69 results on '"Wischnewsky M"'
Search Results
2. Do T1a breast cancers profit from adjuvant systemic therapy? A multicenter retrospective cohort study of 325 T1a-patients
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Wolters, R., Ebner, F., Janni, W., Novopashenny, I., Wöckel, A., Kreienberg, R., Wischnewsky, M., Schwentner, Lukas, and Brenda study group
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- 2016
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3. Identifying the impact of inflammatory breast cancer on survival: a retrospective multi-center cohort study
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Diessner, J., Van Ewijk, R., Weiss, C. R., Janni, W., Wischnewsky, M. B., Kreienberg, R., Hancke, K., Blettner, M., Wöckel, A., and Schwentner, L.
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- 2015
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4. Gender-Related Differences in Patients Presenting with Suspected Acute Coronary Syndromes: Clinical Presentation, Biomarkers and Diagnosis
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Stähli, B. E., Gebhard, C., Yonekawa, K., Gebhard, C. E., Altwegg, L. A., von Eckardstein, A., Hersberger, M., Novopashenny, I., Wolters, R., Wischnewsky, M. B., Lüscher, T. F., and Maier, W.
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- 2015
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5. Ayurvedic vs. Conventional Nutritional Therapy Including Low-FODMAP Diet for Patients With Irritable Bowel Syndrome-A Randomized Controlled Trial.
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Jeitler, M, Wottke, T, Schumann, D, Puerto Valencia, LM, Michalsen, A, Steckhan, N, Mittwede, M, Stapelfeldt, E, Koppold-Liebscher, D, Cramer, H, Wischnewsky, M, Murthy, V, Kessler, CS, Jeitler, M, Wottke, T, Schumann, D, Puerto Valencia, LM, Michalsen, A, Steckhan, N, Mittwede, M, Stapelfeldt, E, Koppold-Liebscher, D, Cramer, H, Wischnewsky, M, Murthy, V, and Kessler, CS
- Abstract
Aims: To compare the effects of Ayurvedic and conventional nutritional therapy in patients with irritable bowel syndrome (IBS). Methods: Sixty-nine patients with IBS were randomized to Ayurvedic (n = 35) or conventional nutritional therapy according to the recommendations of the German Nutrition Society including the low-FODMAP diet (n = 34). Study visits took place at baseline and after 1, 3, and 6 months. The primary outcome was IBS symptom severity (IBS-SSS) after 3 months; secondary outcomes included stress (CPSS), anxiety and depression (HADS), well-being (WHO-5) and IBS-specific quality of life (IBS-QOL). A repeated measures general linear model (GLM) for intent-to-treat-analyses was applied in this explorative study. Results: After 3 months, estimated marginal means for IBS-SSS reductions were 123.8 [95% confidence interval (95% CI) = 92.8-154.9; p < 0.001] in the Ayurvedic and 72.7 (95% CI = 38.8-106.7; p < 0.001) in the conventional group. The IBS-SSS reduction was significantly higher in the Ayurveda group compared to the conventional therapy group (estimated marginal mean = 51.1; 95% CI = 3.8-98.5; p = 0.035) and clinically meaningful. Sixty-eight percentage of the variance in IBS-SSS reduction after 3 months can be explained by treatment, 6.5% by patients' expectations for their therapies and 23.4% by IBS-SSS at pre-intervention. Both therapies are equivalent in their contribution to the outcome variance. The higher the IBS-SSS score at pre-intervention and the larger the patients' expectations, the greater the IBS-SSS reduction. There were no significant group differences in any secondary outcome measures. No serious adverse events occurred in either group. Conclusion: Patients with IBS seem to benefit significantly from Ayurvedic or conventional nutritional therapy. The results warrant further studies with longer-term follow-ups and larger sample sizes. Clinical Trial Registration:https://clinicaltrials.gov/ct2/show/NCT03019861, identifier: NCT03019861
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- 2021
6. Impact of atrial fibrillation on outcome in takotsubo syndrome: Data from the international Takotsubo registry
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El-Battrawy, I., Cammann, V. L., Kato, K., Szawan, K. A., Di Vece, D., Rossi, A., Wischnewsky, M., Hermes-Laufer, J., Gili, S., Citro, R., Bossone, E., Neuhaus, M., Franke, J., Meder, B., Jaguszewski, M., Noutsias, M., Knorr, M., Heiner, S., D'Ascenzo, F., Dichtl, W., Burgdorf, C., Kherad, B., Tschope, C., Sarcon, A., Shinbane, J., Rajan, L., Michels, G., Pfister, R., Cuneo, A., Jacobshagen, C., Karakas, M., Koenig, W., Pott, A., Meyer, P., Arroja, J. D., Banning, A., Cuculi, F., Kobza, R., Fischer, T. A., Vasankari, T., Juhani Airaksinen, K. E., Napp, L. C., Budnik, M., Dworakowski, R., Maccarthy, P., Kaiser, C., Osswald, S., Galiuto, Leonarda, Chan, C., Bridgman, P., Beug, D., Delmas, C., Lairez, O., Gilyarova, E., Shilova, A., Gilyarov, M., Kozel, M., Tousek, P., Winchester, D. E., Galuszka, J., Ukena, C., Poglajen, G., Carrilho-Ferreira, P., Hauck, C., Paolini, C., Bilato, C., Kobayashi, Y., Prasad, A., Rihal, C. S., Liu, K., Schulze, P. C., Bianco, M., Jorg, L., Rickli, H., Pestana, G., Nguyen, T. H., Bohm, M., Maier, L. S., Pinto, F. J., Widimsky, P., Felix, S. B., Opolski, G., Braun-Dullaeus, R. C., Rottbauer, W., Hasenfuss, G., Pieske, B. M., Schunkert, H., Thiele, H., Bauersachs, J., Katus, H. A., Horowitz, J. D., Di Mario, C., Munzel, T., Crea, Filippo, Bax, J. J., Luscher, T. F., Ruschitzka, F., Duru, F., Borggrefe, M., Ghadri, J. R., Akin, I., Templin, C., Galiuto L. (ORCID:0000-0002-6831-479X), Crea F. (ORCID:0000-0001-9404-8846), El-Battrawy, I., Cammann, V. L., Kato, K., Szawan, K. A., Di Vece, D., Rossi, A., Wischnewsky, M., Hermes-Laufer, J., Gili, S., Citro, R., Bossone, E., Neuhaus, M., Franke, J., Meder, B., Jaguszewski, M., Noutsias, M., Knorr, M., Heiner, S., D'Ascenzo, F., Dichtl, W., Burgdorf, C., Kherad, B., Tschope, C., Sarcon, A., Shinbane, J., Rajan, L., Michels, G., Pfister, R., Cuneo, A., Jacobshagen, C., Karakas, M., Koenig, W., Pott, A., Meyer, P., Arroja, J. D., Banning, A., Cuculi, F., Kobza, R., Fischer, T. A., Vasankari, T., Juhani Airaksinen, K. E., Napp, L. C., Budnik, M., Dworakowski, R., Maccarthy, P., Kaiser, C., Osswald, S., Galiuto, Leonarda, Chan, C., Bridgman, P., Beug, D., Delmas, C., Lairez, O., Gilyarova, E., Shilova, A., Gilyarov, M., Kozel, M., Tousek, P., Winchester, D. E., Galuszka, J., Ukena, C., Poglajen, G., Carrilho-Ferreira, P., Hauck, C., Paolini, C., Bilato, C., Kobayashi, Y., Prasad, A., Rihal, C. S., Liu, K., Schulze, P. C., Bianco, M., Jorg, L., Rickli, H., Pestana, G., Nguyen, T. H., Bohm, M., Maier, L. S., Pinto, F. J., Widimsky, P., Felix, S. B., Opolski, G., Braun-Dullaeus, R. C., Rottbauer, W., Hasenfuss, G., Pieske, B. M., Schunkert, H., Thiele, H., Bauersachs, J., Katus, H. A., Horowitz, J. D., Di Mario, C., Munzel, T., Crea, Filippo, Bax, J. J., Luscher, T. F., Ruschitzka, F., Duru, F., Borggrefe, M., Ghadri, J. R., Akin, I., Templin, C., Galiuto L. (ORCID:0000-0002-6831-479X), and Crea F. (ORCID:0000-0001-9404-8846)
- Abstract
BACKGROUND: Atrial fibrillation (AF) is a major risk factor for mortality. The prevalence, clinical correlates, and prognostic impact of AF in Takotsubo syndrome (TTS) have not yet been investigated in a large patient cohort. This study aimed to investigate the prevalence, clinical correlates, and prognostic impact of AF in patients with TTS. METHODS AND RESULTS: Patients with TTS were enrolled from the International Takotsubo Registry, which is a multinational network with 26 participating centers in Europe and the United States. Patients were dichotomized according to the presence or absence of AF at the time of admission. Of 1584 patients with TTS, 112 (7.1%) had AF. The mean age was higher (P<0.001), and there were fewer women (P=0.046) in the AF than in the non-AF group. Left ventricular ejection fraction was significantly lower (P=0.001), and cardiogenic shock was more often observed (P<0.001) in the AF group. Both in-hospital (P<0.001) and long-term mortality (P<0.001) were higher in the AF group. Multivariable Cox regression analysis revealed that AF was independently associated with higher long-term mortality (hazard ratio, 2.31; 95% CI, 1.50– 3.55; P<0.001). Among patients with AF on admission, 42% had no known history of AF before the acute TTS event, and such patients had comparable in-hospital and long-term outcomes compared with those with a history of AF. CONCLUSIONS: In patients presenting with TTS, AF on admission is significantly associated with increased in-hospital and long-term mortality rates. Whether antiarrhythmics and/or cardioversion are beneficial in TTS with AF should thus be tested in a future trial. REGISTRATION: URL: https://www.clinicaltrials.gov; Unique identifier: NCT01947621.
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- 2021
7. Prognostic impact of acute pulmonary triggers in patients with takotsubo syndrome: new insights from the International Takotsubo Registry
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Kato, K., Cammann, V. L., Napp, L. C., Szawan, K. A., Micek, J., Dreiding, S., Levinson, R. A., Petkova, V., Wurdinger, M., Patrascu, A., Sumalinog, R., Gili, S., Clarenbach, C. F., Kohler, M., Wischnewsky, M., Citro, R., Vecchione, C., Bossone, E., Neuhaus, M., Franke, J., Meder, B., Jaguszewski, M., Noutsias, M., Knorr, M., Heiner, S., D'Ascenzo, Francesca, Dichtl, W., Burgdorf, C., Kherad, B., Tschope, C., Sarcon, A., Shinbane, J., Rajan, L., Michels, G., Pfister, R., Cuneo, A., Jacobshagen, C., Karakas, M., Koenig, W., Pott, A., Meyer, P., Roffi, M., Banning, A., Wolfrum, M., Cuculi, F., Kobza, R., Fischer, T. A., Vasankari, T., Airaksinen, K. E. J., Budnik, M., Dworakowski, R., Maccarthy, P., Kaiser, C., Osswald, S., Galiuto, Leonarda, Chan, C., Bridgman, P., Beug, D., Delmas, C., Lairez, O., Gilyarova, E., Shilova, A., Gilyarov, M., El-Battrawy, I., Akin, I., Kozel, M., Tousek, P., Winchester, D. E., Galuszka, J., Ukena, C., Poglajen, G., Carrilho-Ferreira, P., Hauck, C., Paolini, C., Bilato, C., Sano, M., Ishibashi, I., Takahara, M., Himi, T., Kobayashi, Y., Prasad, A., Rihal, C. S., Liu, K., Schulze, P. C., Bianco, M., Jorg, L., Rickli, H., Pestana, G., Nguyen, T. H., Bohm, M., Maier, L. S., Pinto, F. J., Widimsky, P., Felix, S. B., Opolski, G., Braun-Dullaeus, R. C., Rottbauer, W., Hasenfuss, G., Pieske, B. M., Schunkert, H., Borggrefe, M., Thiele, H., Bauersachs, J., Katus, H. A., Horowitz, J. D., Di Mario, Clara, Munzel, T., Crea, Filippo, Bax, J. J., Luscher, T. F., Ruschitzka, F., Ghadri, J. R., Templin, C., D'Ascenzo F., Galiuto L. (ORCID:0000-0002-6831-479X), Di Mario C., Crea F. (ORCID:0000-0001-9404-8846), Kato, K., Cammann, V. L., Napp, L. C., Szawan, K. A., Micek, J., Dreiding, S., Levinson, R. A., Petkova, V., Wurdinger, M., Patrascu, A., Sumalinog, R., Gili, S., Clarenbach, C. F., Kohler, M., Wischnewsky, M., Citro, R., Vecchione, C., Bossone, E., Neuhaus, M., Franke, J., Meder, B., Jaguszewski, M., Noutsias, M., Knorr, M., Heiner, S., D'Ascenzo, Francesca, Dichtl, W., Burgdorf, C., Kherad, B., Tschope, C., Sarcon, A., Shinbane, J., Rajan, L., Michels, G., Pfister, R., Cuneo, A., Jacobshagen, C., Karakas, M., Koenig, W., Pott, A., Meyer, P., Roffi, M., Banning, A., Wolfrum, M., Cuculi, F., Kobza, R., Fischer, T. A., Vasankari, T., Airaksinen, K. E. J., Budnik, M., Dworakowski, R., Maccarthy, P., Kaiser, C., Osswald, S., Galiuto, Leonarda, Chan, C., Bridgman, P., Beug, D., Delmas, C., Lairez, O., Gilyarova, E., Shilova, A., Gilyarov, M., El-Battrawy, I., Akin, I., Kozel, M., Tousek, P., Winchester, D. E., Galuszka, J., Ukena, C., Poglajen, G., Carrilho-Ferreira, P., Hauck, C., Paolini, C., Bilato, C., Sano, M., Ishibashi, I., Takahara, M., Himi, T., Kobayashi, Y., Prasad, A., Rihal, C. S., Liu, K., Schulze, P. C., Bianco, M., Jorg, L., Rickli, H., Pestana, G., Nguyen, T. H., Bohm, M., Maier, L. S., Pinto, F. J., Widimsky, P., Felix, S. B., Opolski, G., Braun-Dullaeus, R. C., Rottbauer, W., Hasenfuss, G., Pieske, B. M., Schunkert, H., Borggrefe, M., Thiele, H., Bauersachs, J., Katus, H. A., Horowitz, J. D., Di Mario, Clara, Munzel, T., Crea, Filippo, Bax, J. J., Luscher, T. F., Ruschitzka, F., Ghadri, J. R., Templin, C., D'Ascenzo F., Galiuto L. (ORCID:0000-0002-6831-479X), Di Mario C., and Crea F. (ORCID:0000-0001-9404-8846)
- Abstract
Aims: Acute pulmonary disorders are known physical triggers of takotsubo syndrome (TTS). This study aimed to investigate prevalence of acute pulmonary triggers in patients with TTS and their impact on outcomes. Methods and results: Patients with TTS were enrolled from the International Takotsubo Registry and screened for triggering factors and comorbidities. Patients were categorized into three groups (acute pulmonary trigger, chronic lung disease, and no lung disease) to compare clinical characteristics and outcomes. Of the 1670 included patients with TTS, 123 (7%) were identified with an acute pulmonary trigger, and 194 (12%) had a known history of chronic lung disease. The incidence of cardiogenic shock was highest in patients with an acute pulmonary trigger compared with those with chronic lung disease or without lung disease (17% vs. 10% vs. 9%, P = 0.017). In-hospital mortality was also higher in patients with an acute pulmonary trigger than in the other two groups, although not significantly (5.7% vs. 1.5% vs. 4.2%, P = 0.13). Survival analysis demonstrated that patients with an acute pulmonary trigger had the worst long-term outcome (P = 0.002). The presence of an acute pulmonary trigger was independently associated with worse long-term mortality (hazard ratio 2.12, 95% confidence interval 1.33–3.38; P = 0.002). Conclusions: The present study demonstrates that TTS is related to acute pulmonary triggers in 7% of all TTS patients, which accounts for 21% of patients with physical triggers. The presence of acute pulmonary trigger is associated with a severe in-hospital course and a worse long-term outcome.
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- 2021
8. LBA94 Effects of short-term fasting on quality of life as an add-on option during chemotherapy
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Koppold, D.A., Kessler, C., Wischnewsky, M., Alvarado-Rupflin, I.M., Kempter, C., Paul, M., Brueckner, B., Fischer, D., Steckhan, N., Jeitler, M., Hanslian, E., Kunz, B., and Michalsen, A.
