630 results on '"Heinzer, H."'
Search Results
202. Erratum to: Biomodulatory Treatment of Patients with Castration-Resistant Prostate Cancer: A Phase II Study of Imatinib with Pioglitazone, Etoricoxib, Dexamethasone and Low-Dose Treosulfan.
- Author
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Vogelhuber, M., Feyerabend, S., Stenzl, A., Suedhoff, T., Schulze, M., Huebner, J., Oberneder, R., Wieland, W., Mueller, S., Eichhorn, F., Heinzer, H., Schmidt, K., Baier, M., Ruebel, A., Birkholz, K., Bakhshandeh-Bath, A., Andreesen, R., Herr, W., and Reichle, A.
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- 2015
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203. Nierenzellkarzinom – Gibt es Neuigkeiten?
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Heinzer, H., Huland, H., and Kuczyk, M.
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- 1999
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204. Nierenzellkarzinom – Neues zu Diagnostik und Therapie?
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Heinzer, H. and Schlag, P.M.
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- 2008
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205. Kommentar: Pro und Contra Metastasenchirurgie Gibt es für die Metastasenchirurgie noch einen Platz in der Behandlung des metastasierten Nierenzellkarzinoms?
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Huland, H., Heinzer, H., and Steinbach, F.
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- 2000
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206. Survival in renal cell carcinoma: a randomized evaluation of tamoxifen vs interleukin-2, α-interferon (leucocyte) and tamoxifen.
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Huland, E. and Heinzer, H.
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RENAL cell carcinoma , *TAMOXIFEN , *INTERLEUKIN-2 - Abstract
Comments on the article 'Survival in Renal Cell Carcinoma: A Randomized Evaluation of Tamoxifen vs Interleukin-2, α-Interferon (Leucocyte) and Tamoxifen,' published in the journal 'British Journal of Cancer.' Issues related to tamoxifen and interleukin doses given to patients; Questions related to the treatment schedule; Important factors not considered in the article.
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- 2000
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207. [F18]-fluoroethylcholine combined in-line PET-CT scan for detection of lymph-node metastasis in high risk prostate cancer patients prior to radical prostatectomy: preliminary results from a prospective histology based study.
- Author
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Steuber T, Schlomm T, Heinzer H, Zacharias M, Ahyai S, Chun KF, Haese A, Klutmann S, Köllermann J, Sauter G, Mester J, Mikecz P, Fisch M, Huland H, Graefen M, and Salomon G
- Abstract
Purpose: To evaluate the diagnostic potential of PET/CT using ([F18]fluorethylcholine (FEC) for lymph node (LN) staging in high risk prostate cancer (PCa) patients prior to radical prostatectomy (RP). Patients and methods: Twenty patients with localised PCa and >/= 20% LN risk according to a published nomogram were prospectively enrolled. FEC PET/CT was done minimum 14 d after prostate biopsy. Afterwards, open RP and extended pelvic LN dissection (ePLND) were performed. Clinical stage, Prostate Specific Antigen (PSA) and biopsy Gleason Grading were assessed and histopathological evaluation of the RP-specimens and dissected LN has been performed. The results from PET/CT were compared with LN metastasis according to their anatomical site. Results: Overall, 285 LN have been removed with a mean number of 15 nodes per patient (7-26). Of the 20 patients, 9 men were LN positive (45%), which corresponds to 31 positive LN with a mean size of 7 mm (0.8-12 mm). Dissection of the obturator fossa, external iliac artery/vein and internal iliac artery/vein revealed 36%, 48% and 16% of positive LN, respectively. FEC PET/CT did not detect one single positive LN, thus was false-negative in 31 metastasis and true negative in 254 LN. Conclusion: Based on our results which confirmed experience from the previous studies, FEC PET/CT scan did not prove to be useful for LN staging in localised PCa prior to treatment and should thus not be applied if clinically occult metastatic disease is suspected. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2010
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- View/download PDF
208. A0525 - Surgical and oncological outcomes of salvage radical prostatectomy after focal therapies: A matched-pair analysis.
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Ambrosini, F., Hagemann, J., Nagaraj, Y., Pose, R., Maurer, T., Heinzer, H., Michl, U., Steuber, T., Budäus, L., Terrone, C., Tennstedt, P., Haese, A., Tilki, D., Graefen, M., and Salomon, G.
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RADICAL prostatectomy , *RETROPUBIC prostatectomy - Published
- 2024
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- View/download PDF
209. A0484 - Nerve-Sparing Radical Prostatectomy (NSRP) using the NeuroSAFE technique is oncologically safe: Results after 20 years of experience.
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Ambrosini, F., Pose, R.M., Tilki, D., Chun, F.K.H., Steuber, T., Salomon, G., Michl, U., Heinzer, H., Maurer, T., Isbarn, H., Budäus, L., Huland, H., Terrone, C., Tennstedt, P., Graefen, M., and Haese, A.
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RADICAL prostatectomy - Published
- 2023
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210. A0657 - Impact of peritoneal bladder flap on the risk of lymphoceles after robotic radical prostatectomy: Results of a prospective controlled trial.
