeyama, Ryo Inuzuka, Satoshi Yasukochi, Michelle Morales Soto, Karina A Solis Labastida, Monique H Suijker, Marike Bartels, Rienk Y Tamminga, C Heleen Van Ommen, D. Maroeska Te Loo, Rui Anjos, Lyudmila Zubarovskaya, Natalia Popova, Elena Samochatova, Margarita Belogurova, Pavel Svirin, Tatiana Shutova, Vladimir Lebedev, Olga Barbarash, Pei L Koh, Joyce C Mei, Ludmila Podracka, Ruben Berrueco, Maria F Fernandez, Tony Frisk, Sebastian Grunt, Johannes Rischewski, Manuela Albisetti-Pedroni, Ali Antmen, Huseyin Tokgoz, Zeynep Karakas, Jayashree Motwani, Michael Williams, John Grainger, Jeanette Payne, Mike Richards, Susan Baird, Neha Bhatnagar, Angela Aramburo, Shelley Crary, Tung Wynn, Shannon Carpenter, Sanjay Ahuja, Neil Goldenberg, Gary Woods, Kamar Godder, Ajovi Scott-Emuakpor, Gavin Roach, Leslie Raffini, Nirmish Shah, Sanjay Shah, Courtney Thornburg, Ayesha Zia, Roger Berkow, Medical University of Vienna, Vienna, Austria, CMR-M3C, Université Paris Descartes - Paris 5 (UPD5)-CHU Necker - Enfants Malades [AP-HP], Physiologie & médecine expérimentale du Cœur et des Muscles [U 1046] (PhyMedExp), Institut National de la Santé et de la Recherche Médicale (INSERM)-Université de Montpellier (UM)-Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS), Centre Hospitalier Régional Universitaire [Montpellier] (CHRU Montpellier), Carl Gustav Carus University (DRESDEN - CGCU), Technische Universität Dresden (TUD), Pediatric Hematology, Emma Children's Hospital/Academic Medical Center, Department of Medicine, McMaster University [Hamilton, Ontario], Department of Earth and Environmental Sciences [Leuven-Heverlee], Catholic University of Leuven - Katholieke Universiteit Leuven (KU Leuven), Service de Pédiatrie [HU Antwerp, Belgium], Antwerp University Hospital [Edegem] (UZA), Service de Pédiatrie - Néphrologie, Médecine interne, Hypertension, CHU Toulouse [Toulouse]-Hôpital des Enfants, CHU Toulouse [Toulouse], Pediatric Hematology/Oncology Department, Hadassah Hebrew University Medical Center [Jerusalem], Pediatric Hematology Unit (Pediatric Hematology Unit), Schneider Children's Medical Center of Israel, Hospital de Santa Cruz, Institute for Information Transmission Problems, Russian Academy of Sciences [Moscow] (RAS), Department of Paediatric Haematology, Hospital Sant Joan de Déu [Barcelona], Laboratoire d'Ecologie Microbienne - UMR 5557 (LEM), Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS)-Ecole Nationale Vétérinaire de Lyon (ENVL)-Université Claude Bernard Lyon 1 (UCBL), Université de Lyon-Université de Lyon-Institut National de la Recherche Agronomique (INRA)-VetAgro Sup - Institut national d'enseignement supérieur et de recherche en alimentation, santé animale, sciences agronomiques et de l'environnement (VAS), Department of Human Evolution [Leipzig], Max Planck Institute for Evolutionary Anthropology, Max-Planck-Gesellschaft-Max-Planck-Gesellschaft, Paediatric Haematology, UCL - SSS/IREC/PEDI - Pôle de Pédiatrie, UCL - (SLuc) Département de pédiatrie, RS: CAPHRI - R5 - Optimising Patient Care, Epidemiologie, MUMC+: KIO Kemta (9), Assistance publique - Hôpitaux de Paris (AP-HP) (AP-HP)-Assistance publique - Hôpitaux de Paris (AP-HP) (AP-HP), Université de Montpellier (UM)-Institut National de la Santé et de la Recherche Médicale (INSERM)-Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS), Technische Universität Dresden = Dresden University of Technology (TU Dresden), and Max Planck Institute for Evolutionary Anthropology [Leipzig]
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Male ,Pediatrics ,DRUG EFFICACY ,[SDV]Life Sciences [q-bio] ,Vascular damage Radboud Institute for Health Sciences [Radboudumc 16] ,FONDAPARINUX ,RANDOMIZED CONTROLLED TRIAL ,MAJOR CLINICAL STUDY ,ADOLESCENT ,LOW MOLECULAR WEIGHT HEPARIN ,law.invention ,Adolescent ,Anticoagulants ,Child ,Child, Preschool ,Female ,Humans ,Infant ,Risk Factors ,Rivaroxaban ,Venous Thromboembolism ,0302 clinical medicine ,Randomized controlled trial ,CHILD ,law ,Medicine ,PRIORITY JOURNAL ,610 Medicine & health ,ANTICOAGULANT AGENT ,oral rivaroxaban ,HUMAN ,RISK FACTOR ,CLINICAL TRIAL ,HUMANS ,Hematology ,DISEASE BURDEN ,Thrombosis ,3. Good health ,DRUG SAFETY ,FEMALE ,OPEN STUDY ,FOLLOW UP ,BLEEDING ,030220 oncology & carcinogenesis ,medicine.drug ,medicine.medical_specialty ,INTENTION TO TREAT ANALYSIS ,ANTICOAGULANTS ,03 medical and health sciences ,ANTICOAGULATION ,ANTIVITAMIN K ,ARTICLE ,Preschool ,CHILD, PRESCHOOL ,VENOUS THROMBOEMBOLISM ,disease ,MALE ,business.industry ,RIVAROXABAN ,PHASE 3 CLINICAL TRIAL ,medicine.disease ,Clinical trial ,CONTROLLED STUDY ,THROMBOSIS ,Clinical research ,DEFINITION ,Multicenter study ,PRESCHOOL CHILD ,HEPARIN ,MULTICENTER STUDY ,INFANT ,business ,Venous thromboembolism ,TREATMENT OUTCOME ,030215 immunology - Abstract
Contains fulltext : 219893.pdf (Publisher’s version ) (Closed access) BACKGROUND: Treatment of venous thromboembolism in children is based on data obtained in adults with little direct documentation of its efficacy and safety in children. The aim of our study was to compare the efficacy and safety of rivaroxaban versus standard anticoagulants in children with venous thromboembolism. METHODS: In a multicentre, parallel-group, open-label, randomised study, children (aged 0-17 years) attending 107 paediatric hospitals in 28 countries with documented acute venous thromboembolism who had started heparinisation were assigned (2:1) to bodyweight-adjusted rivaroxaban (tablets or suspension) in a 20-mg equivalent dose or standard anticoagulants (heparin or switched to vitamin K antagonist). Randomisation was stratified by age and venous thromboembolism site. The main treatment period was 3 months (1 month in children /=1 dose), were centrally assessed by investigators who were unaware of treatment assignment. Repeat imaging was obtained at the end of the main treatment period and compared with baseline imaging tests. This trial is registered with ClinicalTrials.gov, number NCT02234843 and has been completed. FINDINGS: From Nov 14, 2014, to Sept 28, 2018, 500 (96%) of the 520 children screened for eligibility were enrolled. After a median follow-up of 91 days (IQR 87-95) in children who had a study treatment period of 3 months (n=463) and 31 days (IQR 29-35) in children who had a study treatment period of 1 month (n=37), symptomatic recurrent venous thromboembolism occurred in four (1%) of 335 children receiving rivaroxaban and five (3%) of 165 receiving standard anticoagulants (hazard ratio [HR] 0.40, 95% CI 0.11-1.41). Repeat imaging showed an improved effect of rivaroxaban on thrombotic burden as compared with standard anticoagulants (p=0.012). Major or clinically relevant non-major bleeding in participants who received >/=1 dose occurred in ten (3%) of 329 children (all non-major) receiving rivaroxaban and in three (2%) of 162 children (two major and one non-major) receiving standard anticoagulants (HR 1.58, 95% CI 0.51-6.27). Absolute and relative efficacy and safety estimates of rivaroxaban versus standard anticoagulation estimates were similar to those in rivaroxaban studies in adults. There were no treatment-related deaths. INTERPRETATION: In children with acute venous thromboembolism, treatment with rivaroxaban resulted in a similarly low recurrence risk and reduced thrombotic burden without increased bleeding, as compared with standard anticoagulants. FUNDING: Bayer AG and Janssen Research & Development. 01 januari 2020
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- 2020
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19. Toxicity and risk factors after combined high-dose-rate brachytherapy and external beam radiation therapy in men ≥75 years with localized prostate cancer
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Cedric Oliver Carl, Cordula Petersen, Markus Graefen, Anastassia Löser, Yamini Nagaraj, Burkhard Beyer, Andreas Krüll, Rudolf Schwarz, Thorsten Frenzel, and Benjamin Löser
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Male ,Biochemical recurrence ,medicine.medical_specialty ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Brachytherapy ,Urology ,030218 nuclear medicine & medical imaging ,03 medical and health sciences ,Prostate cancer ,0302 clinical medicine ,Risk Factors ,medicine ,Humans ,Radiology, Nuclear Medicine and imaging ,External beam radiotherapy ,Radiation Injuries ,Aged ,Aged, 80 and over ,business.industry ,Hazard ratio ,Prostatic Neoplasms ,Radiotherapy Dosage ,Iridium Radioisotopes ,medicine.disease ,Combined Modality Therapy ,Confidence interval ,High-Dose Rate Brachytherapy ,Radiation therapy ,Oncology ,030220 oncology & carcinogenesis ,Radiotherapy, Intensity-Modulated ,Radiotherapy, Conformal ,business ,Follow-Up Studies - Abstract
Combined high-dose-rate brachytherapy (HDR-BT) and external beam radiation therapy (EBRT) is a favorable treatment option in non-metastatic prostate cancer. However, reports on toxicity and outcome have mainly focused on younger patients. We aimed to determine toxicity and biochemical control rates after combined HDR-BT and EBRT in men ≥75 years. From 1999 to 2015, 134 patients aged ≥75 years (median 76 years; 75–82 years) were identified. Patients received 18 Gy of HDR-BT (9 Gy/fraction on days 1 and 8) with an iridium-192 source. After 1 week, supplemental EBRT with a target dose of 50.4 Gy was started (delivered in 1.8 Gy fractions). Median follow-up time was 25 months (0–127 months). No severe (grade 4) gastrointestinal (GIT) or genitourinary (GUT) toxicities were observed. In 76 patients (56.7%), 3D conformal radiation therapy (CRT) and in 34.3% intensity-modulated radiotherapy (IMRT) was applied. CRT-treated patients were at a 2.17-times higher risk (hazard ratio [HR]: 2.17, 95% confidence interval [CI]: 1.31–3.57, p = 0.002) of experiencing GUT. GIT risks could be reduced by 78% using IMRT (HR: 0.22, 95% CI: 0.07–0.75, p = 0.015). Patients with a higher T stage (T2c–3a/b) were less likely to experience GIT or GUT (HR: 0.49, 95% CI: 0.29–0.85, p = 0.011 and HR: 0.5, 95% CI: 0.3–0.81, p = 0.005, respectively). HDR-BT/EBRT is a well-tolerated treatment option for elderly men ≥75 years with a limited number of comorbidities and localized intermediate- or high-risk prostate cancer. IMRT should be favored since side effects were significantly reduced in IMRT-treated patients.