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- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
9. Age-Related Variations in Takotsubo Syndrome
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Cammann, V. L., Szawan, K. A., Stahli, B. E., Kato, K., Budnik, M., Wischnewsky, M., Dreiding, S., Levinson, R. A., Di Vece, D., Gili, S., Citro, R., Bossone, E., Neuhaus, M., Franke, J., Meder, B., Jaguszewski, M., Noutsias, M., Knorr, M., Heiner, S., D'Ascenzo, F., Dichtl, W., Burgdorf, C., Kherad, B., Tschope, C., Sarcon, A., Shinbane, J., Rajan, L., Michels, G., Pfister, R., Cuneo, A., Jacobshagen, C., Karakas, M., Koenig, W., Pott, A., Meyer, P., Roffi, M., Banning, A., Wolfrum, M., Cuculi, F., Kobza, R., Fischer, T. A., Vasankari, T., Airaksinen, K. E. J., Napp, L. C., Dworakowski, R., Maccarthy, P., Kaiser, C., Osswald, S., Galiuto, Leonarda, Chan, C., Bridgman, P., Beug, D., Delmas, C., Lairez, O., Gilyarova, E., Shilova, A., Gilyarov, M., El-Battrawy, I., Akin, I., Polednikova, K., Tousek, P., Winchester, D. E., Galuszka, J., Ukena, C., Poglajen, G., Carrilho-Ferreira, P., Hauck, C., Paolini, C., Bilato, C., Kobayashi, Y., Shoji, T., Ishibashi, I., Takahara, M., Himi, T., Din, J., Al-Shammari, A., Prasad, A., Rihal, C. S., Liu, K., Schulze, P. C., Bianco, M., Jorg, L., Rickli, H., Pestana, G., Nguyen, T. H., Bohm, M., Maier, L. S., Pinto, F. J., Widimsky, P., Felix, S. B., Braun-Dullaeus, R. C., Rottbauer, W., Hasenfuss, G., Pieske, B. M., Schunkert, H., Borggrefe, M., Thiele, H., Bauersachs, J., Katus, H. A., Horowitz, J. D., Di Mario, C., Munzel, T., Crea, Filippo, Bax, J. J., Luscher, T. F., Ruschitzka, F., Ghadri, J. R., Opolski, G., Templin, C., Galiuto L. (ORCID:0000-0002-6831-479X), Crea F. (ORCID:0000-0001-9404-8846), Cammann, V. L., Szawan, K. A., Stahli, B. E., Kato, K., Budnik, M., Wischnewsky, M., Dreiding, S., Levinson, R. A., Di Vece, D., Gili, S., Citro, R., Bossone, E., Neuhaus, M., Franke, J., Meder, B., Jaguszewski, M., Noutsias, M., Knorr, M., Heiner, S., D'Ascenzo, F., Dichtl, W., Burgdorf, C., Kherad, B., Tschope, C., Sarcon, A., Shinbane, J., Rajan, L., Michels, G., Pfister, R., Cuneo, A., Jacobshagen, C., Karakas, M., Koenig, W., Pott, A., Meyer, P., Roffi, M., Banning, A., Wolfrum, M., Cuculi, F., Kobza, R., Fischer, T. A., Vasankari, T., Airaksinen, K. E. J., Napp, L. C., Dworakowski, R., Maccarthy, P., Kaiser, C., Osswald, S., Galiuto, Leonarda, Chan, C., Bridgman, P., Beug, D., Delmas, C., Lairez, O., Gilyarova, E., Shilova, A., Gilyarov, M., El-Battrawy, I., Akin, I., Polednikova, K., Tousek, P., Winchester, D. E., Galuszka, J., Ukena, C., Poglajen, G., Carrilho-Ferreira, P., Hauck, C., Paolini, C., Bilato, C., Kobayashi, Y., Shoji, T., Ishibashi, I., Takahara, M., Himi, T., Din, J., Al-Shammari, A., Prasad, A., Rihal, C. S., Liu, K., Schulze, P. C., Bianco, M., Jorg, L., Rickli, H., Pestana, G., Nguyen, T. H., Bohm, M., Maier, L. S., Pinto, F. J., Widimsky, P., Felix, S. B., Braun-Dullaeus, R. C., Rottbauer, W., Hasenfuss, G., Pieske, B. M., Schunkert, H., Borggrefe, M., Thiele, H., Bauersachs, J., Katus, H. A., Horowitz, J. D., Di Mario, C., Munzel, T., Crea, Filippo, Bax, J. J., Luscher, T. F., Ruschitzka, F., Ghadri, J. R., Opolski, G., Templin, C., Galiuto L. (ORCID:0000-0002-6831-479X), and Crea F. (ORCID:0000-0001-9404-8846)
- Abstract
Background: Takotsubo syndrome (TTS) occurs predominantly in post-menopausal women but is also found in younger patients. Objectives: This study aimed to investigate age-related differences in TTS. Methods: Patients diagnosed with TTS and enrolled in the International Takotsubo Registry between January 2011 and February 2017 were included in this analysis and were stratified by age (younger: ≤50 years, middle-age: 51 to 74 years, elderly: ≥75 years). Baseline characteristics, hospital course, as well as short- and long-term mortality were compared among groups. Results: Of 2,098 TTS patients, 242 (11.5%) patients were ≤50 years of age, 1,194 (56.9%) were 51 to 74 years of age, and 662 (31.6%) were ≥75 years of age. Younger patients were more often men (12.4% vs. 10.9% vs. 6.3%; p = 0.002) and had an increased prevalence of acute neurological (16.3% vs. 8.4% vs. 8.8%; p = 0.001) or psychiatric disorders (14.1% vs. 10.3% vs. 5.6%; p < 0.001) compared with middle-aged and elderly TTS patients. Furthermore, younger patients had more often cardiogenic shock (15.3% vs. 9.1% vs. 8.1%; p = 0.004) and had a numerically higher in-hospital mortality (6.6% vs. 3.6% vs. 5.1%; p = 0.07). At multivariable analysis, younger (odds ratio: 1.60; 95% confidence interval: 0.86 to 3.01; p = 0.14) and older age (odds ratio: 1.09; 95% confidence interval: 0.66 to 1.80; p = 0.75) were not independently associated with in-hospital mortality using the middle-aged group as a reference. There were no differences in 60-day mortality rates among groups. Conclusions: A substantial proportion of TTS patients are younger than 50 years of age. TTS is associated with severe complications requiring intensive care, particularly in younger patients.
- Published
- 2020
10. P810Novel scoring system for takotsubo syndrome
- Author
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Di Vece, D, primary, Kato, K, additional, Bacchi, B, additional, Candreva, A, additional, Cammann, V L, additional, Szawan, K A, additional, Hermes-Laufer, J, additional, Micek, J, additional, Wischnewsky, M, additional, Ghadri, J R, additional, and Templin, C, additional
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- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
11. Long-Term Prognosis of Patients With Takotsubo Syndrome
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Ghadri, Jr, Kato, K, Cammann, Vl, Gili, S, Jurisic, S, Di Vece, D, Candreva, A, Ding, Kj, Micek, J, Szawan, Ka, Bacchi, B, Bianchi, R, Levinson, Ra, Wischnewsky, M, Seifert, B, Schlossbauer, Sa, Citro, R, Bossone, E, Münzel, T, Knorr, M, Heiner, S, D'Ascenzo, F, Franke, J, Sarcon, A, Napp, Lc, Jaguszewski, M, Noutsias, M, Katus, Ha, Burgdorf, C, Schunkert, H, Thiele, H, Bauersachs, J, Tschöpe, C, Pieske, Bm, Rajan, L, Michels, G, Pfister, R, Cuneo, A, Jacobshagen, C, Hasenfuß, G, Karakas, M, Koenig, W, Rottbauer, W, Said, Sm, Braun-Dullaeus, Rc, Banning, A, Cuculi, F, Kobza, R, Fischer, Ta, Vasankari, T, Airaksinen, Kej, Opolski, G, Dworakowski, R, Maccarthy, P, Kaiser, C, Osswald, S, Galiuto, Leonarda, Crea, Filippo, Dichtl, W, Empen, K, Felix, Sb, Delmas, C, Lairez, O, El-Battrawy, I, Akin, I, Borggrefe, M, Horowitz, J, Kozel, M, Tousek, P, Widimský, P, Gilyarova, E, Shilova, A, Gilyarov, M, Winchester, De, Ukena, C, Bax, Jj, Prasad, A, Böhm, M, Lüscher, Tf, Ruschitzka, F, Templin, C., Galiuto L (ORCID:0000-0002-6831-479X), Crea F (ORCID:0000-0001-9404-8846), Ghadri, Jr, Kato, K, Cammann, Vl, Gili, S, Jurisic, S, Di Vece, D, Candreva, A, Ding, Kj, Micek, J, Szawan, Ka, Bacchi, B, Bianchi, R, Levinson, Ra, Wischnewsky, M, Seifert, B, Schlossbauer, Sa, Citro, R, Bossone, E, Münzel, T, Knorr, M, Heiner, S, D'Ascenzo, F, Franke, J, Sarcon, A, Napp, Lc, Jaguszewski, M, Noutsias, M, Katus, Ha, Burgdorf, C, Schunkert, H, Thiele, H, Bauersachs, J, Tschöpe, C, Pieske, Bm, Rajan, L, Michels, G, Pfister, R, Cuneo, A, Jacobshagen, C, Hasenfuß, G, Karakas, M, Koenig, W, Rottbauer, W, Said, Sm, Braun-Dullaeus, Rc, Banning, A, Cuculi, F, Kobza, R, Fischer, Ta, Vasankari, T, Airaksinen, Kej, Opolski, G, Dworakowski, R, Maccarthy, P, Kaiser, C, Osswald, S, Galiuto, Leonarda, Crea, Filippo, Dichtl, W, Empen, K, Felix, Sb, Delmas, C, Lairez, O, El-Battrawy, I, Akin, I, Borggrefe, M, Horowitz, J, Kozel, M, Tousek, P, Widimský, P, Gilyarova, E, Shilova, A, Gilyarov, M, Winchester, De, Ukena, C, Bax, Jj, Prasad, A, Böhm, M, Lüscher, Tf, Ruschitzka, F, Templin, C., Galiuto L (ORCID:0000-0002-6831-479X), and Crea F (ORCID:0000-0001-9404-8846)
- Abstract
Background: Prognosis of Takotsubo syndrome (TTS) remains controversial due to scarcity of available data. Additionally, the effect of the triggering factors remains elusive. Objectives: This study compared prognosis between TTS and acute coronary syndrome (ACS) patients and investigated short- and long-term outcomes in TTS based on different triggers. Methods: Patients with TTS were enrolled from the International Takotsubo Registry. Long-term mortality of patients with TTS was compared to an age- and sex-matched cohort of patients with ACS. In addition, short- and long-term outcomes were compared between different groups according to triggering conditions. Results: Overall, TTS patients had a comparable long-term mortality risk with ACS patients. Of 1,613 TTS patients, an emotional trigger was detected in 485 patients (30%). Of 630 patients (39%) related to physical triggers, 98 patients (6%) had acute neurologic disorders, while in the other 532 patients (33%), physical activities, medical conditions, or procedures were the triggering conditions. The remaining 498 patients (31%) had no identifiable trigger. TTS patients related to physical stress showed higher mortality rates than ACS patients during long-term follow-up, whereas patients related to emotional stress had better outcomes compared with ACS patients. Conclusions: Overall, TTS patients had long-term outcomes comparable to age- and sex-matched ACS patients. Also, we demonstrated that TTS can either be benign or a life-threating condition depending on the inciting stress factor. We propose a new classification based on triggers, which can serve as a clinical tool to predict short- and long-term outcomes of TTS. (International Takotsubo Registry [InterTAK Registry]; NCT01947621)
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- 2018
12. Gender-related differences in patients presenting with suspected acute coronary syndromes: clinical presentation, biomarkers and diagnosis
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Stähli, B E, Gebhard, C, Yonekawa, K, Gebhard, C E, Altwegg, L A, von Eckardstein, A, Hersberger, M; https://orcid.org/0000-0002-4472-329X, Novopashenny, I, Wolters, R, Wischnewsky, M B, Lüscher, T F, Maier, W, Stähli, B E, Gebhard, C, Yonekawa, K, Gebhard, C E, Altwegg, L A, von Eckardstein, A, Hersberger, M; https://orcid.org/0000-0002-4472-329X, Novopashenny, I, Wolters, R, Wischnewsky, M B, Lüscher, T F, and Maier, W
- Abstract
Objectives: Gender differences in patients presenting with suspected acute coronary syndromes (ACS) have not yet been fully characterized. The aim of this study was to assess gender-related disparities in clinical profiles, biomarkers and diagnoses of patients with suspected ACS. Methods: This single-centre, prospective cohort study included 377 consecutive patients presenting with suspected ACS to the emergency department. Suspected ACS was defined as a request for conventional troponin T (c-cTnT) measurements on clinical grounds. Results: Women were older than men (p = 0.004), and had a lower prevalence of known coronary artery and peripheral vascular disease (p < 0.05). c-cTnT was positive in 8% of female and in 14% of male patients (p = 0.16), TIMI risk score and cardiac biomarkers including c-cTnT, hs-cTnT, myoglobin, creatine kinase, N-terminal pro-brain natriuretic peptide, myeloid-related protein 8/14 and pregnancy-associated plasma protein A were lower in women (p < 0.05). Women were less frequently diagnosed with ACS (30 vs. 51%), and were not referred for urgent coronary angiography as often as men (p < 0.001). In multivariate analysis, female gender was associated with a lower referral for coronary angiography (HR 0.41, 95% CI 0.23-0.78, p = 0.006). Conclusions: In patients with suspected ACS, women presented with different biomarker profiles, and were less often diagnosed with ACS and referred to coronary angiography.
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- 2015
13. Identification of Endoglin as an epigenetically regulated tumour-suppressor gene in lung cancer
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O’Leary, K, primary, Shia, A, additional, Cavicchioli, F, additional, Haley, V, additional, Comino, A, additional, Merlano, M, additional, Mauri, F, additional, Walter, K, additional, Lackner, M, additional, Wischnewsky, M B, additional, Crook, T, additional, Lo Nigro, C, additional, and Schmid, P, additional
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- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
14. Einfluss der Erst- und Zweitlinientherapie auf das Gesamtüberleben des metastasierten Mammakarzinoms
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Regierer, A, primary, Wolters, R, additional, Novopashenny, I, additional, Constantinidou, M, additional, Eucker, J, additional, Possinger, K, additional, and Wischnewsky, M, additional
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- 2015
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15. Identification of Endoglin as an epigenetically regulated tumour-suppressor gene in lung cancer.
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O'Leary, K, Shia, A, Cavicchioli, F, Haley, V, Comino, A, Merlano, M, Mauri, F, Walter, K, Lackner, M, Wischnewsky, M B, Crook, T, Lo Nigro, C, and Schmid, P
- Subjects
LUNG cancer & genetics ,ENDOGLIN ,EPIGENETICS ,TRANSFORMING growth factors-beta ,TUMOR suppressor genes ,DNA methylation ,ANTIGENS ,BIOCHEMISTRY ,CELL lines ,CELL receptors ,GENES ,LUNG cancer ,LUNG tumors ,PHENOMENOLOGY ,METHYLATION ,ONCOGENES ,DISEASE progression ,PROTEIN microarrays ,SEQUENCE analysis - Abstract
Background: The transforming growth factor-beta (TGF- β) pathway has been implicated in proliferation, migration and invasion of various cancers. Endoglin is a TGF-β accessory receptor that modulates signalling. We identified Endoglin as an epigenetically silenced tumour-suppressor gene in lung cancer by means of a genome-wide screening approach, then sought to characterise its effect on lung cancer progression.Methods: Methylation microarray and RNA sequencing were carried out on lung cancer cell lines. Epigenetic silencing of Endoglin was confirmed by methylation and expression analyses. An expression vector and a 20-gene expression panel were used to evaluate Endoglin function. Pyrosequencing was carried out on two independent cohorts comprising 112 and 202 NSCLC cases, respectively, and the impact of Endoglin methylation on overall survival (OS) was evaluated.Results: Methylation in the promoter region resulted in silencing of Endoglin, which could be reactivated by demethylation. Increased invasion coupled with altered EMT marker expression was observed in cell lines with an epithelial-like, but not those with a mesenchymal-like, profile when Endoglin was absent. Methylation was associated with decreased OS in stage I but not in stages II-III disease.Conclusions: We show that Endoglin is a common target of epigenetic silencing in lung cancer. We reveal a link between Endoglin silencing and EMT progression that might be associated with decreased survival in stage I disease. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2015
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16. Prognostic impact of acute pulmonary triggers in patients with Takotsubo syndrome : new insights from the International Takotsubo Registry
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Wolfgang Koenig, John D. Horowitz, Hugo A. Katus, Paul Bridgman, Abhiram Prasad, Carlo Di Mario, Alessandro Cuneo, Johann Bauersachs, Jeroen J. Bax, Mathias Wolfrum, Carsten Tschöpe, Masanori Sano, Vanya Petkova, Lucas Jörg, Fausto J. Pinto, Petr Widimský, Masayuki Takahara, Rodolfo Citro, Iwao Ishibashi, Frank Ruschitzka, Thomas Münzel, Carmine Vecchione, Wolfgang Dichtl, Jan Galuszka, Kan Liu, Leonarda Galiuto, Grzegorz Opolski, Jozef Micek, Susanne Heiner, Florim Cuculi, Gerd Hasenfuß, Jerold S. Shinbane, Maike Knorr, Sebastiano Gili, Filippo Crea, Michael Würdinger, Alexandra Shilova, Malcolm Kohler, Lawrence Rajan, Christian F Clarenbach, Rena A. Levinson, Mikhail Gilyarov, Alexander Pott, Roman Pfister, Ekaterina Gilyarova, Claudius Jacobshagen, Adrian P. Banning, Michael Neuhaus, Jennifer Franke, Christian Templin, Christof Burgdorf, Daniel Beug, K.E. Juhani Airaksinen, Victoria L. Cammann, Thanh H Nguyen, Rafael Sumalinog, Monika Budnik, Wolfgang Rottbauer, Yoshio Kobayashi, Petr Tousek, Stephan B. Felix, Marco Roffi, Michael Böhm, Konrad A. Szawan, Toshiharu Himi, Ibrahim Akin, Christina Chan, Thomas F. Lüscher, Rafal Dworakowski, Annahita Sarcon, Ibrahim El-Battrawy, Miłosz Jaguszewski, Alexandru Patrascu, Eduardo Bossone, David E. Winchester, Michel Noutsias, Guido Michels, Gregor Poglajen, Christian Hauck, Fabrizio D'Ascenzo, Burkert Pieske, Christian Ukena, Thomas Fischer, Matteo Bianco, Lars S. Maier, Christoph Kaiser, Philippe Meyer, P. Christian Schulze, Behrouz Kherad, Gonçalo Pestana, Claudio Bilato, Ken Kato, Martin Kozel, Charanjit S. Rihal, Clément Delmas, Stefan Osswald, Olivier Lairez, Jelena R. Ghadri, Martin Borggrefe, Philip MacCarthy, Heribert Schunkert, Manfred Wischnewsky, Sara Dreiding, Hans Rickli, Tuija Vasankari, L. Christian Napp, Holger Thiele, Richard Kobza, Carla Paolini, Benjamin Meder, Mahir Karakas, Pedro Carrilho-Ferreira, Ruediger C. Braun-Dullaeus, Kato, K., Cammann, V. L., Napp, L. C., Szawan, K. A., Micek, J., Dreiding, S., Levinson, R. A., Petkova, V., Wurdinger, M., Patrascu, A., Sumalinog, R., Gili, S., Clarenbach, C. F., Kohler, M., Wischnewsky, M., Citro, R., Vecchione, C., Bossone, E., Neuhaus, M., Franke, J., Meder, B., Jaguszewski, M., Noutsias, M., Knorr, M., Heiner, S., D'Ascenzo, F., Dichtl, W., Burgdorf, C., Kherad, B., Tschope, C., Sarcon, A., Shinbane, J., Rajan, L., Michels, G., Pfister, R., Cuneo, A., Jacobshagen, C., Karakas, M., Koenig, W., Pott, A., Meyer, P., Roffi, M., Banning, A., Wolfrum, M., Cuculi, F., Kobza, R., Fischer, T. A., Vasankari, T., Airaksinen, K. E. J., Budnik, M., Dworakowski, R., Maccarthy, P., Kaiser, C., Osswald, S., Galiuto, L., Chan, C., Bridgman, P., Beug, D., Delmas, C., Lairez, O., Gilyarova, E., Shilova, A., Gilyarov, M., El-Battrawy, I., Akin, I., Kozel, M., Tousek, P., Winchester, D. E., Galuszka, J., Ukena, C., Poglajen, G., Carrilho-Ferreira, P., Hauck, C., Paolini, C., Bilato, C., Sano, M., Ishibashi, I., Takahara, M., Himi, T., Kobayashi, Y., Prasad, A., Rihal, C. S., Liu, K., Schulze, P. C., Bianco, M., Jorg, L., Rickli, H., Pestana, G., Nguyen, T. H., Bohm, M., Maier, L. S., Pinto, F. J., Widimsky, P., Felix, S. B., Opolski, G., Braun-Dullaeus, R. C., Rottbauer, W., Hasenfuss, G., Pieske, B. M., Schunkert, H., Borggrefe, M., Thiele, H., Bauersachs, J., Katus, H. A., Horowitz, J. D., Di Mario, C., Munzel, T., Crea, F., Bax, J. J., Luscher, T. F., Ruschitzka, F., Ghadri, J. R., Templin, C., and Repositório da Universidade de Lisboa
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medicine.medical_specialty ,Acute respiratory insufficiency ,acute respiratory insufficiency ,Shock, Cardiogenic ,030204 cardiovascular system & hematology ,Broken heart syndrome ,chronic obstructive pulmonary disease ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Takotsubo Cardiomyopathy ,Original Research Articles ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,Humans ,Diseases of the circulatory (Cardiovascular) system ,takotsubo syndrome ,Registries ,Original Research Article ,030212 general & internal medicine ,Survival analysis ,Outcome ,Takotsubo syndrome ,intertak registry ,business.industry ,InterTAK Registry ,Incidence (epidemiology) ,Cardiogenic shock ,Chronic obstructive pulmonary disease ,Hazard ratio ,broken heart syndrome ,Shock ,Cardiogenic ,Prognosis ,medicine.disease ,Survival Analysis ,outcome ,Confidence interval ,3. Good health ,RC666-701 ,Heart failure ,Settore MED/11 - MALATTIE DELL'APPARATO CARDIOVASCOLARE ,Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine ,business - Abstract