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Pose, R.M., Knipper, S., Hohenhorst, L., Beyer, B., Haese, A., Heinzer, H., Salomon, G., Steuber, T., Budäus, L., Tilki, D., Isbarn, H., Maurer, T., Tennstedt, P., Graefen, M., and Michl, U.
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RADICAL prostatectomy , *LYMPHOCELE , *BLADDER , *ROBOTICS - Published
- 2023
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211. A0487 - Robot-assisted versus open radical prostatectomy: Outcomes of highly experienced surgeons for both approaches.
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Ambrosini, F., Pose, R.M., Tilki, D., Heinzer, H., Salomon, G., Michl, U., Steuber, T., Isbarn, H., Budäus, L., Maurer, T., Terrone, C., Tennstedt, P., Huland, H., Graefen, M., and Haese, A.
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RADICAL prostatectomy , *SURGICAL robots , *SURGEONS - Published
- 2023
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212. 554 Does salvage lymphadenectomy for biochemical progression following radical prostatectomy and additional radiotherapy has an impact on overall survival? Initial results from a case-control study.
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Jilg, C.A., Tennstedt, P., Heinzer, H., Wetterauer, U., Grosu, A., Budaeus, L., Schultze-Seemann, W., and Steuber, T.
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LYMPHADENECTOMY , *PROSTATECTOMY , *CANCER radiotherapy , *CASE-control method , *DISEASE progression , *CLINICAL trials - Published
- 2016
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213. A1172 - Potential negative impact of post BX prostatitis on BCR free survival following surgery for prostate cancer.
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Michl, U.H.G., Haese, A., Graefen, M., Heinzer, H., Pose, R., and Tennstedt, P.
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PROSTATE surgery , *ONCOLOGIC surgery , *PROSTATE cancer , *PROSTATITIS , *PROSTATECTOMY - Published
- 2022
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214. No impact of blood transfusion on oncological outcome after radical prostatectomy in patients with prostate cancer.
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Boehm, K., Beyer, B., Tennstedt, P., Schiffmann, J., Budaeus, L., Haese, A., Graefen, M., Schlomm, T., Heinzer, H., and Salomon, G.
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PROSTATE cancer patients , *PROSTATECTOMY , *BLOOD transfusion , *COHORT analysis , *DISEASE risk factors , *REGRESSION analysis - Abstract
Purpose: To assess the association between blood loss, blood transfusion (BT) and biochemical recurrence (BCR)-free, metastasis-free and overall survival after radical prostatectomy (RP) in a large single-center cohort of patients. Perioperative BT at oncologic surgery has been reported to be a potential risk factor for cancer recurrence and survival in several cancer entities. Current studies addressing the relationship between BT, blood loss and BCR-free survival in prostate cancer patients are controversial and include only series with fairly small patient cohorts. Materials and methods: The data of 11,723 patients who underwent RP between 01/1992 and 08/2011 were analyzed. Cox regression analysis, including preoperative PSA level, pT stage, lymph node status, Gleason score, margin status, blood loss, transfusion rate (allogeneic or autologous), tested the relationship between blood loss, transfusion and BCR-free, metastasis-free and overall survival. Additionally, propensity score-matching analysis was performed to adjust differences in tumor characteristics. Results: There was no statistically significant relationship between blood loss or BT and BCR-free, metastasis-free or overall survival. In multivariate analysis PSA level, pT stage, Gleason score, margin status and lymph node status were independent factors for a BCR ( p < 0.0001). These results were identical after propensity score matching analysis, comparing patients with and without BT. Conclusions: This large-scale analysis revealed no correlation between blood loss, blood transfusion and oncological outcome in prostate cancer patients treated with RP. Therefore, the association between higher blood loss or transfusion rate and cancer recurrence as described in other surgical treated tumor entities seems to be irrelevant in prostate cancer patients. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2015
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215. Aspects techniques de la préservation nerveuse au cours de la prostatectomie rétropubienne
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Walz, J., Graefen, M., Michl, U.H.G., Heinzer, H., Friedrich, M.G., Eichelberg, C., Haese, A., and Huland, H.
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CANCER treatment , *CANCER patients , *PROSTATE cancer , *TUMORS , *RETROPUBIC prostatectomy - Abstract
Abstract: Retropubic radical prostatectomy is the most commonly used therapeutic option for the treatment of clinically localized prostate cancer. An ongoing stage migration towards organ-confined cancers allows performing a nerve-sparing procedure in a growing number of patients. Key elements for achieving convincing functional results are a sphincter preserving ligation of the distal part of Santorini''s plexus and the subtle preparation of the neurovascular bundle. This article gives a detailed description of the operative technique. Furthermore, a strategy for patient selection and tumour selection for the indication of nerve-sparing radical prostatectomy (NSRP) is suggested. [Copyright &y& Elsevier]
- Published
- 2007
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216. Interleukin-2/interferon-alpha2a/13-retinoic acid-based chemoimmunotherapy in advanced renal cell carcinoma: results of a prospectively randomised trial of the German Cooperative Renal Carcinoma Chemoimmunotherapy Group (DGCIN).