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- 2018
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20. Schmerztherapie bei Kindern und Jugendlichen mit Hämophilie
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Werner Streif, W. Stromer, R. Crevenna, Karl Zwiauer, B. Wagner, Rudolf Likar, Katharina Thom, B. Jauk, S. H. Hemberger, B. Messerer, and Rudolf Schwarz
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Gynecology ,Clotting factor ,03 medical and health sciences ,medicine.medical_specialty ,0302 clinical medicine ,Anesthesiology and Pain Medicine ,business.industry ,medicine ,Neurology (clinical) ,030204 cardiovascular system & hematology ,business ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery ,Acute pain - Abstract
Kinder und Jugendliche mit schwerer Hamophilie leiden als typische Folge der Blutungen in Muskeln und Gelenken unter akuten und chronischen Schmerzen. Ebenso spielen interventionsbezogene Schmerzen eine erhebliche Rolle. Trotz ihrer hohen Pravalenz werden die Schmerzen in dieser Patientengruppe nicht immer ausreichend thematisiert oder gezielt analgetisch behandelt. Die Handlungsempfehlungen widmen sich der Frage, wie das Schmerzmanagement fur Kinder und Jugendliche mit Hamophilie verbessert werden kann und welche Besonderheiten bei ihnen in der Schmerztherapie zu beachten sind. Im Rahmen eines Expertentreffens wurde das Problem der Schmerzbehandlung bei Kindern und Jugendlichen (Alter 0 bis 18 Jahre) mit Hamophilie diskutiert. Anhand der verfugbaren Literatur und klinischen Erfahrung wurden Handlungsempfehlungen erarbeitet. Die schmerztherapeutische Versorgung von Kindern mit Hamophilie ist haufig insuffizient, sodass die Gefahr besteht, dass akute Schmerzen zu Chronifizierung und Traumatisierung fuhren. Sowohl das Alter der Patienten als auch die Grunderkrankung stellen besondere Anforderungen vor allem an die medikamentose Therapie. Konkrete Handlungsempfehlungen zur Verbesserung der Situation wurden erarbeitet.
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- 2018
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21. The impact of [68Ga]PSMA I&T PET/CT on radiotherapy planning in patients with prostate cancer
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Christoph Berliner, Milena Tienken, Rudolf Schwarz, Andreas Krüll, Peter Bannas, Thorsten Frenzel, Susanne Klutmann, Merve Abel, and Dirk Beyersdorff
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PET-CT ,Palliative treatment ,business.industry ,medicine.medical_treatment ,68ga psma ,urologic and male genital diseases ,medicine.disease ,030218 nuclear medicine & medical imaging ,Radiation therapy ,03 medical and health sciences ,Prostate cancer ,0302 clinical medicine ,Oncology ,030220 oncology & carcinogenesis ,medicine ,Glutamate carboxypeptidase II ,Radiology, Nuclear Medicine and imaging ,In patient ,Tomography ,Nuclear medicine ,business - Abstract
To determine the impact of Gallium-68-labled prostate-specific membrane antigen positron-emission tomography/computed tomography ([68Ga]PSMA PET/CT) on radiotherapy planning for primary disease, biochemical cancer relapse, and advanced disease of prostate cancer. A total of 106 patients with prostate cancer scheduled for radiation therapy underwent 120 [68Ga]PSMA PET/CT scans prior to radiotherapy treatment. In 20 cases, patients underwent [68Ga]PSMA PET/CT for primary therapy (PT), 75 cases were referred for biochemical relapse after surgery (RL), and 25 cases were intended for palliative treatment of localized metastases (MD). We retrospectively compared the impact of [68Ga]PSMA PET/CT on lesion detection and treatment decision to CT alone. [68Ga]PSMA PET/CT revealed a total of 271 positive lesions, whereas CT detected 86 lesions (32%). Overall, the radiotherapy regime was changed in 55 of 120 cases (46%) based on the higher detection rate of [68Ga]PSMA PET/CT: in 15% of cases with PT, in 43% of cases with RL, and in 44% of cases with MD. [68Ga]PSMA PET/CT is superior to CT alone for lesion detection in prostate cancer, thereby significantly impacting on radiotherapy planning for primary disease, biochemical cancer relapse, and advanced disease of prostate cancer.
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- 2018
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22. Functional Outcomes and Quality of Life After Radical Prostatectomy Only Versus a Combination of Prostatectomy with Radiation and Hormonal Therapy
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Georg Salomon, Thomas Steuber, Raisa S. Pompe, Wolfgang Huber, Meike Adam, Dominik Lanwehr, Derya Tilki, Imke Thederan, Cordula Petersen, Jürgen Bernard, Pär Stattin, Rudolf Schwarz, Burkhard Beyer, Uwe Michl, Hans Heinzer, Stacy Loeb, Hartwig Huland, Dirk Pehrke, Markus Graefen, Pierre Tennstedt, Bernd Klaus, Thorsten Schlomm, Alexander Haese, Lars Budäus, and Publica
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Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Antineoplastic Agents, Hormonal ,Urology ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Medical visualization ,030232 urology & nephrology ,Modeling (MOD) ,Medical sciences ,Androgen deprivation therapy ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Erectile Dysfunction ,Quality of life ,medicine ,Humans ,Potency ,Propensity Score ,Evaluation ,Aged ,Prostatectomy ,Salvage Therapy ,Radiotherapy ,business.industry ,Medical diagnosis ,Health care ,Prostatic Neoplasms ,Multimodal therapy ,Chemoradiotherapy, Adjuvant ,Individual Health ,Middle Aged ,Combined Modality Therapy ,Life sciences ,Surgery ,Radiation therapy ,Urinary Incontinence ,Medical informatics ,030220 oncology & carcinogenesis ,Quality of Life ,Medicine ,Hormonal therapy ,Hormone therapy ,business ,Medical applications - Abstract
Background While the optimal use and timing of secondary therapy after radical prostatectomy (RP) remain controversial, there are limited data on patient-reported outcomes following multimodal therapy. Objective To assess the impact of additional radiation therapy (RT) and/or androgen deprivation therapy (ADT) on urinary continence, potency, and quality of life (QoL) after RP. Design, setting, and participants Among 13150 men who underwent RP from 1992 to 2013, 905 received RP + RT, 407 RP + ADT and 688 RP + RT + ADT. Outcome measurements and statistical analyses Urinary function, sexual function, and overall QoL were evaluated annually using self-administered validated questionnaires. Propensity score–matched and bootstrap analyses were performed, and the distributions for all functional outcomes were analyzed as a function of time after RP. Results and limitations Patients who received RP + RT had a 4% higher overall incontinence rate 3 yr after surgery, and 1% higher rate for severe incontinence (>3 pads/24h) compared to matched RP-only patients. ADT further increased the overall and severe incontinence rates by 4% and 3%, respectively, compared to matched RP + RT patients. RP + RT was associated with an 18% lower rate of potency compared to RP alone, while RP + RT + ADT was associated with a further 17% reduction compared to RP + RT. Additional RT reduced QoL by 10% and additional ADT by a further 12% compared to RP only and RP + RT, respectively. The timing of RT after RP had no influence on continence, but adjuvant compared to salvage RT was associated with significantly lower potency (37% vs 45%), but higher QoL (60% vs 56%). Limitations of our study include the observational study design and potential for selection bias in the treatments received. Conclusions Secondary RT and ADT after RP have an additive negative influence on urinary function, potency, and QoL. Patients with high-risk disease should be counseled before RP on the potential net impairment of functional outcomes due to multimodal treatment. Patient summary Men with high-risk disease choosing surgery upfront should be counseled on the potential need for additional radiation and or androgen deprivation, and the potential net impairment of functional outcomes arising from multimodal treatment.
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- 2017
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23. MBCL-11. TIME TO RADIOTHERAPY IMPACTS SURVIVAL IN PEDIATRIC AND ADOLESCENT NON-METASTATIC MEDULLOBLASTOMA TREATED BY UPFRONT RADIOTHERAPY – A REPORT FROM THE HIT 2000 TRIAL
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Heinz Schmidberger, Monika Warmuth-Metz, Albrecht Glück, Karolina Jablonska, Frank Meyer, Karin Dieckmann, Torsten Pietsch, Juergen Dunst, Karin S. Kapp, Rolf-Dieter Kortmann, Martin Mynarek, Nicolas U. Gerber, Felix Placzek, Dagmar Hornung, Matthias Guckenberger, Frank Heinzelmann, Volker Budach, Carmen Martini, Christoph Pöttgen, Jutta Welzel, Rudolf Schwarz, Christiane Matuschek, Katja von Hoff, Frank Paulsen, Montserrat Pazos, Klaus Pietschmann, Beate Timmermann, Robert Kwiecien, Stefan M. Pfister, Stefan Dietzsch, Sabine Klagges, Anca L. Grosu, Steven C. Clifford, Stefan Rutkowski, Martin Benesch, and André O. von Bueren
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Oncology ,Medulloblastoma ,Cancer Research ,medicine.medical_specialty ,business.industry ,medicine.medical_treatment ,medicine.disease ,Radiation therapy ,Internal medicine ,Medulloblastoma (Clinical) ,AcademicSubjects/MED00300 ,Non metastatic ,Medicine ,AcademicSubjects/MED00310 ,Neurology (clinical) ,business - Abstract
PURPOSE To evaluate prognostic factors and impact of participation in a randomized trial in non-metastatic medulloblastoma. METHODS AND PATIENTS 382 patients with non-metastatic medulloblastoma aged 4–21 years with primary neurosurgical resections between 2001 and 2011 were enrolled into the HIT 2000 trial and centrally reviewed. Between 2001 and 2006, 176 of these patients participated in the randomized trial HIT-SIOP PNET 4. Three different radiotherapy protocols were applied. Molecular subgroup was available for 157 patients. RESULTS Median follow-up was 6.35 [0.09–13.86] years. The 5-year progression-free (PFS) and overall survival (OS) rates were 80.3 % ± 2.1 % and 86.5 % ± 1.8 %, respectively. On univariate analysis, there was no difference in PFS and OS according to radiotherapy protocols or in patients who participated in the HIT-SIOP PNET 4 trial or not, while histology, molecular subgroup and postoperative residual tumor influenced PFS significantly. Time interval between surgery and irradiation (≤48 days vs. ≥49 days) failed the significance level (p=0.052). On multivariate analyses, molecular subgroup (WNT activated vs. Group3 HR 5.49; p=0.014) and time interval between surgery and irradiation (HR 2.2; p=0.018) were confirmed as independent risk factors. CONCLUSION Using a centralized review system, multiprofessional and multiinstitutional collaboration as established for pediatric brain tumor patients in Germany, and risk-stratified therapy, outcome for non-metastatic medulloblastoma treated within HIT-SIOP PNET4 could be maintained outside the randomized trial. Prolonged time to radiotherapy negatively influenced survival.