© 2021 The Authors. ESC Heart Failure published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd on behalf of European Society of Cardiology. This is an open access article under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial License., Aims: Acute pulmonary disorders are known physical triggers of takotsubo syndrome (TTS). This study aimed to investigate prevalence of acute pulmonary triggers in patients with TTS and their impact on outcomes. Methods and results: Patients with TTS were enrolled from the International Takotsubo Registry and screened for triggering factors and comorbidities. Patients were categorized into three groups (acute pulmonary trigger, chronic lung disease, and no lung disease) to compare clinical characteristics and outcomes. Of the 1670 included patients with TTS, 123 (7%) were identified with an acute pulmonary trigger, and 194 (12%) had a known history of chronic lung disease. The incidence of cardiogenic shock was highest in patients with an acute pulmonary trigger compared with those with chronic lung disease or without lung disease (17% vs. 10% vs. 9%, P = 0.017). In-hospital mortality was also higher in patients with an acute pulmonary trigger than in the other two groups, although not significantly (5.7% vs. 1.5% vs. 4.2%, P = 0.13). Survival analysis demonstrated that patients with an acute pulmonary trigger had the worst long-term outcome (P = 0.002). The presence of an acute pulmonary trigger was independently associated with worse long-term mortality (hazard ratio 2.12, 95% confidence interval 1.33-3.38; P = 0.002). Conclusions: The present study demonstrates that TTS is related to acute pulmonary triggers in 7% of all TTS patients, which accounts for 21% of patients with physical triggers. The presence of acute pulmonary trigger is associated with a severe in-hospital course and a worse long-term outcome., C. T. has been supported by the H.H. Sheikh Khalifa binHamad Al-Thani Research Programme and the Swiss HeartFoundation. The InterTAK Registry is supported by the BissDavies Charitable Trust. L. S. M. has been supported by EUHORIZON 2020(SILICOFCM ID777204)
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- 2021
17. Intraventricular thrombus formation and embolism in Takotsubo syndrome insights from the international Takotsubo registry
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Alexandra Shilova, Davide Di Vece, Johann Bauersachs, Wolfgang Koenig, Michael Neuhaus, Rodolfo Citro, Jose David Arroja, Adrian P. Banning, Jennifer Franke, Charanjit S. Rihal, Abhiram Prasad, Carlo Di Mario, Michael Böhm, Carsten Tschöpe, Burkhardt Seifert, Filippo Crea, Christian Templin, David E. Winchester, Hugo A. Katus, Clément Delmas, Pedro Carrilho-Ferreira, Paul Bridgman, Petr Tousek, Guido Michels, Fausto J. Pinto, Sebastiano Gili, Jelena R. Ghadri, Petr Widimský, Burkert Pieske, Jeroen J. Bax, Christian Ukena, Christoph Kaiser, Wolfgang Dichtl, Christof Burgdorf, Philippe Meyer, Christina Chan, Gerd Hasenfuß, Philip MacCarthy, Mikhail Gilyarov, Leonarda Galiuto, Grzegorz Opolski, Susanne Heiner, Ruediger C. Braun-Dullaeus, Alexander Pott, Annahita Sarcon, Ekaterina Gilyarova, Michel Noutsias, Lawrence Rajan, Claudius Jacobshagen, Roman Pfister, Behrouz Kherad, John D. Horowitz, Martin Borggrefe, Mahir Karakas, Stefan Osswald, Victoria L. Cammann, Katharina J. Ding, Jan Galuszka, Wolfgang Rottbauer, Ibrahim El-Battrawy, Stephan B. Felix, Martin Kozel, Ibrahim Akin, Thomas F. Lüscher, Frank Ruschitzka, Thomas Fischer, Fabrizio D'Ascenzo, Rafal Dworakowski, Olivier Lairez, L. Christian Napp, Holger Thiele, Eduardo Bossone, Thomas Münzel, Claudio Bilato, Maike Knorr, K.E. Juhani Airaksinen, Florim Cuculi, Carla Paolini, Konrad A. Szawan, Richard Kobza, Alessandro Cuneo, Barbara E. Stähli, Heribert Schunkert, Miłosz Jaguszewski, Manfred Wischnewsky, Tuija Vasankari, Ding, Kj, Cammann, Vl, Szawan, Ka, Stähli, Be, Wischnewsky, M, Di Vece, D, Citro, R, Jaguszewski, M, Seifert, B, Sarcon, A, Knorr, M, Heiner, S, Gili, S, D'Ascenzo, F, Neuhaus, M, Napp, Lc, Franke, J, Noutsias, M, Burgdorf, C, Koenig, W, Kherad, B, Rajan L, Michels, G, Pfister, R, Cuneo, A, Jacobshagen, C, Karakas, M, Pott, A, Meyer, P, Arroja, Jd, Banning, A, Cuculi, F, Kobza, R, Fischer, Ta, Vasankari, T, Airaksinen, Kej, Paolini, C, Bilato, C, Carrilho-Ferreira, P, Opolski, G, Dworakowski, R, Maccarthy, P, Kaiser, C, Osswald, S, Galiuto, L, Dichtl, W, Chan, C, Bridgman, P, Delmas, C, Lairez, O, El-Battrawy, I, Akin, I, Gilyarova, E, Shilova, A, Gilyarov, M, Kozel, M, Tousek, P, Widimský, P, Winchester, De, Galuszka, J, Ukena, C, Horowitz, Jd, Di Mario, C, Prasad A, Rihal, C, Pinto, Fj, Crea, F, Borggrefe, M, Braun-Dullaeus, Rc, Rottbauer, W, Bauersachs, J, Katus, Ha, Hasenfuß, G, Tschöpe, C, Pieske, Bm, Thiele, H, Schunkert, H, Böhm, M, Felix, Sb, Münzel, T, Bax, Jj, Lüscher, Tf, Ruschitzka, F, Ghadri, Jr, Bossone, E, and Templin, C.
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Male ,Coronary angiography ,Time Factors ,Radionuclide ventriculography ,030204 cardiovascular system & hematology ,Coronary Angiography ,Electrocardiography ,0302 clinical medicine ,Risk Factors ,Registries ,030212 general & internal medicine ,Framingham Risk Score ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,Incidence ,Incidence (epidemiology) ,Magnetic Resonance Imaging ,3. Good health ,Europe ,Survival Rate ,Cine ,thrombus ,cardiovascular system ,Cardiology ,outcome ,Female ,Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine ,Takotsubo syndrome ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Heart Diseases ,Heart Ventricles ,Magnetic Resonance Imaging, Cine ,risk score ,Risk Assessment ,embolism ,03 medical and health sciences ,Takotsubo Cardiomyopathy ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,Humans ,cardiovascular diseases ,Thrombus ,Radionuclide Ventriculography ,Aged ,business.industry ,Australia ,Thrombosis ,medicine.disease ,United States ,Embolism ,Settore MED/11 - MALATTIE DELL'APPARATO CARDIOVASCOLARE ,business ,Follow-Up Studies - Abstract
Objective: Takotsubo syndrome (TTS) is characterized by acute left ventricular dysfunction, which can contribute to intraventricular thrombus and embolism. Still, prevalence and clinical impact of thrombus formation and embolic events on outcome of TTS patients remain unclear. This study aimed to investigate clinical features and outcomes of patients with and without intraventricular thrombus or embolism. Additionally, factors associated with thrombus formation or embolism, as well as predictors for mortality, were identified. Approach and Results: TTS patients enrolled in the International Takotsubo Registry at 28 centers in Australia, Europe, and the United States were dichotomized according to the occurrence/absence of intraventricular thrombus or embolism. Patients with intraventricular thrombus or embolism were defined as the ThrombEmb group. Of 1676 TTS patients, 56 (3.3%) patients developed intraventricular thrombus and/or embolism following TTS diagnosis (median time interval, 2.0 days [range, 0–38 days]). Patients in the ThrombEmb group had a different clinical profile including lower left ventricular ejection fraction, higher prevalence of the apical type, elevated levels of troponin and inflammatory markers, and higher prevalence of vascular disease. In a Firth bias-reduced penalized-likelihood logistic regression model apical type, left ventricular ejection fraction ≤30%, previous vascular disease, and a white blood cell count on admission >10×10 3 cells/μL emerged as independent predictors for thrombus formation or embolism. Conclusions: Intraventricular thrombus or embolism occur in 3.3% of patients in the acute phase of TTS. A simple risk score including clinical parameters associated with intraventricular thrombus formation or embolism identifies patients at increased risk. Clinical Trial Registration: URL: http://www.clinicaltrials.gov . Unique identifier: NCT01947621.
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- 2020
18. Long-Term Prognosis of Patients With Takotsubo Syndrome
- Author
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John D. Horowitz, Thomas Münzel, David E. Winchester, Guido Michels, Katharina J. Ding, Wolfgang Koenig, Jeroen J. Bax, Burkert Pieske, Mahir Karakas, Christian Ukena, K.E. Juhani Airaksinen, Christoph Kaiser, Sebastiano Gili, Stephan B. Felix, Rafal Dworakowski, Christian Templin, Claudius Jacobshagen, Abhiram Prasad, Fabrizio D'Ascenzo, Lawrence Rajan, Martin Borggrefe, Rena A. Levinson, Christof Burgdorf, Florim Cuculi, Petr Tousek, Thomas F. Lüscher, Alexandra Shilova, Mikhail Gilyarov, Victoria L. Cammann, Roman Pfister, Frank Ruschitzka, Alessandro Candreva, Filippo Crea, Davide Di Vece, Wolfgang Rottbauer, Ruediger C. Braun-Dullaeus, Heribert Schunkert, Carsten Tschöpe, Stefan Osswald, Rodolfo Citro, Burkhardt Seifert, Annahita Sarcon, Ibrahim Akin, Gerd Hasenfuß, Leonarda Galiuto, L. Christian Napp, Holger Thiele, Ekaterina Gilyarova, Grzegorz Opolski, Susanne Heiner, Michel Noutsias, Johann Bauersachs, Miłosz Jaguszewski, Alessandro Cuneo, Hugo A. Katus, Olivier Lairez, Ibrahim El-Battrawy, Wolfgang Dichtl, Jozef Micek, Philip MacCarthy, Rahel Bianchi, Maike Knorr, Ken Kato, Adrian P. Banning, Jelena-R. Ghadri, Martin Kozel, Michael Böhm, Konrad A. Szawan, Jennifer Franke, Manfred Wischnewsky, Klaus Empen, Tuija Vasankari, Eduardo Bossone, Richard Kobza, Beatrice Bacchi, Susanne A. Schlossbauer, Petr Widimský, Stjepan Jurisic, Samir M. Said, Thomas Fischer, Clément Delmas, Ghadri, Jr, Kato, K, Cammann, Vl, Gili, S, Jurisic, S, Di Vece, D, Candreva, A, Ding, Kj, Micek, J, Szawan, Ka, Bacchi, B, Bianchi, R, Levinson, Ra, Wischnewsky, M, Seifert, B, Schlossbauer, Sa, Citro, R, Bossone, E, Munzel, T, Knorr, M, Heiner, S, D'Ascenzo, F, Franke, J, Sarcon, A, Napp, Lc, Jaguszewski, M, Noutsias, M, Katus, Ha, Burgdorf, C, Schunkert, H, Thiele, H, Bauersachs, J, Tschope, C, Pieske, Bm, Rajan, L, Michels, G, Pfister, R, Cuneo, A, Jacobshagen, C, Hasenfuss, G, Karakas, M, Koenig, W, Rottbauer, W, Said, Sm, Braun-Dullaeus, Rc, Banning, A, Cuculi, F, Kobza, R, Fischer, Ta, Vasankari, T, Airaksinen, Kej, Opolski, G, Dworakowski, R, Maccarthy, P, Kaiser, C, Osswald, S, Galiuto, L, Crea, F, Dichtl, W, Empen, K, Felix, Sb, Delmas, C, Lairez, O, El-Battrawy, I, Akin, I, Borggrefe, M, Horowitz, J, Kozel, M, Tousek, P, Widimsky, P, Gilyarova, E, Shilova, A, Gilyarov, M, Winchester, De, Ukena, C, Bax, Jj, Prasad, A, Bohm, M, Luscher, Tf, Ruschitzka, F, and Templin, C
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Male ,Acute coronary syndrome ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Time Factors ,030204 cardiovascular system & hematology ,tako tsubo syndrome ,acute coronary syndrome ,broken heart syndrome ,classification ,outcome ,stress factor ,Broken heart syndrome ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Takotsubo Cardiomyopathy ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,Humans ,Registries ,030212 general & internal medicine ,Mortality ,Aged ,Aged, 80 and over ,Takotsubo syndrome ,business.industry ,Mortality rate ,Electroencephalography ,Emotional stress ,Middle Aged ,ta3121 ,Prognosis ,Stress factor ,medicine.disease ,3. Good health ,Physical stress ,Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine ,Cohort ,Female ,Nervous System Diseases ,business ,Stress, Psychological ,Follow-Up Studies - Abstract
Background Prognosis of Takotsubo syndrome (TTS) remains controversial due to scarcity of available data. Additionally, the effect of the triggering factors remains elusive. Objectives This study compared prognosis between TTS and acute coronary syndrome (ACS) patients and investigated short- and long-term outcomes in TTS based on different triggers. Methods Patients with TTS were enrolled from the International Takotsubo Registry. Long-term mortality of patients with TTS was compared to an age- and sex-matched cohort of patients with ACS. In addition, short- and long-term outcomes were compared between different groups according to triggering conditions. Results Overall, TTS patients had a comparable long-term mortality risk with ACS patients. Of 1,613 TTS patients, an emotional trigger was detected in 485 patients (30%). Of 630 patients (39%) related to physical triggers, 98 patients (6%) had acute neurologic disorders, while in the other 532 patients (33%), physical activities, medical conditions, or procedures were the triggering conditions. The remaining 498 patients (31%) had no identifiable trigger. TTS patients related to physical stress showed higher mortality rates than ACS patients during long-term follow-up, whereas patients related to emotional stress had better outcomes compared with ACS patients. Conclusions Overall, TTS patients had long-term outcomes comparable to age- and sex-matched ACS patients. Also, we demonstrated that TTS can either be benign or a life-threating condition depending on the inciting stress factor. We propose a new classification based on triggers, which can serve as a clinical tool to predict short- and long-term outcomes of TTS. (International Takotsubo Registry [InterTAK Registry]; NCT01947621)
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- 2018
19. Coexistence and outcome of coronary artery disease in Takotsubo syndrome
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Jelena R. Ghadri, Pedro Carrilho-Ferreira, Wolfgang Koenig, Carla Paolini, Adrian P. Banning, Alessandro Cuneo, Jeroen J. Bax, Petr Widimský, Manfred Wischnewsky, Yoichi Imori, Hugo A. Katus, Paul Bridgman, Martin Borggrefe, Tuija Vasankari, David E. Winchester, Annahita Sarcon, Abhiram Prasad, Alexander Pott, Claudius Jacobshagen, Sebastiano Gili, John D. Horowitz, Heribert Schunkert, Frank Ruschitzka, Stephan B. Felix, Michael Böhm, Guido Michels, Lars S. Maier, Fausto J. Pinto, Carlo Di Mario, Ruediger C. Braun-Dullaeus, Thomas F. Lüscher, Philippe Meyer, Lawrence Rajan, Burkert Pieske, Thomas Münzel, Stefan Osswald, Gerd Hasenfuß, Rodolfo Citro, Olivier Lairez, Mahir Karakas, Florim Cuculi, Christian Ukena, Victoria L. Cammann, Alexandra Shilova, Jose David Arroja, Leonarda Galiuto, Grzegorz Opolski, Christoph Kaiser, Wolfgang Rottbauer, Christian Templin, Carsten Tschöpe, Ibrahim Akin, Ioana Sorici-Barb, Susanne Heiner, Jennifer Franke, Fabrizio D'Ascenzo, Johann Bauersachs, Richard Kobza, Christof Burgdorf, Michael Neuhaus, P. Christian Schulze, Daniel Beug, Petr Tousek, Filippo Crea, Monika Budnik, Miłosz Jaguszewski, Roman Pfister, Konrad A. Szawan, Ekaterina Gilyarova, Philip MacCarthy, Wolfgang Dichtl, Yoshio Kobayashi, Jan Galuszka, Michel Noutsias, Christina Chan, Thomas Fischer, Matteo Bianco, Ibrahim El-Battrawy, L. Christian Napp, Holger Thiele, Karolina Polednikova, Claudio Bilato, Charanjit S. Rihal, Clément Delmas, Rafal Dworakowski, Mikhail Gilyarov, Eduardo Bossone, Gregor Poglajen, Behrouz Kherad, Ken Kato, Christian Hauck, Maike Knorr, Eugene Braunwald, K.E. Juhani Airaksinen, Christian Napp, L., Cammann, V. L., Jaguszewski, M., Szawan, K. A., Wischnewsky, M., Gili, S., Knorr, M., Heiner, S., Citro, R., Bossone, E., D'Ascenzo, F., Neuhaus, M., Franke, J., Sorici-Barb, I., Noutsias, M., Burgdorf, C., Koenig, W., Kherad, B., Sarcon, A., Rajan, L., Michels, G., Pfister, R., Cuneo, A., Jacobshagen, C., Karakas, M., Pott, A., Meyer, P., Arroja, J. D., Banning, A., Cuculi, F., Kobza, R., Fischer, T. A., Vasankari, T., Juhani Airaksinen, K. E., Hauck, C., Paolini, C., Bilato, C., Imori, Y., Kato, K., Kobayashi, Y., Opolski, G., Budnik, M., Dworakowski, R., Maccarthy, P., Kaiser, C., Osswald, S., Galiuto, L., Dichtl, W., Chan, C., Bridgman, P., Beug, D., Delmas, C., Lairez, O., El-Battrawy, I., Akin, I., Gilyarova, E., Shilova, A., Gilyarov, M., Horowitz, J. D., Polednikova, K., Tousek, P., Widimsky, P., Winchester, D. E., Galuszka, J., Ukena, C., Poglajen, G., Carrilho-Ferreira, P., Mario, C. D., Prasad, A., Rihal, C. S., Christian Schulze, P., Bianco, M., Crea, F., Borggrefe, M., Maier, L. S., Pinto, F. J., Braun-Dullaeus, R. C., Rottbauer, W., Katus, H. A., Hasenfuss, G., Tschope, C., Pieske, B. M., Thiele, H., Schunkert, H., Bohm, M., Felix, S. B., Munzel, T., Bax, J. J., Bauersachs, J., Braunwald, E., Luscher, T. F., Ruschitzka, F., Ghadri, J. R., Templin, C., and Repositório da Universidade de Lisboa
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medicine.medical_specialty ,Acute coronary syndrome ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Coronary Artery Disease ,030204 cardiovascular system & hematology ,Coronary Angiography ,Coronary artery disease ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Takotsubo Cardiomyopathy ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,Humans ,030212 general & internal medicine ,Myocardial infarction ,Acute Coronary Syndrome ,10. No inequality ,Cardiac catheterization ,Outcome ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,business.industry ,Incidence ,Percutaneous coronary intervention ,medicine.disease ,3. Good health ,Coronary occlusion ,Heart failure ,Angiography ,Cardiology ,Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine ,business ,Takotsubo syndrome - Abstract
Copyright © 2020 European Society of Cardiology, Aims: Takotsubo syndrome (TTS) is an acute heart failure syndrome, which shares many features with acute coronary syndrome (ACS). Although TTS was initially described with angiographically normal coronary arteries, smaller studies recently indicated a potential coexistence of coronary artery disease (CAD) in TTS patients. This study aimed to determine the coexistence, features, and prognostic role of CAD in a large cohort of patients with TTS. Methods and results: Coronary anatomy and CAD were studied in patients diagnosed with TTS. Inclusion criteria were compliance with the International Takotsubo Diagnostic Criteria for TTS, and availability of original coronary angiographies with ventriculography performed during the acute phase. Exclusion criteria were missing views, poor quality of angiography loops, and angiography without ventriculography. A total of 1016 TTS patients were studied. Of those, 23.0% had obstructive CAD, 41.2% had non-obstructive CAD, and 35.7% had angiographically normal coronary arteries. A total of 47 patients (4.6%) underwent percutaneous coronary intervention, and 3 patients had acute and 8 had chronic coronary artery occlusion concomitant with TTS, respectively. The presence of CAD was associated with increased incidence of shock, ventilation, and death from any cause. After adjusting for confounders, the presence of obstructive CAD was associated with mortality at 30 days. Takotsubo syndrome patients with obstructive CAD were at comparable risk for shock and death and nearly at twice the risk for ventilation compared to an age- and sex-matched ACS cohort. Conclusions: Coronary artery disease frequently coexists in TTS patients, presents with the whole spectrum of coronary pathology including acute coronary occlusion, and is associated with adverse outcome.