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Atzpodien, J, Kirchner, H, Rebmann, U, Soder, M, Gertenbach, U, Siebels, M, Roigas, J, Raschke, R, Salm, S, Schwindl, B, Müller, S C, Hauser, S, Leiber, C, Huland, E, Heinzer, H, Siemer, S, Metzner, B, Heynemann, H, Fornara, P, and Reitz, M
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ANTINEOPLASTIC agents , *COMPARATIVE studies , *FLUOROURACIL , *INTERLEUKIN-2 , *ISOTRETINOIN , *KIDNEY tumors , *LUNG tumors , *RESEARCH methodology , *MEDICAL cooperation , *PROGNOSIS , *PROTEINS , *RECOMBINANT proteins , *RENAL cell carcinoma , *RESEARCH , *STATISTICAL sampling , *SURVIVAL analysis (Biometry) , *EVALUATION research , *RANDOMIZED controlled trials , *DISEASE progression , *DEOXYCYTIDINE - Abstract
We performed a prospectively randomised clinical trial to compare the efficacy of four subcutaneous interleukin-2-(sc-IL-2) and sc interferon-alpha2a (sc-IFN-alpha2a)-based outpatient regimens in 379 patients with progressive metastatic renal cell carcinoma. Patients with lung metastases, an erythrocyte sedimentation rate < or =70 mm h(-1) and neutrophil counts < or =6000 microl(-1) (group I) were randomised to arm A: sc-IL-2, sc-IFN-alpha2a, peroral 13-cis-retinoic acid (po-13cRA) (n=78), or arm B: arm A plus inhaled-IL-2 (n=65). All others (group II) were randomised to arm C: arm A plus intravenous 5-fluorouracil (iv-5-FU) (n=116), or arm D: arm A plus po-Capecitabine (n=120). Median overall survival (OS) was 22 months (arm A; 3-year OS: 29.7%) and 18 months (arm B; 3-year OS: 29.2%) in group I, and 18 months (arm C; 3-year OS: 25.7%) and 16 months (arm D; 3-year OS: 32.6%) in group II. There were no statistically significant differences in OS, progression-free survival, and objective response between arms A and B, and between arms C and D, respectively. Given the known therapeutic efficacy of sc-IL-2/sc-INF-alpha2a/po-13cRA-based outpatient chemoimmunotherapies, our results did not establish survival advantages in favour of po-Capecitabine vs iv-5-FU, and in favour of short-term inhaled-IL-2 in patients with advanced renal cell carcinoma receiving systemic cytokines. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2006
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217. 373 - Six years experience using inhalatory interleukin-2 in pulmonary metastatic renal cell carcinoma
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Huland, E., Heinzer, H., and Huland, H.
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- 1997
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218. A proposal of a new nomogram for predicting upstaging in contemporary D'Amico low-risk prostate cancer patients
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Sami-Ramzi Leyh-Bannurah, Briganti Alberto, Montorsi Francesco, Hartwig Huland, Lars Budäus, Pierre I. Karakiewicz, Nazareno Suardi, Jonas Schiffmann, Shahrokh F. Shariat, Zhe Tian, Hans Heinzer, Paolo Dell'Oglio, Markus Graefen, Leyh-Bannurah, S. -R., Dell'Oglio, P., Tian, Z., Schiffmann, J., Shariat, S. F., Suardi, N., Francesco, M., Alberto, B., Heinzer, H., Huland, H., Graefen, M., Budaus, L., Karakiewicz, P. I., and Briganti, A.
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Oncology ,Adult ,Male ,Risk ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Urology ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Concordance ,030232 urology & nephrology ,Active surveillance ,urologic and male genital diseases ,Nomogram ,Cohort Studies ,03 medical and health sciences ,Prostate cancer ,0302 clinical medicine ,Prostate ,Internal medicine ,Biopsy ,medicine ,Humans ,Stage (cooking) ,Neoplasm Staging ,Upstaging ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,business.industry ,Prostatectomy ,Prostatic Neoplasms ,PRIAS ,Middle Aged ,medicine.disease ,Surgery ,Nomograms ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,030220 oncology & carcinogenesis ,Cohort ,business - Abstract
Purpose: Unfavorable prostate cancer (PCa) disease at final pathology affects at least 10% of D’Amico low-risk patients. Thus, conservative therapies including active surveillance may be wrongfully applied. The purposes were to assess the rate of upstaging in a contemporary cohort of D’Amico low-risk PCa patients and to develop and externally validate a nomogram as upstaging prediction tool in two European cohorts. Methods: Analyses were restricted to 2007 patients who harbored low-risk PCa at ≥10-cores initial biopsy according to D’Amico classification (PSA
- Published
- 2017
219. Partin Tables cannot accurately predict the pathological stage at radical prostatectomy
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Nazareno Suardi, Pierre I. Karakiewicz, Umberto Capitanio, Naeem Bhojani, Thomas Steuber, Sascha Ahyai, Hartwig Huland, Thorsten Schlomm, Markus Graefen, Andreas Erbersdobler, Shahrokh F. Shariat, F. Montorsi, Alexander Haese, Claudio Jeldres, Hans Heinzer, Bhojani, N., Ahyai, S., Graefen, M., Capitanio, U., Suardi, N., Shariat, S. F., Jeldres, C., Erbersdobler, A., Schlomm, T., Haese, A., Steuber, T., Heinzer, H., Montorsi, Francesco, Huland, H., and Karakiewicz, P. I.