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- 2020
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24. Verbessertes Überleben beim fortgeschrittenen oder metastasierten Prostatakarzinom durch zusätzliches Abirateron zur initialen Androgendeprivation
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Cedric Oliver Carl, Cordula Petersen, and Rudolf Schwarz
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Gynecology ,03 medical and health sciences ,medicine.medical_specialty ,0302 clinical medicine ,Oncology ,business.industry ,medicine ,Radiology, Nuclear Medicine and imaging ,030212 general & internal medicine ,030204 cardiovascular system & hematology ,business - Published
- 2018
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25. MBCL-09. ISOLATED M1 METASTASES IN PEDIATRIC MEDULLOBLASTOMA: IS POSTOPERATIVE RADIOTHERAPY FOLLOWED BY MAINTENANCE CHEMOTHERAPY SUPERIOR TO POSTOPERATIVE SANDWICH-CHEMOTHERAPY AND RADIOTHERAPY?
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Christian Hagel, Katja von Hoff, Rudolf Schwarz, Martin Mynarek, David T.W. Jones, Nicolas U. Gerber, Denise Obrecht, Brigitte Bison, Michael Bockmayr, Rolf-Dieter Kortmann, Monika Warmuth-Metz, Michael Spohn, Torsten Pietsch, Carsten Friedrich, Dominik Sturm, Andreas von Deimling, Martin Benesch, Stefan Rutkowski, Robert Kwiecien, Stefan M. Pfister, André O. von Bueren, Felix Sahm, and B Ole Juhnke
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Medulloblastoma ,Cancer Research ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Chemotherapy ,business.industry ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Postoperative radiotherapy ,medicine.disease ,Radiation therapy ,Oncology ,Medulloblastoma (Clinical) ,AcademicSubjects/MED00300 ,Medicine ,AcademicSubjects/MED00310 ,Neurology (clinical) ,Radiology ,business ,Maintenance chemotherapy - Abstract
BACKGROUND Impact of isolated spread into the cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) is still not investigated comprehensively for childhood medulloblastoma and the best therapeutic strategy is currently unclear. MATERIAL AND METHODS Sixty-six patients with isolated M1-MB registered to the HIT-MED-database from 2000–2018 were identified. CSF and MRI were centrally reviewed for all patients. Patients were stratified by age and either treated with upfront craniospinal irradiation (CSI) followed by maintenance chemotherapy (CT) or with postoperative CT and delayed CSI. RESULTS Forty-nine patients were non-infants ≥4 years and seventeen were infants CONCLUSION Isolated M1-MB is rare. Patients without contraindication for CSI appear to benefit from treatment by upfront CSI followed by maintenance CT, while cumulative CT-doses would be reduced compared to sandwich strategies.
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- 2020
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26. Epidemiology and Treatment of Patients with Haemophilia in Austria-Update from the Austrian Haemophilia Registry
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Werner Streif, Michael Grundbichler, Christoph Male, Rudolf Schwarz, Clemens Feistritzer, Karl Zwiauer, Wolfgang Muntean, Peter Neumeister, Katharina Thom, Alexander Hörbst, Neil Jones, Judit Rejtő, Sylvia Reitter-Pfoertner, Stefan Oberbichler, Sylvia Kepa, Ingrid Pabinger, and Gerhard Schuster
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Adult ,Male ,congenital, hereditary, and neonatal diseases and abnormalities ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Pediatrics ,Adolescent ,Hepatitis C virus ,Haemophilia A ,Population ,HIV Infections ,Hemorrhage ,030204 cardiovascular system & hematology ,Haemophilia ,medicine.disease_cause ,Hemophilia A ,Severity of Illness Index ,03 medical and health sciences ,Young Adult ,0302 clinical medicine ,hemic and lymphatic diseases ,Epidemiology ,medicine ,Prevalence ,Humans ,Haemophilia B ,Registries ,education ,Congenital Bleeding Disorder ,Child ,Aged ,Aged, 80 and over ,education.field_of_study ,business.industry ,Infant ,Hematology ,Middle Aged ,medicine.disease ,Combined Modality Therapy ,Hepatitis C ,Austria ,Child, Preschool ,Cohort ,Female ,business ,030215 immunology - Abstract
The Austrian Haemophilia Registry collects epidemiological data on patients with haemophilia, on treatment modalities and potential side effects. The Registry covers more than 85% of the assumed total number of haemophilia patients in Austria. This report summarizes data on 753 patients: 84.3% (635) have haemophilia A and 15.7% (118) have haemophilia B. Patients' median age is 34 years (range: 1-93 years). Of the total cohort, 39.0% (294) patients have severe haemophilia, 11.3% (85) moderate haemophilia, and 49.4% (372) mild haemophilia. Of the patients with severe haemophilia, 38.4% (113) have been infected with hepatitis C virus (HCV) and 12.6% (37) are human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) positive. Overall, 10.6% (67) of patients with haemophilia A and 1.7% (2) of those with haemophilia B have had an inhibitor in their history. Among patients with severe haemophilia, 68.4% (201) receive prophylaxis and 28.6% (84) receive on-demand therapy. There are 65.0% (191) patients with severe haemophilia who are treated with recombinant products. In conclusion, most patients with severe haemophilia receive prophylactic treatment. HCV and HIV infections are still important issues in the Austrian haemophilia population.Das Österreichische Hämophilieregister sammelt epidemiologische Daten über Patienten mit Hämophilie, über die Behandlungsmodalitäten und über die möglichen Nebenwirkungen. Das Österreichische Hämophilie Register erfasst mehr als 85% der zu erwartenden Anzahl von Hämophilen in Österreich. Im Register sind 753 Patienten erfasst, von denen 84.3% (635) Hämophilie A und 15.7% (118) Hämophilie B haben. Das mediane Alter ist 34 Jahre (1–93). Es haben 39.0% (294) eine schwere, 11.3% (85) eine mittelschwere und 49.4% (372) eine leichte Hämophilie. Von den Patienten mit schwerer Hämophilie wurden 38.4% (113) mit HCV infiziert und 12.6% (37) sind HIV positiv. Insgesamt haben 10.6% (67) aller Patienten mit Hämophilie A und 1.7% (2) aller Patienten mit Hämophilie B einen Hemmkörper in ihrer Anamnese. Von den Patienten mit schwerer Hämophilie erhalten 68.4% (201) eine Prophylaxe und 28.6% (84) eine Bedarfsbehandlung. Von den Patienten mit schwerer Hämophilie erhalten 65.0% (191) ein rekombinantes Produkt. Zusammenfassend erhalten die meisten Patienten mit schwerer Hämophilie eine Prophylaxe. HCV und HIV Infektionen sind immer noch von großer Bedeutung für die österreichischen Hämophilie-Patienten.
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- 2018
27. EURO-B.O.S.S.: A European study on chemotherapy in bone-sarcoma patients aged over 40: Outcome in primary high-grade osteosarcoma
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Virginia Ferraresi, Stefan S. Bielack, Anna Paioli, Nina L. Jebsen, Kirsten Sundby Hall, Peter Reichardt, Fatime Krasniqi, Bodil Bjerkehagen, Alessandra Longhi, Otte Brosjö, Thekla von Kalle, Emanuela Palmerini, Marco Gambarotti, Stefano Ferrari, Matthias Kevric, Rossella Bertulli, Per Ulf Tunn, Benjamin Sorg, Wolfgang E. Berdel, Piero Picci, Davide Maria Donati, Mikael Eriksson, Mathias Werner, Rudolf Schwarz, Odd R. Monge, Sylvie Lorenzen, Anne Katrin Kasparek, Marilena Cesari, Sigbjørn Smeland, Alessandro Comandone, Giovanni Grignani, Stefanie Hecker-Nolting, Gerlinde Egerer, DIPARTIMENTO DI MEDICINA SPECIALISTICA, DIAGNOSTICA E SPERIMENTALE, DIPARTIMENTO DI SCIENZE BIOMEDICHE E NEUROMOTORIE, Facolta' di MEDICINA e CHIRURGIA, Ferrari, Stefano, Bielack, Stefan S, Smeland, Sigbjørn, Longhi, Alessandra, Egerer, Gerlinde, Sundby Hall, Kirsten, Donati, Davide, Kevric, Matthia, Brosjö, Otte, Comandone, Alessandro, Werner, Mathia, Monge, Odd, Palmerini, Emanuela, Berdel, Wolfgang E, Bjerkehagen, Bodil, Paioli, Anna, Lorenzen, Sylvie, Eriksson, Mikael, Gambarotti, Marco, Tunn, Per-Ulf, Jebsen, Nina L, Cesari, Marilena, von Kalle, Thekla, Ferraresi, Virginia, Schwarz, Rudolf, Bertulli, Rossella, Kasparek, Anne-Katrin, Grignani, Giovanni, Krasniqi, Fatime, Sorg, Benjamin, Hecker-Nolting, Stefanie, Picci, Piero, and Reichardt, Peter
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0301 basic medicine ,Oncology ,Adult ,Male ,Cancer Research ,medicine.medical_specialty ,medicine.medical_treatment ,International Cooperation ,Treatment outcome ,Bone Neoplasms ,Bone Sarcoma ,chemotherapy ,elderly ,Chemotherapy related toxicity ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,osteosarcoma, elderly, chemotherapy, bone tumors ,Internal medicine ,Antineoplastic Combined Chemotherapy Protocols ,medicine ,Humans ,Ifosfamide ,Prospective Studies ,Prospective cohort study ,health care economics and organizations ,Survival analysis ,Aged ,Febrile Neutropenia ,bone tumors ,Chemotherapy ,Osteosarcoma ,business.industry ,General Medicine ,Middle Aged ,medicine.disease ,Survival Analysis ,Europe ,030104 developmental biology ,Methotrexate ,Treatment Outcome ,Doxorubicin ,030220 oncology & carcinogenesis ,Female ,Sarcoma ,Cisplatin ,business - Abstract
Introduction: The EUROpean Bone Over 40 Sarcoma Study (EURO-B.O.S.S.) was the first prospective international study for patients 41-65 years old with high-grade bone sarcoma treated with an intensive chemotherapy regimen derived from protocols for younger patients with high-grade skeletal osteosarcoma. Methods: Chemotherapy based on doxorubicin, cisplatin, ifosfamide, and methotrexate was suggested, but patients treated with other regimens at the investigators’ choice were also eligible for the study. Results: The present report focuses on the subgroup of 218 patients with primary high-grade osteosarcoma. With a median follow-up of 47 months, the 5-year probability of overall survival (OS) was 66% in patients with localized disease and 22% in case of synchronous metastases. The 5-year OS in patients with localized disease was 29% in pelvic tumors, and 70% and 73% for extremity or craniofacial locations, respectively. In primary chemotherapy, tumor necrosis ≥90% was reported in 21% of the patients. There were no toxic deaths; however, hematological toxicity was considerable with 32% of patients experiencing 1 or more episodes of neutropenic fever. The incidence of nephrotoxicity and neurotoxicity (mainly peripheral) was 28% and 24%, respectively. After methotrexate, 23% of patients experienced delayed excretion, in 4 cases with nephrotoxicity. Conclusions: In patients over 40 years of age with primary high-grade osteosarcoma, an aggressive approach with chemotherapy and surgery can offer the probability of survival similar to that achieved in younger patients. Chemotherapy-related toxicity is significant and generally higher than that reported in younger cohorts of osteosarcoma patients treated with more intensive regimens.