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- 2019
20. Wellness or medicine? Use and perception of Ayurveda in Germany: data from an online-representative cross-sectional study.
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Schiele JK, Jeitler M, Michalsen A, Stapelfeldt E, Ortiz M, Sigl M, Brinkhaus B, Wischnewsky M, and Kessler CS
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Introduction: Ayurveda, South Asia's largest and most relevant system of Traditional Medicine, holds a legal status akin to conventional Western medicine in India and elsewhere. There is an almost complete lack of data on the use of Ayurveda in Germany. The aim of this study was to investigate Ayurveda's utilization patterns, entry points, and factors influencing its use and the perception of Ayurveda among the German population., Methods: Basis of this manuscript was an online-representative survey which involved 4,065 participants aged 18-75 about the use and acceptance of Traditional, Complementary and Integrative Medicine (TCIM) in Germany. The survey was conducted online using Computer Assisted Web Interview (CAWI) in 2022. The dataset was analyzed descriptively and inferentially., Results: Altogether 9.3% ( n = 377) of all survey participants ( n = 4,065) had already used Ayurveda somehow, either more often (1.7%) or at least once in a lifetime (7.6%). Responders associated Ayurveda primarily with Indian Medicine (27.7%) and wellness (18%). Commonly used Ayurvedic services included non-medical treatments at wellness resorts/spas (48.3%), in outpatient practices (27.1%), and hotels (23.6%). 30.2% of the participants believe in Ayurveda's therapeutic potential. 76.7% of Ayurveda users find healthy nutrition important or very important. Nine predictors were found to classify Ayurveda users vs. non-users with spirituality and belief in Ayurveda's therapeutic efficacy as the most relevant ones. Ayurveda seems to be primarily used by well-educated and female individuals, often from higher-income groups and with a rather modern social milieu-orientation., Conclusion: Study results suggest that about every tenth German citizen has used Ayurveda in the past and about one third believes in its therapeutic potential. Because Ayurvedic therapies are often not evidence-based, there is an urgent need to perform high quality randomized controlled trials to investigate potential effects and safety of Ayurveda and how evidence-based Ayurveda treatments can be integrated into the German healthcare system., Competing Interests: JS works self-employed as a nutritionist and alternative practitioner specializing in Ayurveda. She is also a lecturer at the “Sonne und Mond” Health Center in Berlin, training in Ayurvedic medicine. MJ received grants from the Karl and Veronica Carstens Foundation. CK is a lecturer at the “Sonne und Mond” Health Center, Berlin. He is on the scientific advisory board of the Bruno Zimmer company and a board member of the German Medical Association for Ayurveda (DÄGAM e.V.). BB and his working group were partly funded by the Kneipp-Bund e.V., by the Software AG foundation, by the BKK 24 health insurance company, by the Kneipp town Bad Wörishofen, by the Immanuel Albertinen Diakonie gGmbH and the Karl and Veronica Carstens Foundation. MO is a board member of the Berlin Brandenburg Medical Doctors’ Association for Naturheilkunde (Physiotherapy) (ÄN e.V.). ES works as a nutritionist and alternative practitioner specializing in Ayurveda. He is also a lecturer at the “Sonne und Mond” Health Center in Berlin, training in Ayurvedic medicine. The remaining authors declare that the research was conducted in the absence of any commercial or financial relationships that could be construed as a potential conflict of interest., (Copyright © 2024 Schiele, Jeitler, Michalsen, Stapelfeldt, Ortiz, Sigl, Brinkhaus, Wischnewsky and Kessler.)
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- 2024
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21. Use and acceptance of traditional, complementary and integrative medicine in Germany-an online representative cross-sectional study.
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Jeitler M, Ortiz M, Brinkhaus B, Sigl M, Hoffmann R, Trübner M, Michalsen A, Wischnewsky M, and Kessler CS
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Background: Older representative surveys show that Traditional, Complementary and Integrative Medicine (TCIM) is used by about 60% of the German population. However, no data exists for the current nationwide situation. The main aim of this cross-sectional study is to investigate the current use and acceptance of TCIM in Germany., Methods: This study is based on a representative sample of the German population aged 18-75 years. Participants were asked about the use and acceptance of TCIM. The survey was conducted online using Computer Assisted Web Interview (CAWI) in 2022 by three renowned German market research institutes on behalf of and in close coordination with the working group. The data set was analyzed descriptively and inferentially., Results: In total, 4,065 participants (52% female, 48% male, 0.4% diverse) responded completely (response rate: 21.5%). Among participants, 70% stated that they had used TCIM at some point in their lives, with 32% doing so in the last 12 months and 18% currently. The most common reason given (17%) was musculoskeletal pain. For their own health, 39% stated that TCIM is important. Traditional European Medicine was rated as very/mainly effective by 27% of participants and as partly effective by 44% (conventional medicine: 69% very/mainly effective, 19% partly effective). As a complementary treatment strategy to conventional medicine, 35% considered TCIM to be optimal ("Complementary Medicine"), 33% in combination with conventional medicine ("Integrative Medicine") and 5% without conventional medicine ("Alternative Medicine"). The majority of the participants were in favor of more research on TCIM and stated that the costs of TCIM services should be covered by health insurance companies (71% and 69%, respectively)., Conclusion: These results from a representative online-population suggest that the use of TCIM in Germany remains at a high level. The nationwide relevance of TCIM should be given greater consideration in German health care policy making. TCIM should be systematically investigated using appropriate study designs and methods including high quality randomized clinical trials to investigate their effectiveness, efficacy, therapeutic safety and costs in the future., Competing Interests: MJ reports grants from the Karl and Veronica Carstens Foundation. MO is a board member of the Berlin Brandenburg Medical Doctors’ Association for Naturheilkunde (Physiotherapy; ÄN e.V.). AM reports grants from the Karl and Veronica Carstens Foundation and Stifterverband der Deutschen Wissenschaft. He receives honoraria for consulting from the Klosterfrau Foundation. BB and its working group were partly funded by the Kneipp-Bund e.V. MT reports grants from the Karl and Veronica Carstens Foundation. CK reports grants from the Karl and Veronica Carstens Foundation for conducting this study. He is a member of the scientific advisory board of the company Bruno Zimmer, board member of the German Medical Doctors’ Association for Ayurveda-Medicine (DÄGAM e.V.) and receives honoraria for lecturing Ayurveda at Sonne und Mond, Berlin. The remaining authors declare that the research was conducted in the absence of any commercial or financial relationships that could be construed as a potential conflict of interest., (Copyright © 2024 Jeitler, Ortiz, Brinkhaus, Sigl, Hoffmann, Trübner, Michalsen, Wischnewsky and Kessler.)
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- 2024
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22. Timing of Complete Revascularization with Multivessel PCI for Myocardial Infarction.
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Stähli BE, Varbella F, Linke A, Schwarz B, Felix SB, Seiffert M, Kesterke R, Nordbeck P, Witzenbichler B, Lang IM, Kessler M, Valina C, Dibra A, Rohla M, Moccetti M, Vercellino M, Gaede L, Bott-Flügel L, Jakob P, Stehli J, Candreva A, Templin C, Schindler M, Wischnewsky M, Zanda G, Quadri G, Mangner N, Toma A, Magnani G, Clemmensen P, Lüscher TF, Münzel T, Schulze PC, Laugwitz KL, Rottbauer W, Huber K, Neumann FJ, Schneider S, Weidinger F, Achenbach S, Richardt G, Kastrati A, Ford I, Maier W, and Ruschitzka F
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- Humans, Coronary Vessels surgery, Europe, Heart Failure etiology, Myocardial Infarction etiology, Myocardial Infarction surgery, Myocardial Revascularization adverse effects, Myocardial Revascularization methods, Stroke etiology, Time Factors, Treatment Outcome, Time-to-Treatment, Coronary Artery Disease complications, Coronary Artery Disease diagnostic imaging, Coronary Artery Disease surgery, Percutaneous Coronary Intervention adverse effects, Percutaneous Coronary Intervention methods, Percutaneous Coronary Intervention mortality, ST Elevation Myocardial Infarction etiology, ST Elevation Myocardial Infarction mortality, ST Elevation Myocardial Infarction surgery
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Background: In patients with ST-segment elevation myocardial infarction (STEMI) with multivessel coronary artery disease, the time at which complete revascularization of nonculprit lesions should be performed remains unknown., Methods: We performed an international, open-label, randomized, noninferiority trial at 37 sites in Europe. Patients in a hemodynamically stable condition who had STEMI and multivessel coronary artery disease were randomly assigned to undergo immediate multivessel percutaneous coronary intervention (PCI; immediate group) or PCI of the culprit lesion followed by staged multivessel PCI of nonculprit lesions within 19 to 45 days after the index procedure (staged group). The primary end point was a composite of death from any cause, nonfatal myocardial infarction, stroke, unplanned ischemia-driven revascularization, or hospitalization for heart failure at 1 year after randomization. The percentages of patients with a primary or secondary end-point event are provided as Kaplan-Meier estimates at 6 months and at 1 year., Results: We assigned 418 patients to undergo immediate multivessel PCI and 422 to undergo staged multivessel PCI. A primary end-point event occurred in 35 patients (8.5%) in the immediate group as compared with 68 patients (16.3%) in the staged group (risk ratio, 0.52; 95% confidence interval, 0.38 to 0.72; P<0.001 for noninferiority and P<0.001 for superiority). Nonfatal myocardial infarction and unplanned ischemia-driven revascularization occurred in 8 patients (2.0%) and 17 patients (4.1%), respectively, in the immediate group and in 22 patients (5.3%) and 39 patients (9.3%), respectively, in the staged group. The risk of death from any cause, the risk of stroke, and the risk of hospitalization for heart failure appeared to be similar in the two groups. A total of 104 patients in the immediate group and 145 patients in the staged group had a serious adverse event., Conclusions: Among patients in hemodynamically stable condition with STEMI and multivessel coronary artery disease, immediate multivessel PCI was noninferior to staged multivessel PCI with respect to the risk of death from any cause, nonfatal myocardial infarction, stroke, unplanned ischemia-driven revascularization, or hospitalization for heart failure at 1 year. (Supported by Boston Scientific; MULTISTARS AMI ClinicalTrials.gov number, NCT03135275.)., (Copyright © 2023 Massachusetts Medical Society.)
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- 2023
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23. Effects of an Integrative Day Care Clinic Program with a Focus on Nature Therapy in a Hospital Park Setting on Quality of Life in Oncological Patients-A Non-Randomized Controlled Study.
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Kuballa L, Kessler CS, Kandil FI, von Scheidt C, Meinköhn M, Koch B, Wischnewsky M, Michalsen A, and Jeitler M
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Cancer often causes long-term physical and psychological impairments. Lifestyle modification and nature-based interventions (NBIs) can have a positive impact on patients' quality of life (QOL). This participants-blinded, non-randomized controlled study assessed parameters at weeks 0, 12, and 24, including, as a primary endpoint, QOL in cancer patients on the Functional Assessment of Cancer Therapy-General (FACT-G) at week 12. QOL in breast cancer patients, fatigue, well-being, stress, anxiety/depression, socio-psychological well-being, benefits of nature interaction, insomnia, self-efficacy, mindfulness, and self-compassion were assessed as secondary endpoints. N = 107 cancer patients (96.3% women; 52.5 ± 9.3 years, 80.4% breast cancer) were assigned to either a 12-week nature-based (NDC; n = 56) or conventional (DC; n = 51) oncology day care clinic program, whereby the assignment group was not known to the participants. There was no significant group difference for the primary endpoint. At week 24, QOL, fatigue, mindfulness and self-compassion scores were significantly higher, and at weeks 12 and 24, the insomnia score was significantly lower in NDC compared to DC. In conclusion, this study indicates positive and clinically relevant effects of the program on QOL, fatigue, and psychological parameters. NBIs seem to have a more pronounced effect.
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- 2023
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24. Implications for surveillance for breast cancer patients based on the internally and externally validated BRENDA-metastatic recurrence score.
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Ebner F, Salmen J, Dayan D, Kiesel M, Wolters R, Janni W, Wöckel A, and Wischnewsky M
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- Humans, Female, Neoplasm Recurrence, Local epidemiology, Neoplasm Recurrence, Local pathology, Prognosis, Breast pathology, Regression Analysis, Neoplasm Staging, Retrospective Studies, Breast Neoplasms diagnosis, Breast Neoplasms epidemiology, Breast Neoplasms therapy
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Purpose: Although the incidence of distant relapse is decreasing, 20-30% of patients with early breast cancer die of metastasis. The aim of this study is to characterize patients with metastasis-free survival(MFS) less than 5 years, to analyze the most probable site of metastases according to the internally and externally validated BRENDA-score. The BRENDA-score is a combination of the biological subtype and clinical staging., Method: 3832 patients with primary diagnosis of breast cancer and either distant metastatic recurrence within 5 years or MFS ≥ 5 years were assigned to this study. Patients were classified for metastatic recurrence according to the BRENDA-score. 1765 patients were in a validation set. Statistical methods were Kaplan-Meier curves, Cox regression analysis, Exhausted CHAID, likelihood-ratio tests and the Nearest Neighbor Estimation method., Results: There was a significant(p < 0.001) difference between the Kaplan-Meier MFS-functions of M0-patients stratified by BRENDA-score. The BRENDA score outperforms intrinsic subtypes and the Nottingham prognostic score. It fits the original data and the validation set equally well (p = 0.179).There was a significant(p < 0.001) difference between mean BRENDA-Index for patients with MFS < 5y(21.0 ± 9.0) and patients with MFS ≥ 5y(mean BRENDA-Index 11.7 ± 8.2). 55.6% of the very high risk patients(BRENDA-Index ≥ 27) had metastases within 5 years. The most likely primary metastatic site was bone(30%) followed by liver(19%) and lung(18%). The discriminatory ability(areas under the time dependent ROC curve) of the BRENDA score is good to acceptable for the first 5 years. In the very low/low risk (intermediate, high/very high) risk group 50% of all metastases were diagnosed within 26 months. Guideline adherence had a highly significant influence on outcome independent of the risk group., Conclusion: The evaluation showed that the BRENDA-Score is a robust predictive tool for breast cancer recurrence and site of metastases in the first five years after diagnosis. It outperforms intrinsic subtypes and the Nottingham prognostic score. The BRENDA-score could be a tool for a risk orientated and targeted follow up., (© 2023. The Author(s).)