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Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Urology ,Predictive Value of Tests ,Nerve bundle ,Statistics ,medicine ,Humans ,Neoplasm Invasiveness ,Stage (cooking) ,Neoplasm Staging ,Retrospective Studies ,Prostatectomy ,Receiver operating characteristic ,business.industry ,External validation ,Prostatic Neoplasms ,Reproducibility of Results ,General Medicine ,ROC Curve ,Oncology ,Partin Tables ,Surgery ,Lymphadenectomy ,business ,Wide resection ,Follow-Up Studies - Abstract
Purpose: The Partin Tables represent the most commonly used staging tool for radical prostatectomy (RP) candidates. The Partin Tables' predictions are used to guide the type (nerve preserving RP) and/or the extent (RP with wide resection) of RP. We examined the ability of the Partin Tables' predictions incorrectly assigning the stage at RP. Methods: The testing of the Partin Tables (external validation) was based on 3105 patients treated with RP at a single European institution. Standard validation metrics were used (area under the receiver operating characteristics curve, AUC) to test the three endpoints predicted by the Partin Tables. namely the presence of extracapsular extension (ECE), seminal vesicle invasion (SVI), and lymph node invasion (LNI). Results: Ideal predictions are denoted with 100% accuracy vs. 50% for entirely random predictions. For the 2001 version of the Tables the accuracy defined by the AUC was 79.7, 77.8, and 73.0 for ECE, SVI, and LNI, respectively. For the 2007 version of the Tables the corresponding accuracy estimates were 79.8, 80.5, and 76.2. The relationship between predicted probabilities and observed rates was poor. Conclusion: The Partin Tables are meant to guide clinicians about the safety of nerve bundle preservation at RP, about the need for seminal vesicle resection or for lymphadenectomy. Therefore, the use of the Partin Tables predictions may significantly affect the type and/or the extent of RP. In their present format the Partin Tables are not accurate enough to influence the pre-operative decision making regarding the type or extent of RP. (C) 2008 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.
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- 2009
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220. 404 - Accuracy of 68Ga-PSMA-PET for the detection of lymph node metastases before salvage lymphadenectomy – a real life scenario.
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Mandel, P., Tilki, D., Chun, F., Schlomm, T., Leyh-Bannurah, S-R., Pristuba, E., Graefen, M., Heinzer, H., Klutmann, S., Budäus, L., and Steuber, T.
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- 2018
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221. Unilateral prostate cancer cannot be accurately predicted in low-risk patients
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Markus Graefen, Giovanni Lughezzani, Thorsten Schlomm, Felix K.-H. Chun, Thomas Steuber, Hartwig Huland, Hendrik Isbarn, Susanne Vogel, Mario Zacharias, Jens Köllermann, Alberto Briganti, Sascha Ahyai, Paul Perrotte, Lars Budäus, Christian Eichelberg, Roman Heuer, Alexander Haese, Guido Sauter, Claudio Jeldres, Margit Fisch, Francesco Montorsi, Hans Heinzer, Pierre I. Karakiewicz, Isbarn, H, Karakiewicz, Pi, Vogel, S, Jeldres, C, Lughezzani, G, Briganti, Alberto, Montorsi, Francesco, Perrotte, P, Ahyai, Sa, Budäus, L, Eichelberg, C, Heuer, R, Köllermann, J, Sauter, G, Schlomm, T, Steuber, T, Haese, A, Zacharias, M, Fisch, M, Heinzer, H, Huland, H, Chun, Fk, and Graefen, M.
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Adult ,Male ,Cancer Research ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Prostate biopsy ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Urology ,urologic and male genital diseases ,Prostate cancer ,Prostate ,Biopsy ,medicine ,Humans ,Radiology, Nuclear Medicine and imaging ,Neoplasm Invasiveness ,Stage (cooking) ,Aged ,Neoplasm Staging ,Prostatectomy ,Analysis of Variance ,Radiation ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,business.industry ,Biopsy, Needle ,Age Factors ,Cancer ,Prostatic Neoplasms ,Middle Aged ,Prostate-Specific Antigen ,medicine.disease ,Confidence interval ,Surgery ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Oncology ,business - Abstract
Purpose: Hemiablative therapy (HAT) is increasing in popularity for treatment of patients with low-risk prostate cancer (PCa). The validity of this therapeutic modality, which exclusively treats PCa within a single prostate lobe, rests on accurate staging. We tested the accuracy of unilaterally unremarkable biopsy findings in cases of low-risk PCa patients who are potential candidates for HAT. Methods and Materials: The study population consisted of 243 men with clinical stage
- Published
- 2009
222. Biopsies performed at tertiary care centers are superior to referral biopsies in predicting pathologic Gleason sum
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Alberto Briganti, Philippe Arjane, Jochen Walz, Markus Graefen, Andreas Erbersdobler, Hans Heinzer, Alexander Haese, Andrea Gallina, Nazareno Suardi, Eike Currlin, Pierre I. Karakiewicz, Thorsten Schlomm, Felix K.-H. Chun, Uwe Michl, Hartwig Huland, Karakiewicz, Pi, Chun, Fk, Gallina, A, Suardi, N, Briganti, Alberto, Erbersdobler, A, Schlomm, T, Walz, J, Currlin, E, Michl, U, Haese, A, Arjane, P, Heinzer, H, Graefen, M, and Huland, H.