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- 2017
28. The impact of [
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Thorsten, Frenzel, Milena, Tienken, Merve, Abel, Christoph, Berliner, Susanne, Klutmann, Dirk, Beyersdorff, Rudolf, Schwarz, Andreas, Krüll, and Peter, Bannas
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Aged, 80 and over ,Glutamate Carboxypeptidase II ,Male ,Radiotherapy Planning, Computer-Assisted ,Palliative Care ,Prostatic Neoplasms ,Gallium Radioisotopes ,Middle Aged ,Prostate-Specific Antigen ,Decision Support Systems, Clinical ,Sensitivity and Specificity ,Positron Emission Tomography Computed Tomography ,Antigens, Surface ,Humans ,Neoplasm Recurrence, Local ,Tomography, X-Ray Computed ,Aged ,Retrospective Studies - Abstract
To determine the impact of Gallium-68-labled prostate-specific membrane antigen positron-emission tomography/computed tomography ([A total of 106 patients with prostate cancer scheduled for radiation therapy underwent 120 [[[
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- 2017
29. Holmium Laser Enucleation of the Prostate Is Safe in Patients with Prostate Cancer and Lower Urinary Tract Symptoms—A Retrospective Feasibility Study
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Hendrik Isbarn, Oliver Engel, Daniel Seiler, Sascha Ahyai, Luis A. Kluth, Roman Heuer, Andreas Becker, Rudolf Schwarz, Thorsten Schlomm, Anne Placke, Markus Graefen, Felix K.-H. Chun, and Margit Fisch
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Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Urology ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Enucleation ,Urination ,Lasers, Solid-State ,Prostate cancer ,Lower Urinary Tract Symptoms ,Lower urinary tract symptoms ,Prostate ,medicine ,Humans ,Aged ,Retrospective Studies ,Aged, 80 and over ,Prostatectomy ,business.industry ,Prostatic Neoplasms ,Retrospective cohort study ,Perioperative ,Middle Aged ,medicine.disease ,Surgery ,Treatment Outcome ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Quality of Life ,Feasibility Studies ,International Prostate Symptom Score ,Laser Therapy ,business ,Follow-Up Studies - Abstract
To evaluate the outcome of holmium laser enucleation of the prostate (HoLEP) in the known presence of prostate cancer (PCa) and concomitant lower urinary tract symptoms (LUTS).We retrospectively identified 62 patients who underwent HoLEP for LUTS in the known presence of PCa at our center. Perioperative data were assessed including complications, functional outcomes, and quality of life (QoL). Giving respect to different disease characteristics, patients were stratified according to treatment strategy setting into palliative (I), radiation (II), and surveillance (III) groups and compared accordingly.Median follow-up (FU) of the entire study cohort was 27 months (range 2-65 mos). Medians of functional parameters (International Prostate Symptom Score): 18.5 vs 4.5, QoL: 4 vs 1, maximal flow rate: 9.0 vs 18.8 mL/s and residual urine: 100 vs 0 mL, all P0.05) improved significantly in all groups. Perioperative complications were low and without any statistically significant difference between the groups. Postoperatively, voiding was successful in 90.3% of all patients; at last FU, 17% had some degree of urinary incontinence. Treatment strategy groups showed comparable functional outcomes after HoLEP.In the presence of PCa and LUTS, HoLEP represents a feasible, safe, and effective treatment option for patients unfit or without indication for radical prostatectomy. This applies as well in a palliative situation of advanced, obstructive PCa as for patients with LUTS who are scheduled for radiation therapy or surveillance in presumably indolent disease.
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- 2014
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30. Abirateron zur initialen Androgendeprivation
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Cordula Petersen, Rudolf Schwarz, and Cedric Oliver Carl
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Gynecology ,medicine.medical_specialty ,business.industry ,Medicine ,business - Published
- 2018
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31. Eileiter und Ei vom Huhn Die Wechselbeziehungen von Morphologie und Funktion bei Gegenüberstellung von Sekretionsorgan und Sekretionsprodukt
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Rudolf Schwarz
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- 2010
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32. Second and Subsequent Recurrences of Osteosarcoma: Presentation, Treatment, and Outcomes of 249 Consecutive Cooperative Osteosarcoma Study Group Patients
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Knut Helmke, Matthias Kevric, Thomas Kühne, Detlev Branscheid, Godehard Friedel, Rainer Maas, Dorothe Carrle, Gernot Jundt, Beate Kempf-Bielack, Heribert Jürgens, Stefan S. Bielack, Andreas Zoubek, and Rudolf Schwarz
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Osteosarcoma ,Cancer Research ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Chemotherapy ,Lung Neoplasms ,business.industry ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Cancer ,Bone Neoplasms ,Prognosis ,medicine.disease ,Surgery ,Survival Rate ,Surgical Clearance ,Oncology ,medicine ,Humans ,In patient ,Sarcoma ,Neoplasm Recurrence, Local ,Presentation (obstetrics) ,business ,First Recurrence - Abstract
Purpose To evaluate patient and tumor characteristics, treatment, and outcomes in a large cohort of unselected patients with second and subsequent recurrences of osteosarcoma. Patients and Methods Two hundred forty-nine consecutive patients who had originally received combined-modality therapy on neoadjuvant Cooperative Osteosarcoma Study Group protocols and went on to develop a total of 409 second and subsequent osteosarcoma recurrences were analyzed for patient-, tumor-, and treatment-related factors and outcomes. Results Five-year overall and event-free survival rates were 16% and 9% for 249 second, 14% and 0% for 93 third, 13% and 6% for 38 fourth, and 18% and 0% for 14 fifth recurrences, respectively. The proportion of recurrences confined to the lungs decreased and the proportion of those with chest wall involvement increased with increasing numbers of recurrences. The duration of relapse-free intervals and the number of lesions at recurrence correlated with outcomes. While only one of 205 patients with rerecurrence survived past 5 years without surgical remission, 5-year overall and event-free survival rates were 32% and 18% for 119 second, 26% and 0% for 45 third, 28% and 13% for 20 fourth, and 53% and 0% for five fifth recurrences, respectively, in which a renewed surgical remission was achieved. The use of chemotherapy correlated with longer survival in patients without surgical remissions. Conclusion To our knowledge, this is the first report of survival estimates derived from large cohorts of unselected patients with second and subsequent osteosarcoma recurrences. It confirms the overwhelming importance of surgical clearance. Prognostic indicators after rerecurrences resemble those known from first recurrence. The exact role of re-treatment with chemotherapy, particularly in the adjuvant situation, remains to be defined.
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- 2009
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33. Therapy of recurrent disease after radical prostatectomy in 2007
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Andreas Krüll, Rudolf Schwarz, and Markus Graefen
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Male ,Nephrology ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Urology ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Salvage therapy ,Prostate cancer ,Internal medicine ,Biopsy ,medicine ,Recurrent disease ,Humans ,Prostatectomy ,Salvage Therapy ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,business.industry ,Prostatic Neoplasms ,Prostate-Specific Antigen ,medicine.disease ,Surgery ,Radiation therapy ,Prostate-specific antigen ,Treatment Outcome ,Neoplasm Recurrence, Local ,business - Abstract
Recurrence rates of 20-40% after prostatectomy are described. This review will discuss curative treatment options for salvage after primary therapy. Relevant information was identified through searches of published studies, abstracts from scientific meetings, and review articles. Clinical experience in salvage therapy is limited. Conformal radiotherapy to the prostatic bed for PSA relapse and biopsy proven local recurrences after prostatectomy remains the only potentially curative therapy. It can provide durable biochemical control in a range from 17 to 78%. Salvage radiotherapy is well tolerated. Some prognostic factors exist which can help to select the right patient for this treatment. Patients have to be treated early for PSA relapse. Conformal radiotherapy to the prostatic bed for PSA relapse and biopsy proven local recurrences after prostatectomy is a good documented curative therapy. In a patient with a high probability of local recurrence early radiotherapy for PSA relapse is suggested.