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- 2023
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25. Ethnic comparison in takotsubo syndrome: novel insights from the International Takotsubo Registry.
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Imori Y, Kato K, Cammann VL, Szawan KA, Wischnewsky M, Dreiding S, Würdinger M, Schönberger M, Petkova V, Niederseer D, Levinson RA, Di Vece D, Gili S, Seifert B, Wakita M, Suzuki N, Citro R, Bossone E, Heiner S, Knorr M, Jansen T, Münzel T, D'Ascenzo F, Franke J, Sorici-Barb I, Katus HA, Sarcon A, Shinbane J, Napp LC, Bauersachs J, Jaguszewski M, Shiomura R, Nakamura S, Takano H, Noutsias M, Burgdorf C, Ishibashi I, Himi T, Koenig W, Schunkert H, Thiele H, Kherad B, Tschöpe C, Pieske BM, Rajan L, Michels G, Pfister R, Mizuno S, Cuneo A, Jacobshagen C, Hasenfuß G, Karakas M, Mochizuki H, Pott A, Rottbauer W, Said SM, Braun-Dullaeus RC, Banning A, Isogai T, Kimura A, Cuculi F, Kobza R, Fischer TA, Vasankari T, Airaksinen KEJ, Tomita Y, Budnik M, Opolski G, Dworakowski R, MacCarthy P, Kaiser C, Osswald S, Galiuto L, Crea F, Dichtl W, Murakami T, Ikari Y, Empen K, Beug D, Felix SB, Delmas C, Lairez O, Yamaguchi T, El-Battrawy I, Akin I, Borggrefe M, Horowitz JD, Kozel M, Tousek P, Widimský P, Gilyarova E, Shilova A, Gilyarov M, Neuhaus M, Meyer P, Arroja JD, Chan C, Bridgman P, Galuszka J, Poglajen G, Carrilho-Ferreira P, Pinto FJ, Hauck C, Maier LS, Liu K, Di Mario C, Paolini C, Bilato C, Bianco M, Jörg L, Rickli H, Winchester DE, Ukena C, Böhm M, Bax JJ, Prasad A, Rihal CS, Saito S, Kobayashi Y, Lüscher TF, Ruschitzka F, Shimizu W, Ghadri JR, and Templin C
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- Aged, Asian People ethnology, Europe epidemiology, Female, Health Status Disparities, Hospital Mortality ethnology, Humans, Japan epidemiology, Male, Middle Aged, Prevalence, Registries, Shock, Cardiogenic ethnology, Shock, Cardiogenic mortality, Takotsubo Cardiomyopathy mortality, White People ethnology, Asian People statistics & numerical data, Takotsubo Cardiomyopathy ethnology, White People statistics & numerical data
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Background: Ethnic disparities have been reported in cardiovascular disease. However, ethnic disparities in takotsubo syndrome (TTS) remain elusive. This study assessed differences in clinical characteristics between Japanese and European TTS patients and determined the impact of ethnicity on in-hospital outcomes., Methods: TTS patients in Japan were enrolled from 10 hospitals and TTS patients in Europe were enrolled from 32 hospitals participating in the International Takotsubo Registry. Clinical characteristics and in-hospital outcomes were compared between Japanese and European patients., Results: A total of 503 Japanese and 1670 European patients were included. Japanese patients were older (72.6 ± 11.4 years vs. 68.0 ± 12.0 years; p < 0.001) and more likely to be male (18.5 vs. 8.4%; p < 0.001) than European TTS patients. Physical triggering factors were more common (45.5 vs. 32.0%; p < 0.001), and emotional triggers less common (17.5 vs. 31.5%; p < 0.001), in Japanese patients than in European patients. Japanese patients were more likely to experience cardiogenic shock during the acute phase (15.5 vs. 9.0%; p < 0.001) and had a higher in-hospital mortality (8.2 vs. 3.2%; p < 0.001). However, ethnicity itself did not appear to have an impact on in-hospital mortality. Machine learning approach revealed that the presence of physical stressors was the most important prognostic factor in both Japanese and European TTS patients., Conclusion: Differences in clinical characteristics and in-hospital outcomes between Japanese and European TTS patients exist. Ethnicity does not impact the outcome in TTS patients. The worse in-hospital outcome in Japanese patients, is mainly driven by the higher prevalence of physical triggers., Trial Registration: URL: https://www.clinicaltrials.gov ; Unique Identifier: NCT01947621., (© 2021. The Author(s).)
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- 2022
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26. Ayurvedic vs. Conventional Nutritional Therapy Including Low-FODMAP Diet for Patients With Irritable Bowel Syndrome-A Randomized Controlled Trial.
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Jeitler M, Wottke T, Schumann D, Puerto Valencia LM, Michalsen A, Steckhan N, Mittwede M, Stapelfeldt E, Koppold-Liebscher D, Cramer H, Wischnewsky M, Murthy V, and Kessler CS
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Aims: To compare the effects of Ayurvedic and conventional nutritional therapy in patients with irritable bowel syndrome (IBS). Methods: Sixty-nine patients with IBS were randomized to Ayurvedic ( n = 35) or conventional nutritional therapy according to the recommendations of the German Nutrition Society including the low-FODMAP diet ( n = 34). Study visits took place at baseline and after 1, 3, and 6 months. The primary outcome was IBS symptom severity (IBS-SSS) after 3 months; secondary outcomes included stress (CPSS), anxiety and depression (HADS), well-being (WHO-5) and IBS-specific quality of life (IBS-QOL). A repeated measures general linear model (GLM) for intent-to-treat-analyses was applied in this explorative study. Results: After 3 months, estimated marginal means for IBS-SSS reductions were 123.8 [95% confidence interval (95% CI) = 92.8-154.9; p < 0.001] in the Ayurvedic and 72.7 (95% CI = 38.8-106.7; p < 0.001) in the conventional group. The IBS-SSS reduction was significantly higher in the Ayurveda group compared to the conventional therapy group (estimated marginal mean = 51.1; 95% CI = 3.8-98.5; p = 0.035) and clinically meaningful. Sixty-eight percentage of the variance in IBS-SSS reduction after 3 months can be explained by treatment, 6.5% by patients' expectations for their therapies and 23.4% by IBS-SSS at pre-intervention. Both therapies are equivalent in their contribution to the outcome variance. The higher the IBS-SSS score at pre-intervention and the larger the patients' expectations, the greater the IBS-SSS reduction. There were no significant group differences in any secondary outcome measures. No serious adverse events occurred in either group. Conclusion: Patients with IBS seem to benefit significantly from Ayurvedic or conventional nutritional therapy. The results warrant further studies with longer-term follow-ups and larger sample sizes. Clinical Trial Registration: https://clinicaltrials.gov/ct2/show/NCT03019861, identifier: NCT03019861., Competing Interests: CK and ES participate in training courses on Ayurveda at the European Academy for Ayurveda, Birstein and at Sonne und Mond, Berlin. MM participates in training courses on Ayurveda at the European Academy of Ayurveda, Birstein. The remaining authors declare that the research was conducted in the absence of any commercial or financial relationships that could be construed as a potential conflict of interest., (Copyright © 2021 Jeitler, Wottke, Schumann, Puerto Valencia, Michalsen, Steckhan, Mittwede, Stapelfeldt, Koppold-Liebscher, Cramer, Wischnewsky, Murthy and Kessler.)
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- 2021
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27. Impact of Atrial Fibrillation on Outcome in Takotsubo Syndrome: Data From the International Takotsubo Registry.
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El-Battrawy I, Cammann VL, Kato K, Szawan KA, Di Vece D, Rossi A, Wischnewsky M, Hermes-Laufer J, Gili S, Citro R, Bossone E, Neuhaus M, Franke J, Meder B, Jaguszewski M, Noutsias M, Knorr M, Heiner S, D'Ascenzo F, Dichtl W, Burgdorf C, Kherad B, Tschöpe C, Sarcon A, Shinbane J, Rajan L, Michels G, Pfister R, Cuneo A, Jacobshagen C, Karakas M, Koenig W, Pott A, Meyer P, David Arroja J, Banning A, Cuculi F, Kobza R, Fischer TA, Vasankari T, Airaksinen KEJ, Napp LC, Budnik M, Dworakowski R, MacCarthy P, Kaiser C, Osswald S, Galiuto L, Chan C, Bridgman P, Beug D, Delmas C, Lairez O, Gilyarova E, Shilova A, Gilyarov M, Kozel M, Tousek P, Winchester DE, Galuszka J, Ukena C, Poglajen G, Carrilho-Ferreira P, Hauck C, Paolini C, Bilato C, Kobayashi Y, Prasad A, Rihal CS, Liu K, Schulze PC, Bianco M, Jörg L, Rickli H, Pestana G, Nguyen TH, Böhm M, Maier LS, Pinto FJ, Widimský P, Felix SB, Opolski G, Braun-Dullaeus RC, Rottbauer W, Hasenfuß G, Pieske BM, Schunkert H, Thiele H, Bauersachs J, Katus HA, Horowitz JD, Di Mario C, Münzel T, Crea F, Bax JJ, Lüscher TF, Ruschitzka F, Duru F, Borggrefe M, Ghadri JR, Akin I, and Templin C
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- Aged, Aged, 80 and over, Atrial Fibrillation diagnosis, Atrial Fibrillation mortality, Atrial Fibrillation therapy, Europe epidemiology, Female, Hospital Mortality, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Patient Admission, Prevalence, Prognosis, Prospective Studies, Registries, Retrospective Studies, Risk Assessment, Risk Factors, Takotsubo Cardiomyopathy diagnosis, Takotsubo Cardiomyopathy mortality, Takotsubo Cardiomyopathy therapy, Time Factors, United States epidemiology, Atrial Fibrillation epidemiology, Takotsubo Cardiomyopathy epidemiology
- Abstract
Background Atrial fibrillation (AF) is a major risk factor for mortality. The prevalence, clinical correlates, and prognostic impact of AF in Takotsubo syndrome (TTS) have not yet been investigated in a large patient cohort. This study aimed to investigate the prevalence, clinical correlates, and prognostic impact of AF in patients with TTS. Methods and Results Patients with TTS were enrolled from the International Takotsubo Registry, which is a multinational network with 26 participating centers in Europe and the United States. Patients were dichotomized according to the presence or absence of AF at the time of admission. Of 1584 patients with TTS, 112 (7.1%) had AF. The mean age was higher ( P <0.001), and there were fewer women ( P =0.046) in the AF than in the non-AF group. Left ventricular ejection fraction was significantly lower ( P =0.001), and cardiogenic shock was more often observed ( P <0.001) in the AF group. Both in-hospital ( P <0.001) and long-term mortality ( P <0.001) were higher in the AF group. Multivariable Cox regression analysis revealed that AF was independently associated with higher long-term mortality (hazard ratio, 2.31; 95% CI, 1.50-3.55; P <0.001). Among patients with AF on admission, 42% had no known history of AF before the acute TTS event, and such patients had comparable in-hospital and long-term outcomes compared with those with a history of AF. Conclusions In patients presenting with TTS, AF on admission is significantly associated with increased in-hospital and long-term mortality rates. Whether antiarrhythmics and/or cardioversion are beneficial in TTS with AF should thus be tested in a future trial. Registration URL: https://www.clinicaltrials.gov; Unique identifier: NCT01947621.
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- 2021
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28. BRENDA-Score, a Highly Significant, Internally and Externally Validated Prognostic Marker for Metastatic Recurrence: Analysis of 10,449 Primary Breast Cancer Patients.
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Wischnewsky M, Schwentner L, Diessner JD, De Gregorio A, Joukhadar R, Davut D, Salmen J, Bekes I, Kiesel M, Müller-Reiter M, Blettner M, Wolters R, Janni W, Kreienberg R, Wöckel A, and Ebner F
- Abstract
Background Current research in breast cancer focuses on individualization of local and systemic therapies with adequate escalation or de-escalation strategies. As a result, about two-thirds of breast cancer patients can be cured, but up to one-third eventually develop metastatic disease, which is considered incurable with currently available treatment options. This underscores the importance to develop a metastatic recurrence score to escalate or de-escalate treatment strategies. Patients and methods Data from 10,499 patients were available from 17 clinical cancer registries (BRENDA-project [
1 ]. In total, 8566 were used to develop the BRENDA-Index. This index was calculated from the regression coefficients of a Cox regression model for metastasis-free survival (MFS). Based on this index, patients were categorized into very high, high, intermediate, low, and very low risk groups forming the BRENDA-Score. Bootstrapping was used for internal validation and an independent dataset of 1883 patients for external validation. The predictive accuracy was checked by Harrell's c-index. In addition, the BRENDA-Score was analyzed as a marker for overall survival (OS) and compared to the Nottingham prognostic score (NPS). Results : Intrinsic subtypes, tumour size, grading, and nodal status were identified as statistically significant prognostic factors in the multivariate analysis. The five prognostic groups of the BRENDA-Score showed highly significant ( p < 0.001) differences regarding MFS:low risk: hazard ratio (HR) = 2.4, 95%CI (1.7-3.3); intermediate risk: HR = 5.0, 95%CI.(3.6-6.9); high risk: HR = 10.3, 95%CI (7.4-14.3) and very high risk: HR = 18.1, 95%CI (13.2-24.9). The external validation showed congruent results. A multivariate Cox regression model for OS with BRENDA-Score and NPS as covariates showed that of these two scores only the BRENDA-Score is significant (BRENDA-Score p < 0.001; NPS p = 0.447). Therefore, the BRENDA-Score is also a good prognostic marker for OS. Conclusion: The BRENDA-Score is an internally and externally validated robust predictive tool for metastatic recurrence in breast cancer patients. It is based on routine parameters easily accessible in daily clinical care. In addition, the BRENDA-Score is a good prognostic marker for overall survival. Highlights: The BRENDA-Score is a highly significant predictive tool for metastatic recurrence of breast cancer patients. The BRENDA-Score is stable for at least the first five years after primary diagnosis, i.e., the sensitivities and specificities of this predicting system is rather similar to the NPI with AUCs between 0.76 and 0.81 the BRENDA-Score is a good prognostic marker for overall survival.- Published
- 2021
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29. Prognostic impact of acute pulmonary triggers in patients with takotsubo syndrome: new insights from the International Takotsubo Registry.
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Kato K, Cammann VL, Napp LC, Szawan KA, Micek J, Dreiding S, Levinson RA, Petkova V, Würdinger M, Patrascu A, Sumalinog R, Gili S, Clarenbach CF, Kohler M, Wischnewsky M, Citro R, Vecchione C, Bossone E, Neuhaus M, Franke J, Meder B, Jaguszewski M, Noutsias M, Knorr M, Heiner S, D'Ascenzo F, Dichtl W, Burgdorf C, Kherad B, Tschöpe C, Sarcon A, Shinbane J, Rajan L, Michels G, Pfister R, Cuneo A, Jacobshagen C, Karakas M, Koenig W, Pott A, Meyer P, Roffi M, Banning A, Wolfrum M, Cuculi F, Kobza R, Fischer TA, Vasankari T, Airaksinen KEJ, Budnik M, Dworakowski R, MacCarthy P, Kaiser C, Osswald S, Galiuto L, Chan C, Bridgman P, Beug D, Delmas C, Lairez O, Gilyarova E, Shilova A, Gilyarov M, El-Battrawy I, Akin I, Kozel M, Tousek P, Winchester DE, Galuszka J, Ukena C, Poglajen G, Carrilho-Ferreira P, Hauck C, Paolini C, Bilato C, Sano M, Ishibashi I, Takahara M, Himi T, Kobayashi Y, Prasad A, Rihal CS, Liu K, Schulze PC, Bianco M, Jörg L, Rickli H, Pestana G, Nguyen TH, Böhm M, Maier LS, Pinto FJ, Widimský P, Felix SB, Opolski G, Braun-Dullaeus RC, Rottbauer W, Hasenfuß G, Pieske BM, Schunkert H, Borggrefe M, Thiele H, Bauersachs J, Katus HA, Horowitz JD, Di Mario C, Münzel T, Crea F, Bax JJ, Lüscher TF, Ruschitzka F, Ghadri JR, and Templin C
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- Humans, Prognosis, Registries, Shock, Cardiogenic, Survival Analysis, Takotsubo Cardiomyopathy complications, Takotsubo Cardiomyopathy diagnosis, Takotsubo Cardiomyopathy epidemiology
- Abstract
Aims: Acute pulmonary disorders are known physical triggers of takotsubo syndrome (TTS). This study aimed to investigate prevalence of acute pulmonary triggers in patients with TTS and their impact on outcomes., Methods and Results: Patients with TTS were enrolled from the International Takotsubo Registry and screened for triggering factors and comorbidities. Patients were categorized into three groups (acute pulmonary trigger, chronic lung disease, and no lung disease) to compare clinical characteristics and outcomes. Of the 1670 included patients with TTS, 123 (7%) were identified with an acute pulmonary trigger, and 194 (12%) had a known history of chronic lung disease. The incidence of cardiogenic shock was highest in patients with an acute pulmonary trigger compared with those with chronic lung disease or without lung disease (17% vs. 10% vs. 9%, P = 0.017). In-hospital mortality was also higher in patients with an acute pulmonary trigger than in the other two groups, although not significantly (5.7% vs. 1.5% vs. 4.2%, P = 0.13). Survival analysis demonstrated that patients with an acute pulmonary trigger had the worst long-term outcome (P = 0.002). The presence of an acute pulmonary trigger was independently associated with worse long-term mortality (hazard ratio 2.12, 95% confidence interval 1.33-3.38; P = 0.002)., Conclusions: The present study demonstrates that TTS is related to acute pulmonary triggers in 7% of all TTS patients, which accounts for 21% of patients with physical triggers. The presence of acute pulmonary trigger is associated with a severe in-hospital course and a worse long-term outcome., (© 2021 The Authors. ESC Heart Failure published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd on behalf of European Society of Cardiology.)
