12 results on '"Mehrens, Dirk"'
Search Results
2. Distances and angles in standing long-leg radiographs: comparing conventional radiography, digital radiography, and EOS
- Author
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Birkenmaier, Christof, Levrard, Louise, Melcher, Carolin, Wegener, Bernd, Ricke, Jens, Holzapfel, Boris M., Baur-Melnyk, Andrea, and Mehrens, Dirk
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
3. Cost-effectiveness analysis of additional local prostate radio therapy in metastatic prostate cancer from a medicare perspective
- Author
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Kramer, Kristina K. M., Schmidt-Hegemann, Nina-Sophie, Westhofen, Thilo, Foglar, Marco, Ricke, Jens, Westphalen, C. Benedikt, Unterrainer, Marcus, Kunz, Wolfgang G., and Mehrens, Dirk
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
4. Endovascular thrombectomy is cost-saving in patients with acute ischemic stroke with large infarct.
- Author
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Schwarting, Julian, Froelich, Matthias F., Kirschke, Jan S., Mehrens, Dirk, Bodden, Jannis, Sepp, Dominik, Reis, Jonas, Dimitriadis, Konstantinos, Ricke, Jens, Zimmer, Claus, Boeckh-Behrens, Tobias, and Kunz, Wolfgang G.
- Subjects
STROKE patients ,ENDOVASCULAR surgery ,ISCHEMIC stroke ,MEDICAL care ,LACUNAR stroke - Abstract
Objective: Endovascular thrombectomy (EVT) is the standard of care for acute large vessel occlusion stroke. Recently, the ANGEL-ASPECT and SELECT 2 trials showed improved outcomes in patients with acute ischemic Stroke presenting with large infarcts. The cost-effectiveness of EVT for this subpopulation of stroke patients has only been calculated using data from the previously published RESCUE-Japan LIMIT trial. It is, therefore, limited in its generalizability to an international population. With this study we primarily simulated patient-level costs to analyze the economic potential of EVT for patients with large ischemic stroke from a public health payer perspective based on the recently published data and secondarily identified determinants of cost-effectiveness. Methods: Costs and outcome of patients treated with EVT or only with the best medical care based on the recent prospective clinical trials ANGEL-ASPECT, SELECT2 and RESCUE-Japan LIMIT. A A Markov model was developed using treamtment outcomes derived from the most recent available literature. Deterministic and probabilistic sensitivity analyses addressed uncertainty. Results: Endovascular treatment resulted in an incremental gain of 1.32 QALYs per procedure with cost savings of $17,318 per patient. Lifetime costs resulted to be most sensitive to the costs of the endovascular procedure. Conclusion: EVT is a cost-saving (i.e., dominant) strategy for patients presenting with large ischemic cores defined by inclusion criteria of the recently published ANGEL-ASPECT, SELECT2, and RESCUE-Japan LIMIT trials in comparison to best medical care in our simulation. Prospective data of individual patients need to be collected to validate these results. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
5. Cost-effectiveness of endovascular treatment versus best medical management in basilar artery occlusion stroke: A U.S. healthcare perspective.
- Author
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Mehrens, Dirk, Fabritius, Matthias P, Reidler, Paul, Liebig, Thomas, Afat, Saif, Ospel, Johanna M, Fröhlich, Matthias F, Schwarting, Julian, Ricke, Jens, Dimitriadis, Konstantinos, Goyal, Mayank, and Kunz, Wolfgang G
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
6. Gluteal Muscle Fatty Atrophy: An Independent Risk Factor for Surgical Treatment in Elderly Patients Diagnosed with Type-III Fragility Fractures of the Pelvis.