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- 2007
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34. High Accuracy of Virtual Simulation with the Laser System Dorado CT4
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F. Cremers, Dirk Rades, Thorsten Frenzel, Rainer Schmidt, Winfried Alberti, Jochen Walz, D. Albers, and Rudolf Schwarz
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Adult ,Male ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Slice thickness ,Brachytherapy ,Models, Biological ,Sensitivity and Specificity ,law.invention ,User-Computer Interface ,law ,Maximum difference ,Humans ,Medicine ,Computer Simulation ,Radiology, Nuclear Medicine and imaging ,Simulation ,Spiral ,business.industry ,Lasers ,Radiotherapy Planning, Computer-Assisted ,Prostatic Neoplasms ,Reproducibility of Results ,Middle Aged ,Laser ,Oncology ,business - Abstract
To evaluate the accuracy of virtual simulation, which is less time-consuming than physical simulation, with the new laser system Dorado CT4 in 96 prostate cancer patients.Virtual simulation was based on a spiral scan with 8 mm reconstruction index and 8 mm slice thickness in 64 patients (group A), and 3 mm reconstruction index and 3 mm slice thickness in 32 patients (group B). Both groups were evaluated for impact on maximum difference (Deltamax) regarding the isocenters obtained from virtual simulation versus those obtained from physical simulation.In the entire cohort, mean differences were as follows: Deltamax 5.7 +/- 3.5 mm, Deltax (left/right) 2.8 +/- 2.9 mm, Deltay (anterior/posterior) 4.5 +/- 3.8 mm, and Deltaz (cranial/caudal) 2.1 +/- 2.2 mm. In group A, mean values were Deltamax 6.2 +/- 3.8 mm, Deltax 2.9 +/- 3.1 mm, Deltay 4.9 +/- 4.2 mm, and Deltaz 2.3 +/- 2.3 mm. In group B, mean values were Deltamax 4.8 +/- 2.8 mm, Deltax 2.7 +/- 2.7 mm, Deltay 3.7 +/- 2.7 mm, and Deltaz 1.7 +/- 2.0 mm. Time of radiotherapy (primary vs. salvage RT) and radiation regimen (external-beam radiotherapy [EBRT] vs. high-dose-rate brachytherapy [HDR-BT] plus EBRT) had no significant impact on Deltamax.Virtual simulation with the new laser system Dorado CT4 was very precise for both primary and salvage RT in the treatment of prostate cancer patients. High precision was achieved for both EBRT and HDR-BT plus EBRT. Virtual simulation should be performed with a planning CT with 3 mm reconstruction index and 3 mm slice thickness for high accuracy.
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- 2007
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35. Kirche St.Theresia
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Rudolf Schwarz
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- 2015
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36. Kirche St. Florian
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Rudolf Schwarz
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- 2015
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37. Five-year biochemical recurrence-free and overall survival following high-dose-rate brachytherapy with additional external beam or radical prostatectomy in patients with clinically localized prostate cancer
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Katharina Boehm, Zhe Tian, Andreas Krüll, Pierre I. Karakiewicz, Rudolf Schwarz, Markus Graefen, Alessandro Larcher, Jonas Schiffmann, Derya Tilki, Philipp Mandel, and Hans Lesmana
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Biochemical recurrence ,Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Urology ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Brachytherapy ,030232 urology & nephrology ,Salvage therapy ,Androgen deprivation therapy ,Cohort Studies ,03 medical and health sciences ,Prostate cancer ,0302 clinical medicine ,Risk Factors ,Medicine ,Humans ,Survival rate ,Aged ,Neoplasm Staging ,Prostatectomy ,Salvage Therapy ,business.industry ,Prostatic Neoplasms ,Radiotherapy Dosage ,Middle Aged ,Prostate-Specific Antigen ,medicine.disease ,Prognosis ,Combined Modality Therapy ,Surgery ,Radiation therapy ,Survival Rate ,Oncology ,030220 oncology & carcinogenesis ,Neoplasm Grading ,Neoplasm Recurrence, Local ,business ,Follow-Up Studies - Abstract
High-dose-rate brachytherapy (HDR-BT) with external-beam radiation therapy and radical prostatectomy (RP) are common treatment options for clinically localized prostate cancer. The aim was to describe risk factors for biochemical recurrence (BCR) and death, as well as BCR rates and overall survival (OS) rates in both treatment groups.Overall, 5,619 patients with localized prostate cancer underwent either RP (n = 5,200) or HDR-BT (n = 419) between 1999 and 2009. Median follow-up time was 72.4 months. Kaplan-Meier analyses and multivariable Cox regression analyses were performed for the overall cohort and for a propensity score-matched cohort to predict BCR and OS rates. Within the matched cohort, stratified analyses were repeated for HDR-BT alone (n = 206) and HDR-BT plus androgen deprivation therapy (ADT) (n = 213). Sensitivity analyses were performed to adjust for prostate-specific antigen rebound.The 5-year BCR-free survival rates were 82.1% vs. 80.3% (P0.01) for RP and HDR-BT, respectively. Corresponding 5-year OS rates were 97.1% vs. 92.4% (P0.01). In the propensity score-matched cohort, 5-year BCR-free survival rates were 80.3% vs. 77.1%; P = 0.06 and 5-year OS rates were 95.7% vs. 92.4%; P = 0.5. In multivariable models, the overall HDR-BT exerted no significant effect on BCR, and the same results were recorded in the matched cohort. In stratified analyses, HDR-BT alone vs. RP increased BCR risk (1.45; P0.01); conversely, HDR-BT plus ADT vs. RP decreased BCR risk (hazard ratio = 0.66; P = 0.02).First, RP offers equivalent oncological control without the need for concurrent hormone therapy and its morbidity. Second, patients who have RP avoid ADT (2%) and the need for salvage and adjuvant external-beam radiation therapy is low at 11% and 3%, respectively.
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- 2015
38. MP82-05 A COMPARISON OF DIFFERENT TREATMENT OPTIONS FOR LYMPH NODE-POSITIVE PROSTATE CANCER AT RADICAL PROSTATECTOMY
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Markus Graefen, Hartwig Huland, Thomas Steuber, Christian Meyer, Pierre Tennstedt, Derya Tilki, Patrick Tober, Sascha Ahyai, and Rudolf Schwarz
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Oncology ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Lymph node positive ,Prostatectomy ,business.industry ,Urology ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Treatment options ,medicine.disease ,Prostate cancer ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,business - Published
- 2015
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39. MP78-09 5-YEARS BIOCHEMICAL RECURRENCE AND OVERALL SURVIVAL RATES AFTER RADICAL PROSTATECTOMY OR HIGH DOSE RADIATION BRACHYTHERAPY WITH ADDITIONAL EXTERNAL BEAM IN PATIENTS WITH CLINICALLY LOCALIZED PROSTATE CANCER
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Katharina Boehm, Hans Lesmana, Jonas Schiffmann, Alessandro Larcher, Rudolf Schwarz, and Derya Tilki
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Urology - Published
- 2015
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40. Therapy of Treatment Failure After Curative Treatment of Prostate Cancer
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Markus Graefen, Andreas Krüll, and Rudolf Schwarz
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medicine.medical_specialty ,Percutaneous ,business.industry ,Prostatectomy ,Urology ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Brachytherapy ,Salvage therapy ,Cryotherapy ,Cryoablation ,medicine.disease ,Surgery ,Radiation therapy ,Prostate cancer ,Medicine ,business - Abstract
Objective: Recurrence rates of 40–60% after percutaneous radiotherapy or brachytherapy and 20–40% after prostatectomy are described. This review will discuss curative treatment options for salvage after primary therapy. Methods: Relevant information was identified through searches of published studies, abstracts from scientific meetings, and review articles. Results: Clinical experience in salvage therapy is limited. Salvage prostatectomy is an effective method to treat selected patients with recurrence after percutaneous radiotherapy. Cryoablation and brachytherapy are alternative methods. Conformal radiotherapy to the prostatic bed for PSA relapse and biopsy proven local recurrences after prostatectomy remains the only potentially curative therapy. It can provide durable biochemical control in a range from 17% to 78%. Salvage radiotherapy is well tolerated. Some prognostic factors exist which can help to select the right patient for this treatment. Patients have to be treated early for PSA relapse. Conclusions: Salvage prostatectomy for highly selected patients is an effective treatment with excellent long-term control. Complication rates were reduced in the last years. Conformal radiotherapy to the prostatic bed for PSA relapse and biopsy proven local recurrences after prostatectomy is a good documented curative therapy. In a patient with a high probability of local recurrence early radiotherapy for PSA relapse is suggested.
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- 2006
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41. Epoetin-α during radiotherapy for stage III esophageal carcinoma
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Volker Rudat, Steven E. Schild, Rudolf Schwarz, Hendric Job, Dirk Rades, and Emre F. Yekebas
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Cancer Research ,Chemotherapy ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Performance status ,business.industry ,Esophageal disease ,medicine.medical_treatment ,medicine.disease ,Gastroenterology ,Group B ,Radiation therapy ,Oncology ,Internal medicine ,Carcinoma ,Medicine ,Hemoglobin ,business ,Nuclear medicine ,Prospective cohort study - Abstract
BACKGROUND It has been suggested that hemoglobin levels of 12–14 g/dL are optimal for tumor oxygenation, radiosensitivity, and prognosis. In this prospective study, the authors evaluated the effectiveness of epoetin-α to maintain hemoglobin levels at 12–14 g/dL during radiotherapy (RT) for patients with UICC Stage III esophageal carcinoma, and they examined the impact of erythropoetin on overall survival (OS), metastatic-free survival (MFS), and local control (LC). METHODS Sixty patients who received RT between March, 2001 and September, 2004, were included in this prospective, nonrandomized study. Thirty patients received epoetin-α (150 IU/kg 3 times per week) during RT (Group A), and 30 patients did not receive epoetin-α (Group B). Epoetin-α was started at hemoglobin levels < 13 g/dL and was stopped at hemoglobin levels ≥ 14 g/dL. Hemoglobin was measured before RT and once weekly during RT. RESULTS Both patient groups were balanced for age, gender, performance status, tumor location/length, histology, grading, tumor classification, lymph node status, chemotherapy, treatment (45–50.4 grays [Gy] plus resection vs. 45.0–50.4 Gy vs. 59.4–66.0 Gy), and hemoglobin level before RT. In 20 of 30 patients (67%) from Group A and in 3 of 30 patients (10%) from Group B, ≥ 60% of hemoglobin levels during RT were 12–14 g/dL (P = 0.003). The median change in hemoglobin was + 0.4 g/dL per week in Group A and − 0.4 g/dL per week in Group B. LC was significantly better in Group A (66% vs. 38% at 1 year, respectively; P = 0.012), a trend was observed for OS (59% vs. 33%, respectively; P = 0.08), and MFS did not differ significantly (43% vs. 38%, respectively; P = 0.34). No epoetin-α-related toxicity was observed. CONCLUSIONS Epoetin-α was effective in maintaining the hemoglobin levels at 12–14 g/dL during RT. The application of epoetin-α significantly improved LC, and a trend was observed for OS. Cancer 2005. © 2005 American Cancer Society.