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- 2021
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30. Short-term fasting accompanying chemotherapy as a supportive therapy in gynecological cancer: protocol for a multicenter randomized controlled clinical trial.
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Koppold-Liebscher D, Kessler CS, Steckhan N, Bähr V, Kempter C, Wischnewsky M, Hübner M, Kunz B, Paul M, Zorn S, Sari S, Jeitler M, Stange R, and Michalsen A
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- Depression, Fasting, Female, Humans, Multicenter Studies as Topic, Quality of Life, Randomized Controlled Trials as Topic, Breast Neoplasms, Ovarian Neoplasms
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Background/objectives: A few preliminary studies have documented the safety and feasibility of repeated short-term fasting in patients undergoing chemotherapy. However, there is a lack of data from larger randomized trials on the effects of short-term fasting on quality of life, reduction of side effects during chemotherapy, and a possible reduction of tumor progression. Moreover, no data is available on the effectiveness of fasting approaches compared to so-called healthy diets. We aim to investigate whether the potentially beneficial effects of short-term fasting can be confirmed in a larger randomized trial and can compare favorably to a plant-based wholefood diet., Methods: This is a multicenter, randomized, controlled, two-armed interventional study with a parallel group assignment. One hundred fifty patients, including 120 breast cancer patients and 30 patients with ovarian cancer, are to be randomized to one of two nutritional interventions accompanying chemotherapy: (1) repeated short-term fasting with a maximum energy supply of 350-400 kcal on fasting days or (2) repeated short-term normocaloric plant-based diet with restriction of refined carbohydrates. The primary outcome is disease-related quality of life, as assessed by the functional assessment of the chronic illness therapy measurement system. Secondary outcomes include changes in the Hospital Anxiety and Depression Score and as well as frequency and severity of chemotherapy-induced side effects based on the Common Terminology Criteria of Adverse Events. Explorative analysis in a subpopulation will compare histological complete remissions in patients with neoadjuvant treatments., Discussion/planned Outcomes: Preclinical data and a small number of clinical studies suggest that repeated short-term fasting may reduce the side effects of chemotherapy, enhance quality of life, and eventually slow down tumor progression. Experimental research suggests that the effects of fasting may partly be caused by the restriction of animal protein and refined carbohydrates. This study is the first confirmatory, randomized controlled, clinical study, comparing the effects of short-term fasting to a short-term, plant-based, low-sugar diet during chemotherapy on quality of life and histological tumor remission., Trial Registration: ClinicalTrials.gov NCT03162289 . Registered on 22 May 2017.
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- 2020
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31. Rationale and design of the MULTISTARS AMI Trial: A randomized comparison of immediate versus staged complete revascularization in patients with ST-segment elevation myocardial infarction and multivessel disease.
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Stähli BE, Varbella F, Schwarz B, Nordbeck P, Felix SB, Lang IM, Toma A, Moccetti M, Valina C, Vercellino M, Rigopoulos AG, Rohla M, Schindler M, Wischnewsky M, Linke A, Schulze PC, Richardt G, Laugwitz KL, Weidinger F, Rottbauer W, Achenbach S, Huber K, Neumann FJ, Kastrati A, Ford I, Ruschitzka F, and Maier W
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- Coronary Angiography methods, Female, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Outcome and Process Assessment, Health Care, Randomized Controlled Trials as Topic, Risk Factors, Severity of Illness Index, Coronary Vessels diagnostic imaging, Coronary Vessels surgery, Percutaneous Coronary Intervention adverse effects, Percutaneous Coronary Intervention methods, Postoperative Complications diagnosis, Postoperative Complications prevention & control, ST Elevation Myocardial Infarction diagnosis, ST Elevation Myocardial Infarction surgery, Time-to-Treatment standards
- Abstract
About half of patients with acute ST-segment elevation myocardial infarction (STEMI) present with multivessel coronary artery disease (MVD). Recent evidence supports complete revascularization in these patients. However, optimal timing of non-culprit lesion revascularization in STEMI patients is unknown because dedicated randomized trials on this topic are lacking. STUDY DESIGN: The MULTISTARS AMI trial is a prospective, international, multicenter, randomized, two-arm, open-label study planning to enroll at least 840 patients. It is designed to investigate whether immediate complete revascularization is non-inferior to staged (within 19-45 days) complete revascularization in patients in stable hemodynamic conditions presenting with STEMI and MVD and undergoing primary percutaneous coronary intervention (PCI). After successful primary PCI of the culprit artery, patients are randomized in a 1:1 ratio to immediate or staged complete revascularization. The primary endpoint is a composite of all-cause death, non-fatal myocardial infarction, ischemia-driven revascularization, hospitalization for heart failure, and stroke at 1 year. CONCLUSIONS: The MULTISTARS AMI trial tests the hypothesis that immediate complete revascularization is non-inferior to staged complete revascularization in stable patients with STEMI and MVD., (Copyright © 2020 The Authors. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)
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- 2020
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32. Coexistence and outcome of coronary artery disease in Takotsubo syndrome.
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Napp LC, Cammann VL, Jaguszewski M, Szawan KA, Wischnewsky M, Gili S, Knorr M, Heiner S, Citro R, Bossone E, D'Ascenzo F, Neuhaus M, Franke J, Sorici-Barb I, Noutsias M, Burgdorf C, Koenig W, Kherad B, Sarcon A, Rajan L, Michels G, Pfister R, Cuneo A, Jacobshagen C, Karakas M, Pott A, Meyer P, Arroja JD, Banning A, Cuculi F, Kobza R, Fischer TA, Vasankari T, Airaksinen KEJ, Hauck C, Paolini C, Bilato C, Imori Y, Kato K, Kobayashi Y, Opolski G, Budnik M, Dworakowski R, MacCarthy P, Kaiser C, Osswald S, Galiuto L, Dichtl W, Chan C, Bridgman P, Beug D, Delmas C, Lairez O, El-Battrawy I, Akin I, Gilyarova E, Shilova A, Gilyarov M, Horowitz JD, Polednikova K, Tousek P, Widimský P, Winchester DE, Galuszka J, Ukena C, Poglajen G, Carrilho-Ferreira P, Di Mario C, Prasad A, Rihal CS, Schulze PC, Bianco M, Crea F, Borggrefe M, Maier LS, Pinto FJ, Braun-Dullaeus RC, Rottbauer W, Katus HA, Hasenfuß G, Tschöpe C, Pieske BM, Thiele H, Schunkert H, Böhm M, Felix SB, Münzel T, Bax JJ, Bauersachs J, Braunwald E, Lüscher TF, Ruschitzka F, Ghadri JR, and Templin C
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- Coronary Angiography, Humans, Incidence, Acute Coronary Syndrome, Coronary Artery Disease complications, Coronary Artery Disease diagnostic imaging, Takotsubo Cardiomyopathy complications, Takotsubo Cardiomyopathy epidemiology
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Aims: Takotsubo syndrome (TTS) is an acute heart failure syndrome, which shares many features with acute coronary syndrome (ACS). Although TTS was initially described with angiographically normal coronary arteries, smaller studies recently indicated a potential coexistence of coronary artery disease (CAD) in TTS patients. This study aimed to determine the coexistence, features, and prognostic role of CAD in a large cohort of patients with TTS., Methods and Results: Coronary anatomy and CAD were studied in patients diagnosed with TTS. Inclusion criteria were compliance with the International Takotsubo Diagnostic Criteria for TTS, and availability of original coronary angiographies with ventriculography performed during the acute phase. Exclusion criteria were missing views, poor quality of angiography loops, and angiography without ventriculography. A total of 1016 TTS patients were studied. Of those, 23.0% had obstructive CAD, 41.2% had non-obstructive CAD, and 35.7% had angiographically normal coronary arteries. A total of 47 patients (4.6%) underwent percutaneous coronary intervention, and 3 patients had acute and 8 had chronic coronary artery occlusion concomitant with TTS, respectively. The presence of CAD was associated with increased incidence of shock, ventilation, and death from any cause. After adjusting for confounders, the presence of obstructive CAD was associated with mortality at 30 days. Takotsubo syndrome patients with obstructive CAD were at comparable risk for shock and death and nearly at twice the risk for ventilation compared to an age- and sex-matched ACS cohort., Conclusions: Coronary artery disease frequently coexists in TTS patients, presents with the whole spectrum of coronary pathology including acute coronary occlusion, and is associated with adverse outcome., Trial Registration: ClinicalTrials.gov number: NCT01947621., (Published on behalf of the European Society of Cardiology. All rights reserved. © The Author(s) 2020. For permissions, please email: journals.permissions@oup.com.)
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- 2020
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33. Effect of adjuvant radiotherapy in elderly patients with breast cancer.
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Stueber TN, Diessner J, Bartmann C, Leinert E, Janni W, Herr D, Kreienberg R, Woeckel A, and Wischnewsky M
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- Aged, Aged, 80 and over, Breast Neoplasms drug therapy, Breast Neoplasms pathology, Breast Neoplasms surgery, Combined Modality Therapy, Disease-Free Survival, Female, Geriatrics, Humans, Lymphatic Metastasis, Neoplasm Recurrence, Local drug therapy, Neoplasm Recurrence, Local pathology, Neoplasm Recurrence, Local surgery, Risk Factors, Breast Neoplasms radiotherapy, Mastectomy, Segmental, Neoplasm Recurrence, Local radiotherapy, Radiotherapy, Adjuvant
- Abstract
Background: Radiotherapy (RT) is of critical importance in the locoregional management of early breast cancer. Although RT is routinely used following breast conserving surgery (BCS), patients may occasionally be effectively treated with BCS alone. Currently, the selection of patients undergoing BCS who do not need breast irradiation is under investigation. With the advancement of personalized medicine, there is an increasing interest in reduction of aggressive treatments especially in older women. The primary objective of this study was to identify elderly patients who may forego breast irradiation after BCS without measurable consequences on local tumor growth and survival., Methods: We analyzed 2384 early breast cancer patients aged 70 and older who were treated in 17 German certified breast cancer centers between 2001 and 2009. We compared RT versus no RT after guideline adherent (GA) BCS. The outcomes studied were breast cancer recurrence (RFS) and breast cancer-specific survival (BCSS). Low-risk patients were defined by luminal A, tumor size T1 or T2 and node-negative whereas higher-risk patients were defined by patients with G3 or T3/T4 or node-positive or other than Luminal A tumors. To test if there is a difference between two or more survival curves, we used the Gp family of tests of Harrington and Fleming., Results: The median age was 77 yrs (mean 77.6±5.6 y) and the median observation time 46 mths (mean 48.9±24.8 mths). 950 (39.8%) patients were low-risk and 1434 (60.2%) were higher-risk. 1298 (54.4%) patients received GA BCS of which 85.0% (1103) received GA-RT and only 15% (195) did not. For low-risk patients with GA-BCS there were no significant differences in RFS (log rank p = 0.651) and in BCSS (p = 0.573) stratified by GA-RT. 5 years RFS in both groups were > 97%. For higher-risk patients with GA-BCS we found a significant difference (p<0.001) in RFS and tumor-associated OS stratified by GA-RT. The results remain the same after adjusting by adjuvant systemic treatment (AST) and comorbidity (ASA and NYHA)., Conclusions: Patients aged 70 years and older suffering from low-risk early breast cancer with GA-BCS can avoid breast irradiation with <3% chance of relapse. In the case of higher-risk, breast irradiation should be used routinely following GA-BCS. As a side effect of these results, removing the entire breast of elderly low risk patients to spare them from breast irradiation seems to be not necessary., Competing Interests: The authors have declared that no competing interests exist.
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- 2020
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34. Deceleration of Disease Progress Through Ayurvedic Treatment in Nondialysis Stages IV-V Patients with Chronic Renal Failure: A Quasi-Experimental Clinical Pilot Study with One Group Pre- and Postdesign and Two Premeasurements.
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Patel M, Patel M, Patel K, Wischnewsky M, Stapelfeldt E, Kessler CS, and Gupta SN
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- Adolescent, Adult, Creatinine blood, Female, Glomerular Filtration Rate drug effects, Hemoglobins drug effects, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Phytotherapy, Pilot Projects, Plants, Medicinal, Young Adult, Kidney Failure, Chronic therapy, Medicine, Ayurvedic, Plant Preparations therapeutic use
- Abstract
Objective: The aim of this study was to evaluate the effects of Ayurvedic treatment on deceleration of the disease progress of nondialysis patients with stage IV or V chronic renal failure (CRF). Materials and Methods: A complex oral and proctocolonic Ayurvedic multiherbal medication was administered daily for 1 month to inpatients. Thereafter, patients were treated as outpatients with oral medication for additional 5 months. Four renal function tests (RFTs) were evaluated at various time points (TPs): (1) 6 months before baseline (TP -6), (2) at baseline (TP 0), and (3) after completion of 6 months of treatment (TP +6). Repeated-measures analysis of variance (ANOVA) with Greenhouse-Geisser correction and Friedman's ANOVA by ranks were used to analyze the RFTs. For post hoc tests, the Bonferroni correction was applied. Bias-corrected effect sizes (Hedges) for the treatment were calculated. Results: Sixty-four nondialysis CRF patients with laboratory investigations of the preceding 6 months were included; 12 patients discontinued the treatment. Fifty-two patients with stage IV or V at baseline completed the study. Mean concentrations of estimated glomerular filtration rate (eGFR), serum creatinine, and hemoglobin differed significantly between TPs (eGFR: F = 15.3, p < 0.001; serum creatinine: F = 29.3, p < 0.001; blood urea: F = 2.0, p = 0.159; hemoglobin: F = 53.9, p < 0.001). Pairwise comparisons of the mean differences between TPs are significant for eGFR, creatinine, and hemoglobin. For blood urea, a significant decrease was observed for the treatment period [15.9(↓) mg/dL, standard error 4.0; n = 52], but a nonsignificant increase was observed for the pretreatment period [16.2(↑) mg/dL, standard error 9.8] due to insufficient data for TP -6 ( n = 26). The effect sizes for eGFR, creatinine, blood urea, and hemoglobin were medium (0.45, 0.53, 0.44, and 0.30). Conclusions: After 6 months of treatment, statistically and clinically significant improvements of eGFR, creatinine, blood urea, and hemoglobin and a significant shift to better CRF stages were observed. Several cardinal symptoms were also significantly reduced. Randomized controlled trials are warranted to evaluate the effects in comparison to usual care.
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- 2020
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35. Age-Related Variations in Takotsubo Syndrome.
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Cammann VL, Szawan KA, Stähli BE, Kato K, Budnik M, Wischnewsky M, Dreiding S, Levinson RA, Di Vece D, Gili S, Citro R, Bossone E, Neuhaus M, Franke J, Meder B, Jaguszewski M, Noutsias M, Knorr M, Heiner S, D'Ascenzo F, Dichtl W, Burgdorf C, Kherad B, Tschöpe C, Sarcon A, Shinbane J, Rajan L, Michels G, Pfister R, Cuneo A, Jacobshagen C, Karakas M, Koenig W, Pott A, Meyer P, Roffi M, Banning A, Wolfrum M, Cuculi F, Kobza R, Fischer TA, Vasankari T, Airaksinen KEJ, Napp LC, Dworakowski R, MacCarthy P, Kaiser C, Osswald S, Galiuto L, Chan C, Bridgman P, Beug D, Delmas C, Lairez O, Gilyarova E, Shilova A, Gilyarov M, El-Battrawy I, Akin I, Poledniková K, Toušek P, Winchester DE, Galuszka J, Ukena C, Poglajen G, Carrilho-Ferreira P, Hauck C, Paolini C, Bilato C, Kobayashi Y, Shoji T, Ishibashi I, Takahara M, Himi T, Din J, Al-Shammari A, Prasad A, Rihal CS, Liu K, Schulze PC, Bianco M, Jörg L, Rickli H, Pestana G, Nguyen TH, Böhm M, Maier LS, Pinto FJ, Widimský P, Felix SB, Braun-Dullaeus RC, Rottbauer W, Hasenfuß G, Pieske BM, Schunkert H, Borggrefe M, Thiele H, Bauersachs J, Katus HA, Horowitz JD, Di Mario C, Münzel T, Crea F, Bax JJ, Lüscher TF, Ruschitzka F, Ghadri JR, Opolski G, and Templin C
- Subjects
- Aged, Causality, Female, Global Health, Humans, Male, Mental Disorders epidemiology, Middle Aged, Mortality, Nervous System Diseases epidemiology, Prevalence, Prognosis, Registries, Risk Assessment statistics & numerical data, Age Factors, Age of Onset, Hospital Mortality, Shock, Cardiogenic epidemiology, Shock, Cardiogenic etiology, Takotsubo Cardiomyopathy complications, Takotsubo Cardiomyopathy diagnosis, Takotsubo Cardiomyopathy epidemiology, Takotsubo Cardiomyopathy physiopathology
- Abstract
Background: Takotsubo syndrome (TTS) occurs predominantly in post-menopausal women but is also found in younger patients., Objectives: This study aimed to investigate age-related differences in TTS., Methods: Patients diagnosed with TTS and enrolled in the International Takotsubo Registry between January 2011 and February 2017 were included in this analysis and were stratified by age (younger: ≤50 years, middle-age: 51 to 74 years, elderly: ≥75 years). Baseline characteristics, hospital course, as well as short- and long-term mortality were compared among groups., Results: Of 2,098 TTS patients, 242 (11.5%) patients were ≤50 years of age, 1,194 (56.9%) were 51 to 74 years of age, and 662 (31.6%) were ≥75 years of age. Younger patients were more often men (12.4% vs. 10.9% vs. 6.3%; p = 0.002) and had an increased prevalence of acute neurological (16.3% vs. 8.4% vs. 8.8%; p = 0.001) or psychiatric disorders (14.1% vs. 10.3% vs. 5.6%; p < 0.001) compared with middle-aged and elderly TTS patients. Furthermore, younger patients had more often cardiogenic shock (15.3% vs. 9.1% vs. 8.1%; p = 0.004) and had a numerically higher in-hospital mortality (6.6% vs. 3.6% vs. 5.1%; p = 0.07). At multivariable analysis, younger (odds ratio: 1.60; 95% confidence interval: 0.86 to 3.01; p = 0.14) and older age (odds ratio: 1.09; 95% confidence interval: 0.66 to 1.80; p = 0.75) were not independently associated with in-hospital mortality using the middle-aged group as a reference. There were no differences in 60-day mortality rates among groups., Conclusions: A substantial proportion of TTS patients are younger than 50 years of age. TTS is associated with severe complications requiring intensive care, particularly in younger patients., (Copyright © 2020 American College of Cardiology Foundation. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)
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- 2020
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36. Intraventricular Thrombus Formation and Embolism in Takotsubo Syndrome: Insights From the International Takotsubo Registry.