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Adult ,Male ,Nephrology ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Referral ,Biopsy ,Urology ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Prostate cancer ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,Humans ,Referral and Consultation ,Grading (tumors) ,Aged ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,business.industry ,Prostatectomy ,Prostate ,Gleason Sum ,Prostatic Neoplasms ,Anatomical pathology ,Middle Aged ,medicine.disease ,Surgery ,Health Facilities ,Radiology ,business - Abstract
Biopsy grading at tertiary care centers may or may not be superior to biopsies performed at referral institutions.Referral biopsy and tertiary care center biopsy Gleason sums were studied in 758 men treated with radical prostatectomy (RP) at a tertiary care center between 1992 and 2004. Grade agreement was calculated using the Cohen kappa (ê). Logistic regression models predicting high-grade prostate cancer at RP were fitted using either referral or tertiary care center biopsies. Comparison of bootstrap-corrected predictive accuracy estimates were performed using the Mantel-Haenszel test.Grade agreement between biopsy and RP Gleason sum was higher (P = 0.003) for tertiary care center biopsies v referral biopsies (55.5% v 47.9%; P = 0.003). Upgrading occurred in 39.8% of referral biopsies v 32.6% of tertiary care center biopsies (P = 0.03). Tertiary care center biopsies were more accurate in determining RP Gleason sum than referral biopsies (71.5% v 65.6%, P = 0.04).More accurate prediction of RP Gleason grade may be achieved if biopsy is performed and graded at tertiary care centers.
- Published
- 2008
223. Health-insurance status is a determinant of the stage at presentation and of cancer control in European men treated with radical prostatectomy for clinically localized prostate cancer
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Andreas Erbersdobler, Patrizio Rigatti, Vincenzo Scattoni, Thorsten Schlomm, Alberto Briganti, Francesco Montorsi, Hartwig Huland, Felix K.-H. Chun, Alexander Haese, Claudio Jeldres, Luc Valiquette, Pierre I. Karakiewicz, Hans Heinzer, Markus Graefen, Jochen Walz, Federico Dehò, Nazareno Suardi, Andrea Salonia, Andrea Gallina, Gallina, A, Karakiewicz, Pi, Chun, Fkh, Briganti, Alberto, Graefen, M, Montorsi, Francesco, Walz, J, Jeldres, C, Erbersdobler, A, Salonia, Andrea, Suardi, N, Deho, F, Schlomm, T, Scattoni, V, Haese, A, Heinzer, H, Valiquette, L, Rigatti, P, and Huland, H.
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Nephrology ,Biochemical recurrence ,Adult ,Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Urology ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Logistic regression ,Health Services Accessibility ,Prostate cancer ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,Humans ,Stage (cooking) ,Pathological ,Aged ,Neoplasm Staging ,Gynecology ,Aged, 80 and over ,Prostatectomy ,Univariate analysis ,Insurance, Health ,business.industry ,Prostatic Neoplasms ,Middle Aged ,medicine.disease ,Prognosis ,Europe ,Treatment Outcome ,Lymphatic Metastasis ,Neoplasm Recurrence, Local ,business - Abstract
OBJECTIVES To determine whether health-insurance status might result in more localized stage at presentation, more favourable stage at surgery and in a lower rate of biochemical recurrence (BCR), in patients diagnosed with prostate cancer and treated with radical prostatectomy (RP), as despite uninhibited access to healthcare, private and public health insurance are available in most European countries. PATIENTS AND METHODS In all, 4442 consecutive men had RP in two large European centres, of whom 2372 had public and 2070 had private health insurance. The groups were compared for several variables according to insurance status (private vs public). Means and proportions tests were complemented with logistic regression or Kaplan-Meier analyses. RESULTS Serum prostate-specific antigen level (P < 0.001), clinical stage (P < 0.001), pathological Gleason sum (P = 0.02), positive surgical margin rate (18.4% vs 25.4%, P < 0.001), extracapsular extension rate (17.7% vs 20.0%, P = 0.047) and seminal vesicle invasion rate (9.6% vs 11.6%, P = 0.04) were more favourable in privately insured patients. Conversely, the rate of lymph-node involvement was higher in those with private than public insurance (4.4% vs 3.3%, P = 0.045). In univariate analyses addressing pathological variables, private insurance was invariably protective (all P < 0.05). The Kaplan-Meier analyses showed that privately insured patients had a lower rate of BCR after RP (log-rank P = 0.017). CONCLUSION Despite uninhibited access to healthcare, insurance status represents a rate-limiting variable, which affects stage at presentation and the outcome of cancer control. OBJECTIVES To determine whether health-insurance status might result in more localized stage at presentation, more favourable stage at surgery and in a lower rate of biochemical recurrence (BCR), in patients diagnosed with prostate cancer and treated with radical prostatectomy (RP), as despite uninhibited access to healthcare, private and public health insurance are available in most European countries. PATIENTS AND METHODS In all, 4442 consecutive men had RP in two large European centres, of whom 2372 had public and 2070 had private health insurance. The groups were compared for several variables according to insurance status (private vs public). Means and proportions tests were complemented with logistic regression or Kaplan-Meier analyses. RESULTS Serum prostate-specific antigen level (P < 0.001), clinical stage (P < 0.001), pathological Gleason sum (P = 0.02), positive surgical margin rate (18.4% vs 25.4%, P < 0.001), extracapsular extension rate (17.7% vs 20.0%, P = 0.047) and seminal vesicle invasion rate (9.6% vs 11.6%, P = 0.04) were more favourable in privately insured patients. Conversely, the rate of lymph-node involvement was higher in those with private than public insurance (4.4% vs 3.3%, P = 0.045). In univariate analyses addressing pathological variables, private insurance was invariably protective (all P < 0.05). The Kaplan-Meier analyses showed that privately insured patients had a lower rate of BCR after RP (log-rank P = 0.017). CONCLUSION Despite uninhibited access to healthcare, insurance status represents a rate-limiting variable, which affects stage at presentation and the outcome of cancer control.