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- 2005
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42. DEGRO 2004
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T Block, S. Röddiger, H. Fees, P. Feyer, T. Brunner, H. Karle, H. von Specht, M. Schwedas, A. Schmidt, H.-J. Ochel, N. Kröger, K. Müller, R. Waksman, M. Li, R. Sauer, S. Wesarg, A. Van Eck, D. Trog, R. Wilkowski, U. W. Tunn, K. Ikezaki, S. Könemann, L. Acimovic, Wolfgang Hinkelbein, Michael Bremer, E. Dühmke, J. Claßen, J.-I. Kotani, M. Püsken, J. Dudas, B. Pfistner, Christian Grehn, S. Ley, T. Martin, K. Maier-Hauff, A. Hartmann, Martin Weinmann, J. Kutzner, H. Vogel, I. Schmid, W. Lübcke, S. Roth, A. Krystek, Stefan Schultze-Mosgau, L. Freudenberg, J. Dahlke, P. K. Plinkert, Thomas Foitzik, M. Franz, C. Ludwig, O. Schorr, R. Wirtz, J. Klein, K. Krimmel, B. Weigel, A. K. Rustgi, J. Büntzel, W. Stahl, E. Pinnow, M. Graefen, S. Frühauf, K.-J. Buth, P. Reimann, E. A. Lazaridis, J. Lutterbach, C. Schleußner, R. Köster, Matthias Geiger, Beate Timmermann, D. A. Canos, Florian Auer, T. P. Nguyen, R. Anselm, T. M. Behr, Axel Müller, R. Bonnet, K. Leppert, Nicolaus Andratschke, Tilo Wiezorek, N. Prause, M. Tatagiba, M. Busch, N. Banz, M. van Kampen, P.-J. Prott, G. Schlichting, J. Körholz, M. Fritsch, B. Strauß, H. D. Böttcher, K. Schoenekaes, J. Schäfer, Renate Sieber, H. Jürgens, M. Schiebe, D. Milanovic, B. Al-Nawas, T. Beyer, B. Polivka, C. Fink, J. E. Panke, P. M. Messer, R. Kramer, C. F. Hess, D. Eßer, V. Steil, F. Bruns, Reinhard Thamm, R. Kumpf, M. Alber, U. Haverkamp, U. Mende, Christoph Thilmann, M. Bolck, M. W. Groß, Gunther Klautke, A. Zander, Sibylle Stärk, E. Tabbert, H. Taubert, M. Damrau, C. Weining, N. Franz, M. Puderbach, F. Melchert, L. Liu, W. Ito, S. Palkovic, B. Madry-Gevecke, T. Bölling, A. Kaffer, O. Micke, H. Schmidberger, M. Glashörster, A. Günther, S. Püttmann, A. Jordan, U. Claussen, Peter E. Huber, K. Lederer, S. Heiland, M. Niewald, H. Kühl, G. Gademann, Eugen Lang, B. Stieltjes, V. Ehemann, E. Horst, K. Heufelder, D. Fröhlich, S. Sepe, Roger E. Price, R. Bauer, E. Weiss, M. Reinhold, Moshe Schaffer, J.-C. Georgi, A. Dastbaz, Thomas Krieger, P. Hirnle, S. Garbe, D. Küstner, F. Pohl, N. Presselt, C. Voith, V. Meineke, P. Zogal, C. Herskind, S. Liesenfeld, F.-J. Prott, U. Kulka, Thomas Hendrik Knocke, T. Münzel, S. Kusche, Franz Rödel, Christian Ralf Gernhardt, C. Dilcher, Ute Küchenmeister, H. Alfia, N. Willich, D. Stratakis, G. Ramadori, R. Schmid, F. Zimmermann, L. Distel, K.-M. Mueller, V. Diehl, C. Höpfner, Frank Sieker, D. Cengiz, C. Plathow, E. Rolf, E. Schneider, W. Melzner, S.B. Schwarz, D. Sammour, D. Richter, I. Eichwurzel, H. Wassmann, A. L. Huston, B. Dietl, U. Melcher, F. Berthold, B. Kimmig, R. Mager, Richard Pötter, D. Drechsler, A. Lilienthal, A. Schmähl, M. Stuschke, A. Mencl, D. Schwab, H. Mörtel, O. Schneider, K.-W. Sykora, J. Willner, E. Lücke, N. Weidner, K. Hans-Jürgen, Sybille Gutwein, S. Kremp, R. Böhme, M. O. Klein, S. Nill, Hans-Günter Schaller, Matthias W. Beckmann, A. Feussner, M. Miemietz, A. Schmachtenberg, R. Seaborn, R.-P. Müller, Margret Rave-Fränk, A. Block, M. Gotthardt, I. Hacker, Á. Mayer, H.-W. Gottfried, G. Sakas, F. Nüsslin, M. Reinert, Markus Bohrer, H. Schmidt, A. Scheda, B. Dobler, T. Merz, K. Hansemann, K. A. Grötz, Grit Welzel, D. Isik, K. Wagner, P. Marini, C. Schäfer, M. Schrappe, T. Trinh, V. Rudat, M. Kowalski, T. Schneider, Daniela Schulz-Ertner, H. D. Weitmann, M. Henzel, I. Zuna, A. Nolte, Birgit Lang, K. Kian Ang, Thomas Wiegel, G. Seifert, A. Gossmann, D. van Beuningen, R. Wolfram, R. Hofheinz, K. Ludwig, T. Heil, M. Wittlinger, G. Lochhas, M. Houf, Robert Krempien, T. Averbeck, N. M. Blumstein, S. Astner, R. Willers, K.-J. Weber, J. Lorenzen, A. Krüll, U. Hädinger, C. Stoffregen, B. Pollock, S. Weidauer, U. Höller, M. Behe, B. Didinger, J. Gerstein, L. Bauer, S. Schill, M. Roebel, R. Schauer, J. Lamprecht, M. A. Leonardi, Otto A. Sauer, M. Molls, A. Varkonyi, Silke Tribius, U. Schäfer, V. Ghilescu, U. Keller, R. Galalae, E. Weiß, M. Buechler, W. Thiem, W. Winkelmann, S. N. Reske, T. Riedel, C. Int-Veen, Peter Geyer, A. Hunold, Barbara Röper, P. Peschke, M. Becker-Schiebe, I. Schulz, S. Bernhard, J. Fleckenstein, A. Hertel, H. Wördehoff, G. Müller, H. Grundtke, F. Rudolf, C. Böhme, Kurt Baier, R. Ullrich, S. Hesselmann, M. Raub, M. Schmidt, B. Hero, D. Sidow, C. Schöfl, U. Rühl, N. J. Volegova-Neher, C. Pöttgen, Stefan Glocker, Frank W. Hensley, Steven E. Schild, N. Dettmar, A. Quanz, R. Oppenkowski, A. Oettel, I. Seufert, U. Ganswindt, Volker Budach, H. Schoepgens, T. Fink, C. Ostertag, B. Milicic, R. C. Chan, F. Kiessling, J. Diebold, P. Rai, H.-U. Kauczor, H. Hoppe, P. Wolf, K. Litzenberger, M. Kappler, Peter Kneschaurek, Steffi Pigorsch, F. Momm, K. Kaube, Jörg Wiltfang, E. Koscielniak, J. Bohsung, J. Zumbe, K.-H. Grosser, N. Nüse, P. Erichsen, G. Kleinert, Chr. Rübe, P. Lukas, P. Spillner, C. Fehr, P. Benkel, O. Kölbl, N. Cordes, B. Hültenschmidt, Marc Bischof, N. J. Weissman, K. Yang, A. Engling, S. Milker-Zabel, Arndt-Christian Müller, B. Jeremic, D. Sandrock, Gabriele Hänsgen, C. Schul, Jörn Wulf, C. Fauser, M. Reiner, K. Dederer, M. Thelen, B. Grzyska, C. Evers, S. Daeuber, V. Platz, D. Riesenbeck, M. Erren, H. Zieher, W. Zeller, R. Bahrehmand, L. Wisser, K. Hoeffken, S. Kalb, M. Flentje, B. Greve, Claudia Waldhäusl, Fabian Fehlauer, Alessandra Siegmann, H. Czempiel, H. Stattaus, F. O’Tio, Vratislav Strnad, S. Frick, R. Kurek, E. Koepcke, R. Jäger, E. Severin, K. Krause, K. Pinsker, A.-R. Fischedick, P. Bach, S. Steinvorth, J. Blumberg, A. Stoßberg, Jörg Licher, S. X. Cavanaugh, R. Skripnitchenko, B. Mbarek, J. L. Martinez, V. van Lengen, Gabriele Beckmann, H. Saleske, E. Susanne, Christian Rübe, S. Mose, D. Rades, C. Scholz, P. Kupelian, T. W. Kaulich, M. Thoma, M. Stahl, A. Naszaly, M. R. Veldwijk, G. Radosavljevic-Asic, J. Schröder, Frank-Michael Köhn, L. Malaimare, Mathias Walke, K. Fischedick, M. Schmuecking, Gudrun Goitein, D. Hornung, T. Zabelina, N. Jirsak, K. Wolf, B. Schick, Mirko Nitsche, C. Pambor, K. Bajor, Isabell Braun, N. Czech, A. Sak, B. Hornig, Eric J. Bernhard, J. Meier zu Eissen, Michael Lotter, W. Hoffmann, L. Edler, Holger Hof, J. Lambert, M. Henke, C. Baum, B. Justus, W. Eyrich, I. Grießbach, T. Liehr, M. Wannenmacher, Peter Kessler, Klaus Eberlein, J. Dunst, A. E. Trappe, L. Hoffmann, S. Gruber, K. Mathias, S. Fruehauf, J. Hammer, J. H. Karstens, Erwin M. Röttinger, R. Schneider, G. Rothe, S. Milisavljevic, B. Pöllinger, H. Christiansen, A. Heinecke, Stefan Welz, B. Saile, W. Mühlnickel, M. Cartes, Rolf Kreienberg, M. Niemeyer, Claus Belka, T. Meyer, A. Nikoghosyan, Birgit Siekmeyer, K. Neubauer-Saile, Toralf Reimer, F. Bartel, M. Scheithauer, T. Osterham, Marc W. Münter, B. Theophil, N. Köhler, B. Krenkel, B. Hermann, M. Romano, T. Hölscher, T. Christian, M.-L. Sautter-Bihl, A. Bakai, K. Steckler, Franz Schwab, O. Bundschuh, S. Staar, G. Maurer, Johanna Gellermann, M. K. Körner, V. Hamelmann, T. Wenk, Jussi Moog, V. Heyl, S. Riedl, K. Lipson, T. Hehr, B. Röhrig, I. Schlöcker, I. Wildfang, H. Feldmann, D. Jürgen, A. Van Oosterhut, D. Vordermark, W. Schlegel, A. Kolkmeyer, R. Holy, N. Fridtjof, M. J. Eble, M. Pinkawa, S. Levegrün, P. Schneider, J. Debus, A. M. Frank, Andreas Engert, M. Bamberg, Reinhard Wurm, D. Treutler, M. Michaelis, Hans-Theodor Eich, I. Brecht, P. Gong, U. Keilholz, Martin Kocher, H. Salz, Oliver Koelbl, A. Schuchert, M. Osvath, H. Petrat, B. Asadpour, M. Birkner, B. Henzel, O. Hamid, Michael Baumann, G. Sigingan-Tek, B. Robrandt, B. Gerber, Ulf Lamprecht, J. Treuner, C. G. Rahl, G. Jakse, Roland Felix, N. Zöller, W. Krüger, F. Lohr, S.-K. Mai, C. Reddy, V. M. Shah, T. Olschewski, Wolfgang Harms, Martin Fuss, K. Markert, A. Kuechler, F. S. Schreiber, K.-H. Kloetzer, Jan Palm, F. Jänicke, R. Scholz, Y. Nour, W. Mohr, R. Exeler, D. Strauß, U. Oppitz, A. Kuhlmey, A. Schuck, K. Lang, A. Hille, A. Dani, R. Wehrmann, A. Hochhaus, L. Piasswilm, C. Winkler, B. van Oorschot, F.