- Author
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Linhart, Christoph, Mehrens, Dirk, Gellert, Luca Maximilian, Ehrnthaller, Christian, Gleich, Johannes, Lampert, Christopher, Lerchenberger, Maximilian, Böcker, Wolfgang, Neuerburg, Carl, and Zhang, Yunjie
- Subjects
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GLUTEAL muscles , *OLDER patients , *MUSCULAR atrophy , *PREOPERATIVE risk factors , *PELVIC fractures , *ELECTRICAL impedance tomography - Abstract
Background: Gluteal muscle fatty atrophy (gMFA) might impair pelvic stability and negatively influence remobilization in patients with fragility fractures of the pelvis (FFP). This study aimed to investigate the association between gMFA and surgical indication in patients with FFP. Methods and materials: A retrospective analysis of 429 patients (age ≥80) diagnosed with FFP was performed. gMFA of the gluteus maximus, medius, and minimus was evaluated using a standard scoring system based on computer tomography images. Results: No significant difference was found in gMFA between genders or among FFP types. The severity of gMFA did not correlate with age. The severity of gMFA in the gluteus medius was significantly greater than in the gluteus maximus, whereas the most profound gMFA was found in the gluteus minimus. gMFA was significantly more severe in patients who underwent an operation than in conservatively treated patients with type-III FFP, and an independent correlation to surgical indication was found using logistic regression. Conclusion: Our findings imply that gMFA is an independent factor for surgical treatment in patients with type-III FFP. Besides focusing on the fracture pattern, the further evaluation of gMFA could be a feasible parameter for decision making toward either conservative or surgical treatment of type-III FFP. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
7. Is PSMA PET/CT cost-effective for the primary staging in prostate cancer? First results for European countries and the USA based on the proPSMA trial.
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Holzgreve, Adrien, Unterrainer, Marcus, Calais, Jérémie, Adams, Thaiza, Oprea-Lager, Daniela E., Goffin, Karolien, Lopci, Egesta, Unterrainer, Lena M., Kramer, Kristina K. M., Schmidt-Hegemann, Nina-Sophie, Casuscelli, Jozefina, Stief, Christian G., Ricke, Jens, Bartenstein, Peter, Kunz, Wolfgang G., and Mehrens, Dirk
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POSITRON emission tomography ,PROSTATE cancer ,PROSTATE cancer patients ,TUMOR classification ,COMPUTED tomography ,DECISION trees - Abstract
Purpose: The proPSMA trial at ten Australian centers demonstrated increased sensitivity and specificity for PSMA PET/CT compared to conventional imaging regarding metastatic status in primary high-risk prostate cancer patients. A cost-effectiveness analysis showed benefits of PSMA PET/CT over conventional imaging for the Australian setting. However, comparable data for other countries are lacking. Therefore, we aimed to verify the cost-effectiveness of PSMA PET/CT in several European countries as well as the USA. Methods: Clinical data on diagnostic accuracy were derived from the proPSMA trial. Costs for PSMA PET/CT and conventional imaging were taken from reimbursements of national health systems and individual billing information of selected centers in Belgium, Germany, Italy, the Netherlands, and the USA. For comparability, scan duration and the decision tree of the analysis were adopted from the Australian cost-effectiveness study. Results: In contrast to the Australian setting, PSMA PET/CT was primarily associated with increased costs in the studied centers in Europe and the USA. Mainly, the scan duration had an impact on the cost-effectiveness. However, costs for an accurate diagnosis using PSMA PET/CT seemed reasonably low compared to the potential consequential costs of an inaccurate diagnosis. Conclusion: We assume that the use of PSMA PET/CT is appropriate from a health economic perspective, but this will need to be verified by a prospective evaluation of patients at initial diagnosis. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
8. Endovascular thrombectomy is cost-effective in acute basilar artery occlusion stroke.
- Author
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Schwarting, Julian, Rühling, Sebastian, Bodden, Jannis, Schwarting, Stéphanie K., Zimmer, Claus, Mehrens, Dirk, Kirschke, Jan S., Kunz, Wolfgang G., Boeckh-Behrens, Tobias, and Froelich, Matthias F.