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Ding KJ, Cammann VL, Szawan KA, Stähli BE, Wischnewsky M, Di Vece D, Citro R, Jaguszewski M, Seifert B, Sarcon A, Knorr M, Heiner S, Gili S, D'Ascenzo F, Neuhaus M, Napp LC, Franke J, Noutsias M, Burgdorf C, Koenig W, Kherad B, Rajan L, Michels G, Pfister R, Cuneo A, Jacobshagen C, Karakas M, Pott A, Meyer P, Arroja JD, Banning A, Cuculi F, Kobza R, Fischer TA, Vasankari T, Airaksinen KEJ, Paolini C, Bilato C, Carrilho-Ferreira P, Opolski G, Dworakowski R, MacCarthy P, Kaiser C, Osswald S, Galiuto L, Dichtl W, Chan C, Bridgman P, Delmas C, Lairez O, El-Battrawy I, Akin I, Gilyarova E, Shilova A, Gilyarov M, Kozel M, Tousek P, Widimský P, Winchester DE, Galuszka J, Ukena C, Horowitz JD, Di Mario C, Prasad A, Rihal CS, Pinto FJ, Crea F, Borggrefe M, Braun-Dullaeus RC, Rottbauer W, Bauersachs J, Katus HA, Hasenfuß G, Tschöpe C, Pieske BM, Thiele H, Schunkert H, Böhm M, Felix SB, Münzel T, Bax JJ, Lüscher TF, Ruschitzka F, Ghadri JR, Bossone E, and Templin C
- Subjects
- Aged, Australia epidemiology, Coronary Angiography, Electrocardiography, Embolism diagnosis, Embolism epidemiology, Europe epidemiology, Female, Follow-Up Studies, Heart Diseases diagnosis, Heart Diseases epidemiology, Heart Diseases etiology, Heart Ventricles, Humans, Incidence, Magnetic Resonance Imaging, Cine, Male, Radionuclide Ventriculography, Risk Factors, Survival Rate trends, Takotsubo Cardiomyopathy diagnosis, Thrombosis diagnosis, Thrombosis epidemiology, Time Factors, United States epidemiology, Embolism etiology, Registries, Risk Assessment methods, Takotsubo Cardiomyopathy complications, Thrombosis etiology
- Abstract
Objective: Takotsubo syndrome (TTS) is characterized by acute left ventricular dysfunction, which can contribute to intraventricular thrombus and embolism. Still, prevalence and clinical impact of thrombus formation and embolic events on outcome of TTS patients remain unclear. This study aimed to investigate clinical features and outcomes of patients with and without intraventricular thrombus or embolism. Additionally, factors associated with thrombus formation or embolism, as well as predictors for mortality, were identified. Approach and Results: TTS patients enrolled in the International Takotsubo Registry at 28 centers in Australia, Europe, and the United States were dichotomized according to the occurrence/absence of intraventricular thrombus or embolism. Patients with intraventricular thrombus or embolism were defined as the ThrombEmb group. Of 1676 TTS patients, 56 (3.3%) patients developed intraventricular thrombus and/or embolism following TTS diagnosis (median time interval, 2.0 days [range, 0-38 days]). Patients in the ThrombEmb group had a different clinical profile including lower left ventricular ejection fraction, higher prevalence of the apical type, elevated levels of troponin and inflammatory markers, and higher prevalence of vascular disease. In a Firth bias-reduced penalized-likelihood logistic regression model apical type, left ventricular ejection fraction ≤30%, previous vascular disease, and a white blood cell count on admission >10×10
3 cells/μL emerged as independent predictors for thrombus formation or embolism., Conclusions: Intraventricular thrombus or embolism occur in 3.3% of patients in the acute phase of TTS. A simple risk score including clinical parameters associated with intraventricular thrombus formation or embolism identifies patients at increased risk., Clinical Trial Registration: URL: http://www.clinicaltrials.gov. Unique identifier: NCT01947621.- Published
- 2020
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37. B 2 Prognostic Score: External Validation of a Clinical Decision-making Tool for Metastatic Breast Cancer.
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Stueber TN, Wischnewsky M, Leinert E, Diessner J, Bartmann C, Stein RG, and Woeckel A
- Subjects
- Adult, Aged, Aged, 80 and over, Biomarkers, Tumor metabolism, Bone Neoplasms drug therapy, Bone Neoplasms secondary, Brain Neoplasms drug therapy, Brain Neoplasms secondary, Breast Neoplasms drug therapy, Breast Neoplasms pathology, Female, Follow-Up Studies, Humans, Liver Neoplasms drug therapy, Liver Neoplasms secondary, Lung Neoplasms drug therapy, Lung Neoplasms secondary, Middle Aged, Neoplasm Recurrence, Local drug therapy, Neoplasm Recurrence, Local mortality, Neoplasm Recurrence, Local pathology, Prognosis, Receptor, ErbB-2 metabolism, Receptors, Estrogen metabolism, Receptors, Progesterone metabolism, Retrospective Studies, Risk Factors, Survival Rate, Antineoplastic Combined Chemotherapy Protocols therapeutic use, Bone Neoplasms mortality, Brain Neoplasms mortality, Breast Neoplasms mortality, Clinical Decision-Making, Liver Neoplasms mortality, Lung Neoplasms mortality
- Abstract
Background: The B
2 Prognostic Score (B2 PS) is a clinical decision-making tool in metastatic breast cancer (MBC) that provides risk classification based on routine parameters. This study validates the B2 PS in an independent series of MBC for the whole study group and for each intrinsic subtype., Patients and Methods: We analyzed 641 metastasized patients, treated in 17 German certified breast cancer centers between 2001 and 2009. They were classified into low, intermediate, and high-risk groups according to B2 PS. Overall survival (OS) curves for the various B2 PS groups were compared with Kaplan-Meier method., Results: According to the B2 PS formula, 42.3% of patients were classified as low risk, 25.4% as intermediate risk and 32.3% as high risk. Intermediate- and high-risk patients had a statistically significant decreased OS compared with B2 PS low-risk patients: (intermediate-risk: hazard ratio, 1.36; 95% confidence interval, 1.04-1.77; P = .023; high-risk: hazard ratio, 2.62; 95% confidence interval, 2.06-3.32; P < .001). The 5-year survival rates of low-, intermediate-, and high-risk patients were 41.3%, 26.9%, and 10.2%, respectively. The distribution of B2 PS risk groups varied significantly within the intrinsic subtypes. For each intrinsic subtype, B2 PS gives an additional risk classification., Conclusions: This study demonstrates the reproducibility of the B2 PS based on routinely assessable parameters and confirms its prognostic value in an independent entire cohort of MBC as well as in the separate intrinsic subtypes. It therefore can help in counseling and individualizing the therapeutic regimens of those patients., (Copyright © 2019 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)- Published
- 2019
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38. Reliability of Ayurvedic Diagnosis for Knee Osteoarthritis Patients: A Nested Diagnostic Study Within a Randomized Controlled Trial.
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Kessler CS, Morandi A, Kumar A, Dhiman KS, Gupta S, Icke K, Bühner C, Stapelfeldt E, Wischnewsky M, Kronpaß L, Murthy V, Michalsen A, and Witt CM
- Subjects
- Humans, Predictive Value of Tests, Reproducibility of Results, Medicine, Ayurvedic, Osteoarthritis, Knee diagnosis
- Abstract
Background: Ayurveda is a traditional Indian system of medicine. The customized Ayurvedic approach consists of a combination of several diagnostic procedures and subsequent individualized therapeutic interventions. Evaluation of inter-rater reliability (IRR) of Ayurvedic diagnoses has rarely been performed. The aim of this study was to evaluate IRR of Ayurvedic diagnosis for patients with knee osteoarthritis. Methods: A diagnostic reliability study of 30 patients and 4 Ayurvedic experts was nested in a randomized controlled trial. Patients were diagnosed in a sequential order by all experts utilizing a semistructured patient history form. A nominal group technique as consensus procedure was performed to reach agreement on the items to be diagnosed. An IRR analysis using Fleiss' and Cohen's kappa statistics was performed to determine a chance-corrected measure of agreement among raters. Results: One hundred and twenty different ratings and 30 consensus ratings were performed and analyzed. While high percentages of agreement for main diagnostic entities and the final Ayurveda diagnosis (95% consensus agreement on main diagnosis) could be observed, this was not reflected in the corresponding kappa values, which largely yielded fair-to-poor inter-rater agreement kappas for central diagnostic aspects such as prakriti and agni ( κ values between 0 and 0.4). Notably, agreement on disease-related entities was better than that on constitutional entities. Conclusions: This is the first diagnostic study embedded in a clinical trial on patients with knee osteoarthritis utilizing a multimodality whole systems approach. Results showed a contrast between the high agreement of the consented final diagnosis and disagreement on certain diagnostic details. Future diagnostic studies should have larger sample sizes and a methodology more tailored to the specificities of traditional whole systems of medicine. Equal emphasis will need to be placed on all core diagnostic components of Ayurveda, both constitutional and disease specific, using detailed structured history taking forms.
- Published
- 2019
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39. Does chemotherapy improve survival in patients with nodal positive luminal A breast cancer? A retrospective Multicenter Study.
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Herr D, Wischnewsky M, Joukhadar R, Chow O, Janni W, Leinert E, Fink V, Stüber T, Curtaz C, Kreienberg R, Blettner M, Wollschläger D, and Wöckel A
- Subjects
- Aged, Chemotherapy, Adjuvant, Disease-Free Survival, Female, Humans, Lymph Nodes pathology, Lymphatic Metastasis, Middle Aged, Retrospective Studies, Survival Rate, Breast Neoplasms drug therapy, Breast Neoplasms mortality, Breast Neoplasms pathology
- Abstract
Background: In this study based on the BRENDA data, we investigated the impact of endocrine ± chemotherapy for luminal A, nodal positive breast cancer on recurrence free (RFS) and overall survival (OS). In addition, we analysed if tumor size of luminal A breast cancer influences survival in patients with the same number of positive lymph nodes., Methods: In this retrospective multi-centre cohort study data of 1376 nodal-positive patients with primary diagnosis of luminal A breast cancer during 2001-2008 were analysed. The results were stratified by therapy and adjusted by age, tumor size and number of affected lymph nodes., Results: In our study population, patients had a good to excellent prognosis (5-year RFS: 91% and tumorspecific 5-year OS 96.5%). There was no significant difference in RFS stratified by patients with only endocrine therapy and with endocrine plus chemo-therapy. Patients with 1-3 affected lymph nodes had no significant differences in OS treated only with endocrine therapy or with endocrine plus chemotherapy, independent of tumor size. Patients with large tumors and more than 3 affected lymph nodes had a significant worse survival as compared to the small tumors. However, despite the worse prognosis of those, adjuvant chemotherapy failed in order to improve RFS., Conclusions: According to our data, nodal positive patients with luminal A breast cancer have, if any, a limited benefit of adjuvant chemotherapy. Tumor size and nodal status seem to be of prognostic value in terms of survival, however both tumor size as well as nodal status were not predictive for a benefit of adjuvant chemotherapy., Competing Interests: The authors have declared that no competing interests exist.
- Published
- 2019
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40. Does the number of removed axillary lymphnodes in high risk breast cancer patients influence the survival?
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Ebner F, Wöckel A, Schwentner L, Blettner M, Janni W, Kreienberg R, and Wischnewsky M
- Subjects
- Adult, Aged, Aged, 80 and over, Breast metabolism, Breast pathology, Breast Neoplasms metabolism, Breast Neoplasms pathology, Disease-Free Survival, Female, Humans, Lymph Node Excision statistics & numerical data, Middle Aged, Multivariate Analysis, Receptor, ErbB-2 metabolism, Retrospective Studies, Risk Factors, Axilla, Breast surgery, Breast Neoplasms surgery, Lymph Node Excision methods
- Abstract
Background: The decision making process for axillary dissection has changed in recent years for patients with early breast cancer and positive sentinel lymph nodes (LN). The question now arises, what is the optimal surgical treatment for patients with positive axillary LN (pN+). This article tries to answer the following questions: (1) Is there a survival benefit for breast cancer patients with 3 or more positive LN (pN3+) and with more than 10 removed LN? (2) Is there a survival benefit for high risk breast cancer patients (triple negative or Her2 + breast cancer) and with 3 or more positive LN (pN3+) with more than 10 removed LN? (3) In pN + patients is the prognostic value of the lymph node ratio (LNR) of pN+/pN removed impaired if 10 or less LN are removed?, Methods: A retrospective database analysis of the multi center cohort database BRENDA (breast cancer under evidence based guidelines) with data from 9625 patients from 17 breast centers was carried out. Guideline adherence was defined by the 2008 German National consensus guidelines., Results: 2992 out of 9625 patients had histological confirmed positive lymph nodes. The most important factors for survival were intrinsic sub types, tumor size and guideline adherent chemo- and hormonal treatment (and age at diagnosis for overall survival (OAS)). Uni-and multivariable analyses for recurrence free survival (RFS) and OAS showed no significant survival benefit when removing more than 10 lymph nodes even for high-risk patients. The mean and median of LNR were significantly higher in the pN+ patients with ≤10 excised LN compared to patients with > 10 excised LN. LNR was in both, uni-and multivariable, analysis a highly significant prognostic factor for RFS and OAS in both subgroups of pN + patients with less respective more than 10 excised LN. Multivariable COX regression analysis was adjusted by age, tumor size, intrinsic sub types and guideline adherent adjuvant systemic therapy., Conclusion: The removal of more than 10 LN did not result in a significant survival benefit even in high risk pN + breast cancer patients.
- Published
- 2019
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41. Reply: Prevalence of Diabetes Mellitus in Patients With Takotsubo Syndrome, Precipitated by Nonphysical or No Triggers.
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Kato K, Cammann VL, Wischnewsky M, Ghadri JR, and Templin C
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- Humans, Prevalence, Prognosis, Diabetes Mellitus, Takotsubo Cardiomyopathy
- Published
- 2018
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42. Long-Term Prognosis of Patients With Takotsubo Syndrome.
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Ghadri JR, Kato K, Cammann VL, Gili S, Jurisic S, Di Vece D, Candreva A, Ding KJ, Micek J, Szawan KA, Bacchi B, Bianchi R, Levinson RA, Wischnewsky M, Seifert B, Schlossbauer SA, Citro R, Bossone E, Münzel T, Knorr M, Heiner S, D'Ascenzo F, Franke J, Sarcon A, Napp LC, Jaguszewski M, Noutsias M, Katus HA, Burgdorf C, Schunkert H, Thiele H, Bauersachs J, Tschöpe C, Pieske BM, Rajan L, Michels G, Pfister R, Cuneo A, Jacobshagen C, Hasenfuß G, Karakas M, Koenig W, Rottbauer W, Said SM, Braun-Dullaeus RC, Banning A, Cuculi F, Kobza R, Fischer TA, Vasankari T, Airaksinen KEJ, Opolski G, Dworakowski R, MacCarthy P, Kaiser C, Osswald S, Galiuto L, Crea F, Dichtl W, Empen K, Felix SB, Delmas C, Lairez O, El-Battrawy I, Akin I, Borggrefe M, Horowitz J, Kozel M, Tousek P, Widimský P, Gilyarova E, Shilova A, Gilyarov M, Winchester DE, Ukena C, Bax JJ, Prasad A, Böhm M, Lüscher TF, Ruschitzka F, and Templin C
- Subjects
- Acute Coronary Syndrome diagnosis, Acute Coronary Syndrome mortality, Acute Coronary Syndrome physiopathology, Aged, Aged, 80 and over, Electroencephalography mortality, Electroencephalography trends, Female, Follow-Up Studies, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Mortality trends, Nervous System Diseases diagnosis, Nervous System Diseases physiopathology, Prognosis, Stress, Psychological diagnosis, Stress, Psychological mortality, Stress, Psychological physiopathology, Takotsubo Cardiomyopathy physiopathology, Takotsubo Cardiomyopathy psychology, Time Factors, Registries, Takotsubo Cardiomyopathy diagnosis, Takotsubo Cardiomyopathy mortality
- Abstract
Background: Prognosis of Takotsubo syndrome (TTS) remains controversial due to scarcity of available data. Additionally, the effect of the triggering factors remains elusive., Objectives: This study compared prognosis between TTS and acute coronary syndrome (ACS) patients and investigated short- and long-term outcomes in TTS based on different triggers., Methods: Patients with TTS were enrolled from the International Takotsubo Registry. Long-term mortality of patients with TTS was compared to an age- and sex-matched cohort of patients with ACS. In addition, short- and long-term outcomes were compared between different groups according to triggering conditions., Results: Overall, TTS patients had a comparable long-term mortality risk with ACS patients. Of 1,613 TTS patients, an emotional trigger was detected in 485 patients (30%). Of 630 patients (39%) related to physical triggers, 98 patients (6%) had acute neurologic disorders, while in the other 532 patients (33%), physical activities, medical conditions, or procedures were the triggering conditions. The remaining 498 patients (31%) had no identifiable trigger. TTS patients related to physical stress showed higher mortality rates than ACS patients during long-term follow-up, whereas patients related to emotional stress had better outcomes compared with ACS patients., Conclusions: Overall, TTS patients had long-term outcomes comparable to age- and sex-matched ACS patients. Also, we demonstrated that TTS can either be benign or a life-threating condition depending on the inciting stress factor. We propose a new classification based on triggers, which can serve as a clinical tool to predict short- and long-term outcomes of TTS. (International Takotsubo Registry [InterTAK Registry]; NCT01947621)., (Copyright © 2018 American College of Cardiology Foundation. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2018
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43. Highly significant improvement in guideline adherence, relapse-free and overall survival in breast cancer patients when treated at certified breast cancer centres: An evaluation of 8323 patients.