-W. Keffel, K. Jung, H. Gumprecht, R. Henschler, S. Swiderski, N. Waldöfner, Thilo Dörk, J. Thale, I. Griessbach, Dirk Bottke, F. Heinze, S. Roeddiger, S. Laufs, Detlef Imhoff, H. Annweiler, C. Verfaillie, M. Knips, R. Baumann, P. Barwig, P. Ketterer, B. Hentschel, Christiane Berns, M. Keller, B. Forthuber, G. S. Mintz, Martina Treiber, C. Moustakis, W. Huhnt, W. Oehler, U. Maurer, Juergen Wolf, H. Alheit, B. Kober, Guido Hildebrandt, R. Guttenberger, H. Vorwerk, Peter Vacha, N. Zamboglou, H. Job, O. Pradier, R. M. Huber, C. Pfaffendorf, Jürgen Füller, K. Engel, J. Zurheide, Artur Mayerhofer, D. Hahm, C. Nieder, U. Löhrs, J. Leonhardi, H. Thurmann, F. Willeke, D. Köppen, T. Dannenberg, G. Matschuck, E. Blank, B. von Gerstenberg-Helldorf, C. Seidel, H. Borchers, H. Lemnitzer, Rainer Souchon, A. Siefert, G. Strasssmann, K. Huppers, C. Schaal, H. Frommhold, W. Hosch, S. Theden, T. Wilhelm, U. Spahn, S. Höcht, Robert Semrau, J. Schultze, I. von Schorlemer, N. Riefenstahl, W. Reuschel, A.-M. Bentia, U. Glowalla, U. Schalldach, Verena Jendrossek, Amira Bajrovic, M. Schmücking, S.-W. Rha, B. Neu, M. Kuhlen, Markus Buchgeister, D. Treutier, T. Körschgen, Susanne Oertel, A. Schlieck, F. Schroeder, F. Paulsen, B. Knutzen, K. Kisters, F. van Valen, S. Tippelt, R. Pakala, J. Beck, Anca-Ligia Grosu, J. Hayen, Klaus Bratengeier, U. Militz, Raymonde Busch, S. Pachmann, M. Bache, M. Seebass, C. G. Blumstein, D. Lorenz, A. Johne, B. Kaminski, S. Neubauer, P. Zahn, Wolfgang A. Weber, M. Tine, M. Herbst, K. Junker, Thomas G. Wendt, Johannes Classen, C. Bilecen, S. Appold, P. Fritz, H. Koltze, M. Piroth, H. Molina, A. Zabel, C. B. Lumenta, B. Müller, Susanne Sehlen, Y. Kaplan, K. Brüchner, J. Güttler, S. Kunze, B. Schwald, C. Born, Rudolf Schwarz, E. Östreicher, G. Guenther, G. Friedel, Amir Abdollahi, Kathleen Grüschow, M. Glatzel, M. Richter, H. G. Strauß, Thomas Kuhnt, Klaus Herfarth, M. Guckenberger, K. Theodorou, A. Szasz, H. Schmitz, U. Kraus-Tiefenbacher, W. Budach, A. Winzer, Sabine Semrau, A. Mondry, M. Munnes, Peter Wust, W. Alberti, C. P. Schneider, G. Adam, S. Grehl, Stephen M. Hahn, B. Aydeniz, B. J. Salter, D. Wolff, P. Csere, P. Patonay, Robert Michael Hermann, S. Bäsecke, U. Koch, L. Schlenger, M. Rogger, T. Meinertz, R. Berndt-Skorka, V. Heinemann, Dieter Oetzel, Friedrich Wilhelm Neukam, H. Seibert, B. Rogge, C. Kappas, Anthony Lomax, Hans Geinitz, B. Sommer, K. Lehmann, A. Martin, I. Wolf, Rita Engenhart-Cabillic, C. Baumbach, G. G. Grabenbauer, Johannes Ring, K. Thompson, T. Wendt, S. Ahrens, C. Liebscher, G. Schaal, S. Steinkirchner, G. Horstmann, B. Wahlers, Ernst Klar, T. Loch, G. Assmann, W. G. McKenna, A. Mattke, S. Knaack, U. Ramm, P. Schüller, T. Gorbatov, D. Hellinga, W. Wagner, Hilbert Blank, W. Kleen, K. Janke, T. Welzel, W. Arnold, K. Fleckenstein, U. Gneveckow, K. Xydis, I. Haas, G. Stüben, B. Gagel, B. Wörmann, M. Ibrahim, A. Warszawski, A. Niesen, B. Elo, H. Kabisch, K. Meyer, Claus Rödel, H. Göbel, C. Weiß, U. Pinkert, N. Licht, Rainer Fietkau, Th. Herrmann, S. Bartelt, D. Lehmann, O. Baumgart, D. Jacob-Heutmann, P. Treusacher, H. Hollenhorst, J. Ficker, D. Baltas, C. Weber, B. Prümer, V. Kanellopoulos-Niemeyer, H. Jung, T. Hoelscher, Thomas Papadopoulos, M. Sure, O. Ott, H. Huland, Cordelia Hoinkis, F. Wenz, B. Bürger, H.-J. Kraus, Klaus-Josef Weber, M. Todorovic, F. Indenkämpen, J. Licner, Astrid Katzer, D. Lubgan, K.-H. Link, E. Liebermeister, B. Michaelis, G. Matnjani, M. Heintz, F. Guntrum, A. Grüneisen, A. Krauß, J. Schulte-Mönting, P. Achanta, Stephanie E. Combs, E. John, R. P. Baum, J. Haferanke, R. Feierabend, M. H. Seegenschmiedt, B. Rhein, M. Kolb, W. Spengler, A. Meyer, U. Niewöhner-Desbordes, A. Buchali, R. Mücke, K. Hamm, S. B. Müller, M. Kunkel, and K. Schönekaes
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Gynecology ,03 medical and health sciences ,medicine.medical_specialty ,0302 clinical medicine ,Oncology ,business.industry ,MEDLINE ,Medicine ,Radiology, Nuclear Medicine and imaging ,business ,030218 nuclear medicine & medical imaging - Published
- 2004
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43. Various regimens for prophylactic treatment of patients with haemophilia
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Rudolf Schwarz, Rolf Ljung, and Ulf Tedgård
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Adult ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Catheterization, Central Venous ,Lower risk ,Haemophilia ,Hemophilia A ,Antibodies ,Drug Administration Schedule ,Quality of life ,Risk Factors ,Internal medicine ,Arthropathy ,Hemarthrosis ,medicine ,Humans ,Intensive care medicine ,Ultrasonography ,Hematology ,Factor VIII ,business.industry ,Risk of infection ,Arthritis ,Age Factors ,Infant ,General Medicine ,Bleed ,medicine.disease ,Magnetic Resonance Imaging ,Surgery ,Regimen ,Child, Preschool ,Quality of Life ,Joints ,business - Abstract
Haemophilia prophylaxis is superior to on-demand treatment to prevent joint damage. High-dose prophylaxis' as used in Sweden is more effective in preventing arthropathy than an intermediate-dose regimen' (the Netherlands) and the Canadian tailored primary prophylaxis. Prophylaxis may reduce the risk of developing inhibitors. There is no difference in inhibitor risk between plasma derived and recombinant factor VIII (rFVIII) products but the Rodin study showed increased risk with second-generation rFVIII products. MRI is a new and very sensitive tool to detect the symptoms of early arthropathy but some results (soft tissue changes in bleed-free joints') still need to be investigated. Ultrasound is a very helpful method to aid diagnosis especially during the acute phase of a bleed. The risk of infection with central venous access remains a matter of debate. A fully implanted central venous access device (CVAD) has a significant lower risk of infection compared to external CVADs. Patient's age under 6yr and inhibitor presence are additional risk factors for infections. The role of arteriovenous fistulae needs to be investigated because significant complications have been reported. Disease-specific quality of life instruments are complementary to generic instruments evaluating QoL in patients with haemophilia and have become important health outcome measures. (Less)
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- 2014
44. Additional androgen deprivation makes the difference: Biochemical recurrence-free survival in prostate cancer patients after HDR brachytherapy and external beam radiotherapy
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Hans Lesmana, Andreas Krüll, Markus Graefen, Jonas Schiffmann, Cordula Petersen, Volker Platz, Rudolf Schwarz, Katharina Boehm, Derya Tilki, Burkhard Beyer, Pierre Tennstedt, and Georg Salomon
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Biochemical recurrence ,Oncology ,Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,medicine.drug_class ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Brachytherapy ,urologic and male genital diseases ,Disease-Free Survival ,Androgen deprivation therapy ,Prostate cancer ,Neoplasm Recurrence ,Internal medicine ,Medicine ,Humans ,Radiology, Nuclear Medicine and imaging ,External beam radiotherapy ,Aged ,business.industry ,Prostatic Neoplasms ,Androgen Antagonists ,Chemoradiotherapy ,Androgen ,medicine.disease ,Combined Modality Therapy ,Radiation therapy ,Neoplasm Recurrence, Local ,Radiotherapy, Conformal ,business - Abstract
The role of additional androgen deprivation therapy (ADT) in prostate cancer (PCa) patients treated with combined HDR brachytherapy (HDR-BT) and external beam radiotherapy (EBRT) is still unknown.Consecutive PCa patients classified as D'Amico intermediate and high-risk who underwent HDR-BT and EBRT treatment ± ADT at our institution between January 1999 and February 2009 were assessed. Multivariable Cox regression models predicting biochemical recurrence (BCR) were performed. BCR-free survival was assessed with Kaplan-Meier analyses.Overall, 392 patients were assessable. Of these, 221 (56.4 %) underwent trimodality (HDR-BT and EBRT and ADT) and 171 (43.6 %) bimodality (HDR-BT and EBRT) treatment. Additional ADT administration reduced the risk of BCR (HR: 0.4, 95 % CI: 0.3-0.7, p 0.001). D'Amico high-risk patients had superior BCR-free survival when additional ADT was administered (log-rank p 0.001). No significant difference for BCR-free survival was recorded when additional ADT was administered to D'Amico intermediate-risk patients (log-rank p = 0.2).Additional ADT administration improves biochemical control in D'Amico high-risk patients when HDR-BT and EBRT are combined. Physicians should consider the oncological benefit of ADT administration for these patients during the decision-making process.