- Subjects
ENDOVASCULAR surgery ,BASILAR artery ,ARTERIAL occlusions ,MEDICAL care ,WILLINGNESS to pay - Abstract
Objective: Endovascular thrombectomy is a long-established therapy for acute basilar artery occlusion (aBAO). Unlike for anterior circulation stroke, cost-effectiveness of endovascular treatment has not been evaluated and is urgently needed to calculate expected health benefits and financial rewards. The aim of this study was therefore to simulate patient-level costs, analyze the economic potential of endovascular thrombectomy in patients with acute basilar artery occlusion (aBAO), and identify major determinants of costeffectiveness. Methods: A Markov model was developed to compare outcome and cost parameters between patients treated by endovascular thrombectomy and patients treated by best medical care, based on four recent prospective clinical trials (ATTENTION, BAOCHE, BASICS, and BEST). Treatment outcomes were derived from the most recent literature. Uncertainty was addressed by deterministic and probabilistic sensitivity analyses. Willingness to pay per QALY thresholds were set at 1x gross domestic product per capita, as recommended by the World Health Organization. Results: Endovascular treatment of acute aBAO stroke yielded an incremental gain of 1.71 quality-adjusted life-years per procedure with an incremental costeffectiveness ratio of $7,596 per QALY. This was substantially lower than the Willingness to pay of $63,593 per QALY. Lifetime costs were most sensitive to costs of the endovascular procedure. Conclusion: Endovascular treatment is cost-effective in patients with aBAO stroke. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
9. Cost-effectiveness of Response-Adapted De-escalation of Immunotherapy in Advanced Melanoma.
- Author
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Cartun, Zachary, Kunz, Wolfgang G., Heinzerling, Lucie, Tomsitz, Dirk, Guertler, Anne, Westphalen, C. Benedikt, Ricke, Jens, Weir, William, Unterrainer, Marcus, and Mehrens, Dirk
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
10. Cost-Effectiveness Analysis of Local Treatment in Oligometastatic Disease.
- Author
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Mehrens, Dirk, Unterrainer, Marcus, Corradini, Stefanie, Niyazi, Maximilian, Manapov, Farkhad, Westphalen, C. Benedikt, Froelich, Matthias F., Wildgruber, Moritz, Seidensticker, Max, Ricke, Jens, Rübenthaler, Johannes, and Kunz, Wolfgang G.
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CONSUMER price indexes ,COST effectiveness ,THERAPEUTICS ,QUALITY-adjusted life years ,PROGRESSION-free survival - Abstract
Background: In certain malignancies, patients with oligometastatic disease benefit from radical ablative or surgical treatment. The SABR-COMET trial demonstrated a survival benefit for oligometastatic patients randomized to local stereotactic ablative radiation (SABR) compared to patients receiving standard care (SC) alone. Our aim was to determine the cost-effectiveness of SABR. Materials and Methods: A decision model based on partitioned survival simulations estimated costs and quality-adjusted life years (QALY) associated with both strategies in a United States setting from a health care perspective. Analyses were performed over the trial duration of six years as well as a long-term horizon of 16 years. Model input parameters were based on the SABR-COMET trial data as well as best available and most recent data provided in the published literature. An annual discount of 3% for costs was implemented in the analysis. All costs were adjusted to 2019 US Dollars according to the United States Consumer Price Index. SABR costs were reported with an average of $11,700 per treatment. Deterministic and probabilistic sensitivity analyses were performed. Incremental costs, effectiveness, and cost-effectiveness ratios (ICER) were calculated. The willingness-to-pay (WTP) threshold was set to $100,000/QALY. Results: Based on increased overall and progression-free survival, the SABR group showed 0.78 incremental QALYs over the trial duration and 1.34 incremental QALYs over the long-term analysis. Treatment with SABR led to a marginal increase in costs compared to SC alone (SABR: $304,656; SC: $303,523 for 6 years; ICER $1,446/QALY and SABR: $402,888; SC: $350,708 for long-term analysis; ICER $38,874/QALY). Therapy with SABR remained cost-effective until treatment costs of $88,969 over the trial duration (i.e. 7.6 times the average cost). Sensitivity analysis identified a strong model impact for ongoing annual costs of oligo- and polymetastatic disease states. Conclusion: Our analysis suggests that local treatment with SABR adds QALYs for patients with certain oligometastatic cancers and represents an intermediate- and long-term cost-effective treatment strategy. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
11. In response to: PSMA PET/CT cost-effectiveness analysis in the USA: a response to a published commentary.
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Holzgreve, Adrien, Kunz, Wolfgang G., Mehrens, Dirk, and Unterrainer, Marcus
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POSITRON emission tomography ,COST effectiveness - Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
12. PET/CT imaging of differentiated and medullary thyroid carcinoma using the novel SSTR-targeting peptide [18F]SiTATE – first clinical experiences.