- Published
- 2007
224. Development and external validation of an extended repeat biopsy nomogram
- Author
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Felix K.-H. Chun, Alberto Briganti, Markus Graefen, Christopher Porter, Francesco Montorsi, Alexander Haese, Vincenzo Scattoni, Lester Borden, Thomas Steuber, Andrea Salonia, Thorsten Schlomm, Kalyan Latchemsetty, Jochen Walz, Jason Kim, Christian Eichelberg, Eike Currlin, Sascha A. Ahyai, Andreas Erbersdobler, Luc Valiquette, Hans Heinzer, Patrizio Rigatti, Hartwig Huland, Pierre I. Karakiewicz, Chun, Fk, Briganti, Alberto, Graefen, M, Porter, C, Montorsi, Francesco, Haese, A, Scattoni, V, Borden, L, Steuber, T, Salonia, Andrea, Schlomm, T, Latchemsetty, K, Walz, J, Kim, J, Eichelberg, C, Currlin, E, Ahyai, Sa, Erbersdobler, A, Valiquette, L, Heinzer, H, Rigatti, P, Huland, H, and Karakiewicz, Pi
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Adult ,Aged, 80 and over ,Male ,Nomograms ,Urology ,Biopsy ,Humans ,Prostatic Neoplasms ,Middle Aged ,Aged - Abstract
Purpose: We hypothesized that the outcome of repeat biopsy could be accurately predicted. We tested this hypothesis in a contemporary cohort from 3 centers. Materials and Methods: The principal cohort of 1,082 men from Hamburg, Germany was used for nomogram development as well as for internal 200 bootstrap validation in 721 and external validation in 361. Two additional external validation cohorts, including 87 men from Milan, Italy and 142 from Seattle, Washington, were also used. Predictors of prostate cancer on repeat biopsy were patient age, digital rectal examination, prostate specific antigen, percent free prostate specific antigen, number of previous negative biopsy sessions and sampling density. Multivariate logistic regression models were used to develop the nomograms. Results: The mean number of previous negative biopsies was 1.5 (range 1 to 6) and the mean number of cores at final repeat biopsy was 11.1 (range 10 to 24). Of the men 370 (30.2%) had prostate cancer. On multivariate analyses all predictors were statistically significant (p
- Published
- 2007
225. Significant upgrading affects a third of men diagnosed with prostate cancer: predictive nomogram and internal validation
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Patrizio Rigatti, Vincenzo Scattoni, Shahrokh F. Shariat, Hartwig Huland, Pierre I. Karakiewicz, Claus G. Roehrborn, Andreas Erbersdobler, Felix K.-H. Chun, Hans Heinzer, Luc Valiquette, Eike Currlin, Markus Graefen, Martin G. Friedrich, Uwe Michl, Alexander Haese, Andrea Salonia, Renzo Colombo, Alberto Briganti, Thomas Steuber, Thorsten Schlomm, Francesco Montorsi, Chun, Fkh, Briganti, Alberto, Shariat, Sf, Graefen, M, Montorsi, Francesco, Erbersdobler, A, Steuber, T, Salonia, Andrea, Currlin, E, Scattoni, V, Friedrich, Mg, Schlomm, T, Haese, A, Michl, U, Colombo, R, Heinzer, H, Valiquette, L, Rigatti, P, Roehrborn, Cg, Huland, H, and Karakiewicz, Pi
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Adult ,Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Prostate biopsy ,Urology ,medicine.medical_treatment ,urologic and male genital diseases ,Logistic regression ,Cohort Studies ,Prostate cancer ,Predictive Value of Tests ,Biopsy ,medicine ,Humans ,Prospective Studies ,Prospective cohort study ,Aged ,Aged, 80 and over ,Prostatectomy ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,business.industry ,Biopsy, Needle ,Prostate ,Prostatic Neoplasms ,Nomogram ,Middle Aged ,Prostate-Specific Antigen ,medicine.disease ,Surgery ,Nomograms ,Predictive value of tests ,Regression Analysis ,business - Abstract
Objective To explore the rate of significant upgrading from biopsy to radical prostatectomy (RP) specimens in a contemporary cohort, and to develop a prognostic model capable of predicting the probability of significant upgrading, as previous reports indicate that up to 43% of men with low-grade prostate cancer at biopsy will be diagnosed with high-grade cancer at RP. Patients and Methods The study cohort comprised 4789 men (median age 63 years, range 39-82) treated with RP, with available clinical stage, prostate-specific antigen levels, biopsy and RP Gleason sum values. These variables were used as predictors in multivariate logistic regression models (LRMs) addressing the rate of significant Gleason sum upgrading, defined as a Gleason sum increase either from = 7 or from 7 to >= 8 between the biopsy and RP specimens. Regression