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- 2014
45. MP51-18 ADJUVANT AND SALVAGE RADIOTHERAPY AFTER RADICAL PROSTATECTOMY DOES NOT COMPROMISE URINARY CONTINENCE
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Thorsten Schlomm, Dominik Lanwehr, Andreas Becker, Hartwig Huland, Meike Adam, Pierre Tennstedt, Philipp Wenzel, Markus Graefen, Rudolf Schwarz, and Uwe Michl
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medicine.medical_specialty ,Urinary continence ,business.industry ,Prostatectomy ,Urology ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Salvage radiotherapy ,Medicine ,business ,Adjuvant - Published
- 2014
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46. Ergebnisse der Strahlentherapie von Wirbelkörperangiomen
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Sophie Brackrock, Andreas Krüll, Winfried Alberti, and Rudolf Schwarz
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medicine.medical_specialty ,business.industry ,Vascular disease ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Treatment outcome ,Retrospective cohort study ,medicine.disease ,Vertebra ,Hemangioma ,Radiation therapy ,Angioma ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Oncology ,medicine ,Radiology, Nuclear Medicine and imaging ,Radiology ,Spinal Neoplasms ,business - Abstract
Analyse unserer Therapieergebnisse bei der Behandlung von symptomatischen Wirbelkorperangiomen und Bewertung der Literatur.
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- 1999
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47. A randomized, double-blind clinical trial of two doses of meloxicam compared with naproxen in children with juvenile idiopathic arthritis: short- and long-term efficacy and safety results
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Nicolino Ruperto, Irina Nikishina, Evgueni D. Pachanov, Ynessa Shachbazian, Anne Marie Prieur, Richard Mouy, Rik Joos, Francesco Zulian, Rudolf Schwarz, Valeria Artamonova, Wolfgang Emminger, Marcia Bandeira, Antonella Buoncompagni, Ivan Foeldvari, Fernanda Falcini, Eileen Baildam, Isabelle Kone Paut, Valeria Gerloni, Alessandro Lenhardt, Alberto Martini, Gertraud Hanft, Ralf Sigmund, Stefan Simianer, Pediatric Rheumatology International, ALESSIO, MARIA, Nicolino, Ruperto, Irina, Nikishina, Evgueni D., Pachanov, Ynessa, Shachbazian, Anne Marie, Prieur, Richard, Mouy, Rik, Joo, Francesco, Zulian, Rudolf, Schwarz, Valeria, Artamonova, Wolfgang, Emminger, Marcia, Bandeira, Antonella, Buoncompagni, Ivan, Foeldvari, Fernanda, Falcini, Eileen, Baildam, Isabelle Kone, Paut, Alessio, Maria, Valeria, Gerloni, Alessandro, Lenhardt, Alberto, Martini, Gertraud, Hanft, Ralf, Sigmund, Stefan, Simianer, and Pediatric Rheumatology, International
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Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Randomization ,Adolescent ,Immunology ,Analgesic ,Thiazines ,Administration, Oral ,Meloxicam ,law.invention ,Naproxen ,Rheumatology ,Randomized controlled trial ,Double-Blind Method ,law ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,Immunology and Allergy ,Humans ,Pharmacology (medical) ,Cyclooxygenase Inhibitors ,Antipyretic ,Adverse effect ,Child ,business.industry ,Anti-Inflammatory Agents, Non-Steroidal ,medicine.disease ,Arthritis, Juvenile ,Surgery ,Clinical trial ,Thiazoles ,Treatment Outcome ,Child, Preschool ,Female ,business ,Juvenile rheumatoid arthritis ,medicine.drug - Abstract
Objective In an international, multicenter, double-blind, randomized clinical trial we evaluated the short-term (3 months) and long-term (12 months) efficacy and safety of 2 different doses of meloxicam oral suspension compared with the efficacy and safety of naproxen oral suspension in children with oligoarticular-course (oligo-course) or polyarticular-course (poly-course) juvenile idiopathic arthritis (JIA). Methods Children ages 2–16 years who had active oligo-course or poly-course JIA and who required therapy with a nonsteroidal antiinflammatory drug were eligible for this trial. Patients were randomly allocated to receive therapy with meloxicam oral suspension, 0.125 mg/kg body weight in a single daily dose; meloxicam oral suspension, 0.25 mg/kg body weight in a single daily dose; or naproxen, 10 mg/kg body weight in 2 daily doses. The trial drugs were administered in a double-blind, double-dummy design for up to 12 months. Response rates were determined according to the American College of Rheumatology pediatric 30% improvement criteria (ACR pediatric 30). Safety parameters were assessed by evaluating the frequency of adverse events in the 3 groups. Results Of 232 patients enrolled, 225 received treatment, 6 were not eligible for randomization, and 1 randomized patient was not treated. One hundred eighty-two patients (81%) completed the 12-month treatment period. Response rates according to the ACR pediatric 30 criteria improved from month 3 to month 12, as follows: from 63% to 77% in the meloxicam 0.125 mg/kg group, from 58% to 76% in the meloxicam 0.25 mg/kg group, and from 64% to 74% in the naproxen group. No statistically significant differences in response rates were observed between the groups. There were no differences in the frequency of adverse events or abnormal laboratory values between the 3 groups. Conclusion The short- and long-term safety and efficacy of meloxicam oral suspension appear to be comparable with the safety and efficacy of naproxen oral suspension in the treatment of oligo-course and poly-course JIA. The once-daily administration of meloxicam oral suspension might represent an improvement in the treatment of JIA.
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- 2005
48. Ergebnisse der Strahlentherapie bei Meningeomen mit hohem Rezidivrisiko
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Michael H. Baumann, Sigrid Friedrich, C. Winkler, Rudolf Schwarz, and Sylvia Dornfeld
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Radiation therapy ,Meningioma ,Oncology ,business.industry ,medicine.medical_treatment ,medicine ,Radiology, Nuclear Medicine and imaging ,business ,medicine.disease ,Nuclear medicine - Published
- 1998
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49. Salvagebehandlung fortgeschrittener Plattenepithelkarzinome der Mundhöhle und des Oropharynx
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R. Schmelzle, Rudolf Schwarz, K. Plambeck, Reinhard E Friedrich, Andreas Krüll, and Horst Thurmann
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Gynecology ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Oncology ,business.industry ,medicine ,Radiology, Nuclear Medicine and imaging ,business - Abstract
Es wurde retrospektiv der Einflus der interstitiellen High-dose-rate-(HDR-)Brachytherapie mit Iridium 192 auf die lokale Tumorkontrolle und Gesamtuberlebenszeit von Patienten mit fortgeschrittenen, perkutan vorbestrahlten Mundhohlen- und Oropharynxkarzinomen untersucht. 38 Patienten mit Plattenepithelkarzinomen der Mundhohle und des Oropharynx wurden wahrend eines Zeitraums von sieben Jahren (1988 bis 1994) mit der interstitiellen Brachytherapie nach dem HDR-Afterloading-Verfahren (Gammamed® 12i, Iridium 192) behandelt. Die Vorbehandlung von 34 Patienten variierte entsprechend der individuellen Krankheitsverlaufe: perkutane Strahlentherapie bei 33 Patienten (60 bis 75,6 Gy), davon bei acht Patienten Bestrahlung und ablative Tumoroperation. Ein Patient war non in sano voroperiert. Vier Patienten waren weder operiert noch perkutan bestrahlt worden. Die Indikationen zur Brachytherapie waren uberwiegend Rest- oder Rezidivtumoren nach vorausgegangener externer Strahlentherapie. Die klinische und morphologische Beurteilung ergab eine komplette Remission in zwolf, eine partielle Remission in 19, keine Veranderung in zwei und einen lokalen Progres in funf Fallen. Nach einer mittleren Nachbeobachtungszeit von 15 Monaten betrug die lokale Tumorkontrolle nach sechs Monaten 59% und nach zwolf Monaten 47%. Die Uberlebensrate der Patienten nach diesen Zeiten lag bei 81% bzw. 49%. Die interstitielle Brachytherapie nach dem HDR-Afterloading-Verfahren wird empfohlen fur Patienten mit Lokalrezidiven und Zweitkarzinomen von Plattenepithelkarzinomen der Mundhohle und des Oropharynx, die bereits perkutan bestrahlt worden sind und fur die keine erneute perkutane Bestrahlung mehr anwendbar ist. Eine Kombination der interstitiellen Brachytherapie mit chirurgischer Sanierung ist fur diese Patienten anzustreben.
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- 1997
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50. Osteosarcoma of the mobile spine
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G. Hofmann-Wackersreuther, Stefan S. Bielack, Miriam Wilhelm, T. von Kalle, Titus Kuehne, T. Andus, Katja Zils, Rudolf Schwarz, Mathias Werner, Reinhard Windhager, Leo Kager, and Peter Reichardt
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musculoskeletal diseases ,Adult ,Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Adolescent ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Pain ,Complete resection ,Disease-Free Survival ,Young Adult ,Retrospective analysis ,Medicine ,Humans ,Child ,Retrospective Studies ,Chemotherapy ,Osteosarcoma ,business.industry ,Complete remission ,Hematology ,Middle Aged ,medicine.disease ,Spine ,Surgery ,Radiation therapy ,Survival Rate ,Treatment Outcome ,Oncology ,Child, Preschool ,Lumbar spine ,Female ,Neoplasm Recurrence, Local ,business - Abstract
Background The aims of this analysis were to investigate features and outcome of high-grade osteosarcomas of the mobile spine. Patients and methods Since 1977, 20 Cooperative Osteosarcoma Study Group patients had a diagnosis of high-grade osteosarcomas of the mobile spine and were included in this retrospective analysis of patient-, tumor- and treatment-related variables and outcome. Results The median age was 29 years (range 5-58). Most frequent tumor sites were thoracic and lumbar spine. All but three patients had nonmetastatic disease at diagnosis. Treatment included surgery and chemotherapy for all patients, 13 were also irradiated. Eight patients failed to achieve a macroscopically complete surgical remission (five local, one primary metastases, two both), six died, two are alive, both with radiotherapy. Of 12 patients with complete remission at all sites, three had a recurrence (two local, one metastases) and died. The median follow-up of the 11 survivors was 8.7 years (range 3.1-22.3), 5-year overall and event-free survival rates were 60% and 43%. Age
- Published
- 2013
Catalog
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