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Kunte, Sophie C., Wenter, Vera, Toms, Johannes, Lindner, Simon, Unterrainer, Marcus, Eilsberger, Friederike, Jurkschat, Klaus, Wängler, Carmen, Wängler, Björn, Schirrmacher, Ralf, Tiling, Maximilian W., Sheikh, Gabriel T., Mehrens, Dirk, Brendel, Matthias, Rübenthaler, Johannes, Auernhammer, Christoph J., Spitzweg, Christine, Unterrainer, Lena M., and Holzgreve, Adrien
- Subjects
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SOMATOSTATIN receptors , *MEDULLARY thyroid carcinoma , *COMPUTED tomography , *TUMOR markers , *THYROID cancer , *CALCITONIN - Abstract
Purpose: The novel 18F-labeled somatostatin receptor (SSTR)-directed radiotracer [18F]SiTATE demonstrated promising results for the imaging of various SSTR-expressing tumor types. Although thyroid carcinomas (TC) express SSTR, data on [18F]SiTATE PET/CT imaging in TC are lacking. This study explores the use of [18F]SiTATE PET/CT in a patient cohort with histologically proven TC.As part of a prospective observational study at a single tertiary cancer center, 21 patients with TC (10 medullary (MTC) and 11 differentiated (DTC)) who underwent at least one [18F]SiTATE PET/CT were included (37 scans in total). Mean SUVmax and SUVmean of tumoral lesions, mean total-tumor-volume (TTV), and whole-body (WB)-SUVmax and WB-SUVmean on PET with their standard deviations (SDs) were determined. PET parameters were correlated to clinical parameters including tumor marker levels (thyroglobulin for DTC, calcitonin for MTC).89 lesions were included in the analysis. Metastases were localized in the bone, lymph nodes, lung, soft tissue, and thyroid bed. Osseous (31 lesions; SUVmax 8.6 ± 8.0; SUVmean 5.8 ± 5.4) and nodal (37 lesions; SUVmax 8.7 ± 7.8; SUVmean 5.7 ± 5.4) metastases showed the highest uptake. The MTC disease burden on PET significantly correlated with the calcitonin tumor marker level (e.g., TTV:
r = 0.771, r2 = 0.594,p = 0.002). For DTC, no such correlation was present.Our data demonstrate high feasibility of [18F]SiTATE PET/CT in a small cohort of patients with MTC and DTC. The use of [18F]SiTATE may overcome logistical disadvantages of 68Ga-based tracers and facilitate SSTR-targeted PET/CT imaging of thyroid carcinoma.Methods: The novel 18F-labeled somatostatin receptor (SSTR)-directed radiotracer [18F]SiTATE demonstrated promising results for the imaging of various SSTR-expressing tumor types. Although thyroid carcinomas (TC) express SSTR, data on [18F]SiTATE PET/CT imaging in TC are lacking. This study explores the use of [18F]SiTATE PET/CT in a patient cohort with histologically proven TC.As part of a prospective observational study at a single tertiary cancer center, 21 patients with TC (10 medullary (MTC) and 11 differentiated (DTC)) who underwent at least one [18F]SiTATE PET/CT were included (37 scans in total). Mean SUVmax and SUVmean of tumoral lesions, mean total-tumor-volume (TTV), and whole-body (WB)-SUVmax and WB-SUVmean on PET with their standard deviations (SDs) were determined. PET parameters were correlated to clinical parameters including tumor marker levels (thyroglobulin for DTC, calcitonin for MTC).89 lesions were included in the analysis. Metastases were localized in the bone, lymph nodes, lung, soft tissue, and thyroid bed. Osseous (31 lesions; SUVmax 8.6 ± 8.0; SUVmean 5.8 ± 5.4) and nodal (37 lesions; SUVmax 8.7 ± 7.8; SUVmean 5.7 ± 5.4) metastases showed the highest uptake. The MTC disease burden on PET significantly correlated with the calcitonin tumor marker level (e.g., TTV:r = 0.771, r2 = 0.594,p = 0.002). For DTC, no such correlation was