coefficients were used to develop and validate (200 bootstrap re-samples) a nomogram predicting significant biopsy Gleason sum upgrading. Results Significant biopsy Gleason sum upgrading was recorded in 1349 (28.2%) patients. In multivariate LRMs, all predictors were highly significant (all P < 0.001). The bootstrap-corrected accuracy of the nomogram predicting the probability of significant Gleason sum upgrading between biopsy and RP specimens was 75.7%. Conclusion Our nomogram might prove highly useful when the possibility of a more aggressive Gleason variant could change the treatment options. Objective To explore the rate of significant upgrading from biopsy to radical prostatectomy (RP) specimens in a contemporary cohort, and to develop a prognostic model capable of predicting the probability of significant upgrading, as previous reports indicate that up to 43% of men with low-grade prostate cancer at biopsy will be diagnosed with high-grade cancer at RP. Patients and Methods The study cohort comprised 4789 men (median age 63 years, range 39-82) treated with RP, with available clinical stage, prostate-specific antigen levels, biopsy and RP Gleason sum values. These variables were used as predictors in multivariate logistic regression models (LRMs) addressing the rate of significant Gleason sum upgrading, defined as a Gleason sum increase either from = 7 or from 7 to >= 8 between the biopsy and RP specimens. Regression coefficients were used to develop and validate (200 bootstrap re-samples) a nomogram predicting significant biopsy Gleason sum upgrading. Results Significant biopsy Gleason sum upgrading was recorded in 1349 (28.2%) patients. In multivariate LRMs, all predictors were highly significant (all P < 0.001). The bootstrap-corrected accuracy of the nomogram predicting the probability of significant Gleason sum upgrading between biopsy and RP specimens was 75.7%. Conclusion Our nomogram might prove highly useful when the possibility of a more aggressive Gleason variant could change the treatment options.
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- 2006
226. 359 Identification of apparent-diffusion-coefficient (ADC) cut-offs during DWI-MRI in prostate cancer lymph node metastasis: Implication for daily clinical practice.
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Bud, L., Leyh-Bannurah, S-R., Seiwerts, C., Beyer, B., Salomon, G., Heinzer, H., Graefen, M., Adam, G., and Regier, M.
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- 2013
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227. 852 [18F]FLUOROCHOLINE COMBINED IN-LINE PET-CT SCAN FOR DETECTION OF LYMPH-NODE METASTASIS PRIOR TO RADICAL PROSTATECTOMY: RESULTS FROM A PROSPECTIVE HISTOLOGY BASED STUDY
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Steuber, T., Zacharias, M., Haese, A., Friedrich, M., Heinzer, H., Schlomm, T., Graefen, M., Von Borczyskowski, D., Huland, H., and Brenner, W.
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- 2008
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228. 682 IMPORTANCE OF BASELINE POTENCY RATE ASSESSMENT OF MEN DIAGNOSED WITH CLINICALLY LOCALISED PROSTATE CANCER PRIOR TO RADICAL PROSTATECTOMY
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Salomon, G., Chun, F.K., Hendrik, I., Ahyai, S.A., Eichelberg, C., Steuber, T., Heinzer, H., Graefen, M., and Huland, H.
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- 2008
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229. 652 PROSTATE CANCER CHARACTERISTICS OF POTENTIAL CANDIDATES FOR ACTIVE SURVEILLANCE AFTER INITIAL AND REPEAT BIOPSY
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Ahyai, S.A., Heuer, R., Rehberg, H., Isbarn, H., Heinzer, H., Schlomm, T., Zacharias, M., Huland, H., and Graefen, M.
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- 2008
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230. 17 EVALUATION OF PROSTATE CANCER DETECTION WITH REAL- TIME-ELASTOGRAPHY: A COMPARISON WITH STEP SECTION PATHOLOGICAL ANALYSIS AFTER RADICAL PROSTATECTOMY
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Salomon, G., Köllermann, J., Thederan, I., Schlomm, T., Budäus, L.H., Isbarn, H.I., Heinzer, H., Huland, H., and Graefen, M.
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- 2008
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231. Surgical and oncological outcomes of salvage radical prostatectomy after focal therapies: a matched-pair analysis.