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Kreienberg R, Wöckel A, and Wischnewsky M
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Adult, Aged, Aged, 80 and over, Breast Neoplasms therapy, Certification, Disease-Free Survival, Female, Germany, Humans, Middle Aged, Neoplasm Recurrence, Local mortality, Treatment Outcome, Young Adult, Ambulatory Care Facilities standards, Antineoplastic Protocols standards, Breast Neoplasms mortality, Guideline Adherence statistics & numerical data, Quality Improvement statistics & numerical data
- Abstract
Objectives: Certified multi-disciplinary breast cancer centres (CBCs) have been established worldwide. Development of CBCs, guideline-adherent systemic therapy and surgical management should now show an impact on outcomes. This analysis aimed to investigate whether guideline adherence (GA) rates, relapse-free survival (RFS) and overall survival (OS) have significantly improved at CBCs compared to the pre-certification period., Materials and Methods: 8323 patients with primary breast cancer were treated in 17 German CBCs, which had been certified between 2003 and 2007 [2003 (n = 1), 2004 (n = 6), 2005 (n = 3), 2006 (n = 6) and 2007 (n = 1)]. 3544 patients (42.6%) were treated before certification and 4779 patients (57.4%) after certification., Results and Conclusion: A highly significant (p < 0.001) difference in 100%-GA was found between the various hospitals before certification (min 25.0%; max 54.6%). In 2008, when all participating hospitals were certified, the GA rate was 61.8% (min 39.5%, max 74.4%) and 69.2% (min 45.9%, max 86.4%) for patients <75 y (n = 6675). The difference between pre-certification 100%-GA (46.9%) and post-certification (57.2%) was highly significant (p < 0.001). RFS and OS were both significantly better after certification compared to the pre-certification period (RFS: HR = 0.79; 95% CI: 0.68-0.92; p = 0.003; OS: HR = 0.75; 95% CI: 0.65-0.85; p < 0.001). 5-year RFS (OS) of patients <75 y was 89.6% (85.4%) pre-certification and 91.4% (89.5%) post-certification. Since improvement in GA and outcomes correlated as well, GA remains a highly significant prognostic factor for RFS and OS regardless of NPI, intrinsic subtype and adjuvant systemic therapy. This suggests that the certification process is strongly associated with improvements in outcome., (Copyright © 2018 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2018
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44. The effects of short-term fasting on quality of life and tolerance to chemotherapy in patients with breast and ovarian cancer: a randomized cross-over pilot study.
- Author
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Bauersfeld SP, Kessler CS, Wischnewsky M, Jaensch A, Steckhan N, Stange R, Kunz B, Brückner B, Sehouli J, and Michalsen A
- Subjects
- Adult, Aged, Antineoplastic Combined Chemotherapy Protocols adverse effects, Body Weight, Breast Neoplasms diagnosis, Breast Neoplasms metabolism, Cross-Over Studies, Female, Humans, Middle Aged, Neoplasm Staging, Ovarian Neoplasms diagnosis, Ovarian Neoplasms metabolism, Pilot Projects, Treatment Outcome, Antineoplastic Combined Chemotherapy Protocols therapeutic use, Breast Neoplasms drug therapy, Fasting, Ovarian Neoplasms drug therapy, Quality of Life
- Abstract
Background: This pilot trial aimed to study the feasibility and effects on quality of life (QOL) and well-being of short-term fasting (STF) during chemotherapy in patients with gynecological cancer., Methods: In an individually-randomized cross-over trial patients with gynecological cancer, 4 to 6 planned chemotherapy cycles were included. Thirty-four patients were randomized to STF in the first half of chemotherapies followed by normocaloric diet (group A;n = 18) or vice versa (group B;n = 16). Fasting started 36 h before and ended 24 h after chemotherapy (60 h-fasting period). QOL was assessed by the FACIT-measurement system., Results: The chemotherapy-induced reduction of QOL was less than the Minimally Important Difference (MID; FACT-G = 5) with STF but greater than the MID for non-fasted periods. The mean chemotherapy-induced deterioration of total FACIT-F was 10.4 ± 5.3 for fasted and 27.0 ± 6.3 for non-fasted cycles in group A and 14.1 ± 5.6 for non-fasted and 11.0 ± 5.6 for fasted cycles in group B. There were no serious adverse effects., Conclusion: STF during chemotherapy is well tolerated and appears to improve QOL and fatigue during chemotherapy. Larger studies should prove the effect of STF as an adjunct to chemotherapy., Trial Registration: This trial was registered at clinicaltrials.gov: NCT01954836 .
- Published
- 2018
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45. Personalized axillary dissection: the number of excised lymph nodes of nodal-positive breast cancer patients has no significant impact on relapse-free and overall survival.
- Author
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Ebner F, Wöckel A, Janni W, Kreienberg R, Schwentner L, and Wischnewsky M
- Subjects
- Adult, Aged, Aged, 80 and over, Breast Neoplasms mortality, Breast Neoplasms surgery, Cohort Studies, Disease-Free Survival, Female, Humans, Lymph Node Excision methods, Lymphatic Metastasis diagnosis, Middle Aged, Retrospective Studies, Sentinel Lymph Node Biopsy methods, Breast Neoplasms pathology, Lymph Node Excision mortality, Lymphatic Metastasis pathology, Sentinel Lymph Node Biopsy mortality
- Abstract
Purpose: Sentinel lymph node (SLN) biopsy has replaced axillary lymph node dissection (ALND) for the staging of clinically node-negative breast cancer patients (BCP), demonstrating equivalent survival to ALND while resulting in reduced morbidity. ALND has remained the standard of care for the majority of BCP with clinical axillary metastases or metastases found on SLN biopsy. More recently, it is debated whether ALND could be avoided not only in SLN-negative BCP but also in selected SLN-positive disease or even in all patients. This analysis of pN+ BCP shows the impact of the number of excised lymph nodes on RFS and OAS adjusted by age, tumor size, intrinsic subtypes and adjuvant systemic therapy., Methods: In this retrospective, multicenter cohort study, we investigated data from 2992 pN+ primary BCP recruited from 17 participating certified breast cancer centers in Germany between 2001 and 2008 within the BRENDA study group., Results: The median number of excised lymph nodes was 17. The number of excised lymph nodes was neither significant for RFS (p = 0.085) nor for OAS (p = 0.285). Adjustments were made for age, tumor size and intrinsic subtypes. The most important significant parameters for RFS were intrinsic subtypes (p < 0.001) and tumor size (p < 0.001) and for OAS age (p < 0.001) and intrinsic subtypes (p < 0.001). There were no significant differences in RFS and OAS in any subgroup stratified by the number of excised lymph nodes. Only for T3/T4 tumors, there is a very small significant advantage of ALND for RFS but not for OAS. After adjusting in addition by guideline adherence of adjuvant systemic therapy (AST), intrinsic subtypes and guideline-adherent AST are the most important significant (p < 0.001) parameters for RFS and OAS., Conclusions: The number of excised lymph nodes of pN+ BCP neither correlates with RFS nor with OAS. Survival of pN+ BCP is primarily determined by the biology and the guideline-adherent AST based on the corresponding intrinsic subtypes. These results support the omission of a radical ALND at least for pN+ patients scheduled for breast-conserving surgery (not mastectomy), provided they receive whole breast irradiation and guideline-adherent AST.
- Published
- 2017
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46. Factors influencing the development of visceral metastasis of breast cancer: A retrospective multi-center study.
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Bartmann C, Diessner J, Blettner M, Häusler S, Janni W, Kreienberg R, Krockenberger M, Schwentner L, Stein R, Stüber T, Wöckel A, and Wischnewsky M
- Subjects
- Adult, Age Factors, Aged, Aged, 80 and over, Breast Neoplasms chemistry, Chi-Square Distribution, Female, Humans, Kaplan-Meier Estimate, Logistic Models, Middle Aged, Multivariate Analysis, Proportional Hazards Models, Retrospective Studies, Risk Factors, Young Adult, Breast Neoplasms pathology, Carcinoma, Ductal, Breast secondary, Liver Neoplasms secondary, Lung Neoplasms secondary
- Abstract
Purpose: Visceral metastasis of breast cancer (BC) is an alarming development and correlates with poor median overall survival. The purpose of this retrospective study is to examine the risk factors for developing visceral metastasis by considering tumor biology and patient characteristics., Methods: Using the BRENDA database, the risk factors such as histological and intrinsic subtypes of BC, age at primary diagnosis, grading, nodal status, tumor size and year of primary diagnosis were examined in univariate and multivariate analysis. Categorical variables were compared by using χ2 tests. Furthermore, multivariate Cox proportional hazards regression models, Kaplan-Meier product-limit method and log-rank test were applied. The results of two tree-building algorithms, "exhausted CHAID" (Chi-squared Automatic Interaction Detector) and CART (Classification and Regression Trees) were verified with further multivariate analysis, radial basis function networks (RBF-net), feedforward multilayer perceptron networks (MLP) and logistic regression., Results: In a patient collective of 886 metastasized patients, 56.9% had developed visceral metastases and 27.1% visceral-only metastases. The different histological and intrinsic subtypes of BC and the grading correlate significantly with the visceral-only metastasis behavior, whereas the age at primary diagnosis, the nodal status, the tumor size and the year of the primary diagnosis had no influence. Patients with ductal/other BC, LuminalB/HER2, TNBC, HER2 overexpressing subtype and grade 3 had an increased risk for the development of visceral-only metastasis., Conclusions: Intrinsic and histological subtypes as well as the grading of BC affected significantly the visceral metastasis behavior., (Copyright © 2016 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2017
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47. Pattern of metastatic spread and subcategories of breast cancer.
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Bartmann C, Wischnewsky M, Stüber T, Stein R, Krockenberger M, Häusler S, Janni W, Kreienberg R, Blettner M, Schwentner L, Wöckel A, and Diessner J
- Subjects
- Female, Humans, Kaplan-Meier Estimate, Proportional Hazards Models, Retrospective Studies, Survival Rate, Bone Neoplasms secondary, Breast Neoplasms pathology
- Abstract
Purpose: The development of metastases is the most aggressive attribute of breast cancer. In this retrospective multicenter study, we evaluated if and how the different pathological breast cancer subtypes influence the spreading of tumor cells, the development of metastasis and the survival of breast cancer patients., Methods: This retrospective German multicenter study is based on the BRENDA collective including 9625 breast cancer patients treated in the adjuvant setting. We used the χ
2 tests for the analysis of the categorical variables between groups of patients with different sites of metastasis. Survival distributions and median survival times were estimated using the Kaplan-Meier product-limit method. The log-rank test was applied to compare survival rates. The Cox proportional hazards model was used to estimate the hazard ratio and confidence intervals., Results: 886 women developed metastases during a time interval of 53 months after primary diagnosis. Luminal A tumor patients were more likely to get bone metastases than lung, liver or CNS metastases. Patients with a triple-negative subtype were, however, the least affected by metastasis in the skeleton. They were most likely to develop visceral metastases. Location, numbers of metastases herein and the subtype influenced the overall survival (OAS). Altogether, the best OAS was found in patients with the luminal A subtype, the worst in patients with the triple-negative subtype., Conclusions: Knowledge of the typical metastatic pattern of the subtypes of breast cancer will help to personalize therapeutic options and follow-up examinations of cancer patients.- Published
- 2017
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48. Are There Breast Cancer Patients with Node-Negative Small Tumours, Who Do Not Benefit from Adjuvant Systemic Therapy?
- Author
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Stüber T, Novopashenny I, Diessner J, Bartmann C, Stein R, Krockenberger M, Häusler S, Janni W, Kreienberg R, Blettner M, Wöckel A, and Wischnewsky M
- Subjects
- Adult, Aged, Aged, 80 and over, Antineoplastic Agents administration & dosage, Antineoplastic Agents adverse effects, Antineoplastic Agents therapeutic use, Drug Administration Schedule, Female, Germany epidemiology, Humans, Middle Aged, Neoplasm Staging, Practice Guidelines as Topic, Prognosis, Proportional Hazards Models, Receptor, ErbB-2, Retrospective Studies, Risk Assessment, Young Adult, Breast Neoplasms drug therapy, Breast Neoplasms pathology, Chemotherapy, Adjuvant adverse effects
- Abstract
Objective: To identify subgroups of patients with pT1 pN0 breast cancer (BC) who might not profit from adjuvant systemic therapy (AST)., Methods: Data of 3,774 pT1 pN0 BC patients from 17 certified BC centres within the BRENDA study group were collected between 1992 and 2008 and retrospectively analysed. Uni- and multivariate analyses were performed using Kaplan-Meier methods and Cox regression models., Results: 279 (7.4%) of the pT1 pN0 BC patients were T1a, 944 (25.0%) were T1b and 2,551 (67.6%) were T1c. There was no significant difference (p > 0.1) in recurrence-free survival (RFS)/overall survival (OAS) between patients with pT1a, pT1b, and T1c. Patients receiving any type of AST had a better outcome compared to women without AST after adjusting for age, tumour size, and intrinsic subtypes (RFS: p < 0.001; OAS: p < 0.001). AST was the most important prognostic parameter for RFS followed by intrinsic subtypes and age., Conclusion: Patients with pT1 pN0 BC profit from AST independently of molecular subtypes, tumour size, age or comorbidity, with 5-year RFS of more than 95%. The correct definition of subgroups of patients who do not need AST is still an open question., (© 2017 S. Karger AG, Basel.)
- Published
- 2017
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49. Do Patients with Luminal A Breast Cancer Profit from Adjuvant Systemic Therapy? A Retrospective Multicenter Study.
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Diessner J, Wischnewsky M, Blettner M, Häusler S, Janni W, Kreienberg R, Stein R, Stüber T, Schwentner L, Bartmann C, and Wöckel A
- Subjects
- Adult, Aged, Aged, 80 and over, Chemotherapy, Adjuvant methods, Disease-Free Survival, Female, Humans, Middle Aged, Retrospective Studies, Survival Rate, Breast Neoplasms drug therapy, Breast Neoplasms mortality
- Abstract
Background: Luminal A breast cancers respond well to anti-hormonal therapy (HT), are associated with a generally favorable prognosis and constitute the majority of breast cancer subtypes. HT is the mainstay of treatment of these patients, accompanied by an acceptable profile of side effects, whereas the added benefit of chemotherapy (CHT), including anthracycline and taxane-based programs, is less clear-cut and has undergone a process of critical revision., Methods: In the framework of the BRENDA collective, we analyzed the benefits of CHT compared to HT in 4570 luminal A patients (pts) with primary diagnosis between 2001 and 2008. The results were adjusted by nodal status, age, tumor size and grading., Results: There has been a progressive reduction in the use of CHT in luminal A patients during the last decade. Neither univariate nor multivariate analyses showed any statistically significant differences in relapse free survival (RFS) with the addition of CHT to adjuvant HT, independent of the nodal status, age, tumor size or grading. Even for patients with more than 3 affected lymph nodes, there was no significant difference (univariate: p = 0.865; HR 0.94; 95% CI: 0.46-1.93; multivariate: p = 0.812; HR 0.92; 95% CI: 0.45-1.88)., Conclusions: The addition of CHT to HT provides minimal or no clinical benefit at all to patients with luminal A breast cancer, independent of the RFS-risk. Consequently, risk estimation cannot be the initial step in the decisional process. These findings-that are in line with several publications-should encourage the critical evaluation of applying adjuvant CHT to patients with luminal A breast cancer., Competing Interests: The authors have declared that no competing interests exist.
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
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50. The impact of breast cancer biological subtyping on tumor size assessment by ultrasound and mammography - a retrospective multicenter cohort study of 6543 primary breast cancer patients.
- Author
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Stein RG, Wollschläger D, Kreienberg R, Janni W, Wischnewsky M, Diessner J, Stüber T, Bartmann C, Krockenberger M, Wischhusen J, Wöckel A, Blettner M, and Schwentner L
- Subjects
- Aged, Breast pathology, Breast surgery, Breast Neoplasms surgery, Carcinoma, Ductal, Breast surgery, Carcinoma, Lobular surgery, Female, Humans, Mammography, Middle Aged, Neoplasm Staging, Receptor, ErbB-2 metabolism, Receptors, Estrogen metabolism, Receptors, Progesterone metabolism, Retrospective Studies, Ultrasonography, Mammary, Breast Neoplasms diagnostic imaging, Breast Neoplasms pathology, Carcinoma, Ductal, Breast diagnosis, Carcinoma, Ductal, Breast pathology, Carcinoma, Lobular diagnostic imaging, Carcinoma, Lobular pathology
- Abstract
Background: Mammography and ultrasound are the gold standard imaging techniques for preoperative assessment and for monitoring the efficacy of neoadjuvant chemotherapy in breast cancer. Maximum accuracy in predicting pathological tumor size non-invasively is critical for individualized therapy and surgical planning. We therefore aimed to assess the accuracy of tumor size measurement by ultrasound and mammography in a multicentered health services research study., Methods: We retrospectively analyzed data from 6543 patients with unifocal, unilateral primary breast cancer. The maximum tumor diameter was measured by ultrasound and/or mammographic imaging. All measurements were compared to final tumor diameter determined by postoperative histopathological examination. We compared the precision of each imaging method across different patient subgroups as well as the method-specific accuracy in each patient subgroup., Results: Overall, the correlation with histology was 0.61 for mammography and 0.60 for ultrasound. Both correlations were higher in pT2 cancers than in pT1 and pT3. Ultrasound as well as mammography revealed a significantly higher correlation with histology in invasive ductal compared to lobular cancers (p < 0.01). For invasive lobular cancers, the mammography showed better correlation with histology than ultrasound (p = 0.01), whereas there was no such advantage for invasive ductal cancers. Ultrasound was significantly superior for HR negative cancers (p < 0.001). HER2/neu positive cancers were also more precisely assessed by ultrasound (p < 0.001). The size of HER2/neu negative cancers could be more accurately predicted by mammography (p < 0.001)., Conclusion: This multicentered health services research approach demonstrates that predicting tumor size by mammography and ultrasound provides accurate results. Biological tumor features do, however, affect the diagnostic precision.
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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