present.Our data demonstrate high feasibility of [18F]SiTATE PET/CT in a small cohort of patients with MTC and DTC. The use of [18F]SiTATE may overcome logistical disadvantages of 68Ga-based tracers and facilitate SSTR-targeted PET/CT imaging of thyroid carcinoma.Results: The novel 18F-labeled somatostatin receptor (SSTR)-directed radiotracer [18F]SiTATE demonstrated promising results for the imaging of various SSTR-expressing tumor types. Although thyroid carcinomas (TC) express SSTR, data on [18F]SiTATE PET/CT imaging in TC are lacking. This study explores the use of [18F]SiTATE PET/CT in a patient cohort with histologically proven TC.As part of a prospective observational study at a single tertiary cancer center, 21 patients with TC (10 medullary (MTC) and 11 differentiated (DTC)) who underwent at least one [18F]SiTATE PET/CT were included (37 scans in total). Mean SUVmax and SUVmean of tumoral lesions, mean total-tumor-volume (TTV), and whole-body (WB)-SUVmax and WB-SUVmean on PET with their standard deviations (SDs) were determined. PET parameters were correlated to clinical parameters including tumor marker levels (thyroglobulin for DTC, calcitonin for MTC).89 lesions were included in the analysis. Metastases were localized in the bone, lymph nodes, lung, soft tissue, and thyroid bed. Osseous (31 lesions; SUVmax 8.6 ± 8.0; SUVmean 5.8 ± 5.4) and nodal (37 lesions; SUVmax 8.7 ± 7.8; SUVmean 5.7 ± 5.4) metastases showed the highest uptake. The MTC disease burden on PET significantly correlated with the calcitonin tumor marker level (e.g., TTV:r = 0.771, r2 = 0.594,p = 0.002). For DTC, no such correlation was present.Our data demonstrate high feasibility of [18F]SiTATE PET/CT in a small cohort of patients with MTC and DTC. The use of [18F]SiTATE may overcome logistical disadvantages of 68Ga-based tracers and facilitate SSTR-targeted PET/CT imaging of thyroid carcinoma.Conclusion: The novel 18F-labeled somatostatin receptor (SSTR)-directed radiotracer [18F]SiTATE demonstrated promising results for the imaging of various SSTR-expressing tumor types. Although thyroid carcinomas (TC) express SSTR, data on [18F]SiTATE PET/CT imaging in TC are lacking. This study explores the use of [18F]SiTATE PET/CT in a patient cohort with histologically proven TC.As part of a prospective observational study at a single tertiary cancer center, 21 patients with TC (10 medullary (MTC) and 11 differentiated (DTC)) who underwent at least one [18F]SiTATE PET/CT were included (37 scans in total). Mean SUVmax and SUVmean of tumoral lesions, mean total-tumor-volume (TTV), and whole-body (WB)-SUVmax and WB-SUVmean on PET with their standard deviations (SDs) were determined. PET parameters were correlated to clinical parameters including tumor marker levels (thyroglobulin for DTC, calcitonin for MTC).89 lesions were included in the analysis. Metastases were localized in the bone, lymph nodes, lung, soft tissue, and thyroid bed. Osseous (31 lesions; SUVmax 8.6 ± 8.0; SUVmean 5.8 ± 5.4) and nodal (37 lesions; SUVmax 8.7 ± 7.8; SUVmean 5.7 ± 5.4) metastases showed the highest uptake. The MTC disease burden on PET significantly correlated with the calcitonin tumor marker level (e.g., TTV:r = 0.771, r2 = 0.594,p = 0.002). For DTC, no such correlation was present.Our data demonstrate high feasibility of [18F]SiTATE PET/CT in a small cohort of patients with MTC and DTC. The use of [18F]SiTATE may overcome logistical disadvantages of 68Ga-based tracers and facilitate SSTR-targeted PET/CT imaging of thyroid carcinoma. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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