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Ambrosini F, Hagemann J, Pose R, Maurer T, Heinzer H, Michl U, Steuber T, Budäus L, Terrone C, Tennstedt P, Haese A, Tilki D, Graefen M, Nagaraj Y, and Salomon G
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- Humans, Male, Retrospective Studies, Middle Aged, Matched-Pair Analysis, Aged, Treatment Outcome, Robotic Surgical Procedures, Prostatectomy methods, Prostatic Neoplasms surgery, Salvage Therapy methods
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Objectives: To determine the surgical and oncologic outcomes of salvage radical prostatectomy (sRP) after FT failure., Materials and Methods: Patients who consecutively underwent primary RP or sRP after FT failure between 2008 and 2022 were retrospectively selected. Primary or sRP were performed with either a robot-assisted or open approach. All surgeries were performed by surgeons with experience of ≥ 500 cases. Biochemical recurrence-free survival (BFS), intra- and postoperative surgical and functional outcomes were assessed. To evaluate the impact of surgical setting, propensity score (PS) matching was performed., Results: 80 patients received sRP. Outcomes were analyzed using PS-matched cohorts (203 RPs vs. 68 sRPs). After a median follow-up of 25.4 months, sRP and RP had equal BFS (24mo-BFS: 72.4% vs. 76.0% (p = 0.8)). No statistically significant differences were found between sRP and RP in terms of median operative time (OT) (171 min vs. 168 min), estimated blood loss (EBL) (500 ml vs. 500 ml), length of hospital stay (LOS) (7 days vs. 7 days) and time to catheter removal (11 days vs. 11 days) and 1-year continence rates (all standardized mean differences ≤ 0.1). The main limitation is the retrospective study design., Conclusion: In the hands of experienced surgeons, sRP after FT offered comparable surgical and oncologic outcomes as RP in a primary setting., Competing Interests: Declaration. Conflict of interest: The authors declare that they have no conflict of interest., (© 2024. The Author(s), under exclusive licence to Springer-Verlag GmbH Germany, part of Springer Nature.)
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- 2024
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232. Impact of COVID-19 on the time to counseling and treatment of prostate cancer.
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Filipas DK, Pose RM, Marks P, Tennstedt P, Beyer B, Tilki D, Isbarn H, Maurer T, Ludwig TA, Heinzer H, and Steuber T
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- Humans, Male, Aged, Middle Aged, SARS-CoV-2, Counseling, Retrospective Studies, Time Factors, Prostatic Neoplasms therapy, Prostatic Neoplasms surgery, Prostatic Neoplasms epidemiology, COVID-19 epidemiology, Prostatectomy methods, Time-to-Treatment statistics & numerical data
- Abstract
Purpose: This study investigates how the COVID-19 pandemic (CP) impacted the timeline between initial diagnosis (ID) of prostate carcinoma and subsequent therapy consultation (TC) or radical prostatectomy (RP) due to the implementation of a "minimal contact concept," which postponed clinical examinations until the day of admission., Methods: We analyzed patient data from a tertiary care center from 2018 to September 2021. The focus was on comparing the time intervals from ID to TC and from ID to RP before and during the CP., Results: Of 12,255 patients, 6,073 (61.6%) were treated before and 3,791 (38.4%) during the CP. The median time from ID to TC reduced from 37 days (IQR: 21 - 58d) pre-CP to 32 days (IQR: 20 - 50d) during CP ( p < 0.001). Similarly, the time from ID to RP decreased from 98 days (IQR: 70 - 141d) to 75 days (IQR: 55 - 108d; p < 0.001) during the CP. There was a significant decrease in low-risk tumor cases at ID (18.9% vs. 21.4%; p = 0.003) and post-RP (4% vs. 6.7%; p < 0.001) during the CP., Conclusion: Our findings suggest that the COVID-19 pandemic facilitated more timely treatment of prostate cancer, suggesting potential benefits for both low-risk and aggressive tumor management through expedited clinical procedures.
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- 2024
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233. Nerve-sparing radical prostatectomy using the neurovascular structure-adjacent frozen-section examination (NeuroSAFE): results after 20 years of experience.
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Ambrosini F, Preisser F, Tilki D, Heinzer H, Salomon G, Michl U, Steuber T, Maurer T, Chun FKH, Budäus L, Pose RM, Terrone C, Schlomm T, Tennstedt P, Huland H, Graefen M, and Haese A
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Objectives: To evaluate the long-term oncological outcomes and functional results of the neurovascular structure-adjacent frozen-section examination (NeuroSAFE) during nerve-sparing (NS) radical prostatectomy (RP)., Materials and Methods: A 10-yr survival analysis on 11069 RPs performed with or without the NeuroSAFE, between January 2002 to June 2011 was carried out. In the NeuroSAFE cohort, the neurovascular structure-adjacent prostatic margins are removed and stained for cryo-sectioning during RP. In case of a PSM, partial or full removal of the neurovascular bundle was performed. The impact of NeuroSAFE on biochemical recurrence-free survival (BFS), salvage radiation therapy-free survival, metastasis-free survival, and prostate cancer-specific survival at 10 years was analyzed. 1-year (1-yr) erectile function (EF), 1-yr, and 2-yr continence rates were assessed in propensity score-based matched cohorts., Results: Median follow-up was 121 (IQR: 73, 156) months. No differences in BFS between NeuroSAFE and non-NeuroSAFE were recorded (10-yr BFS: NeuroSAFE vs non-Neurosafe, pT2: 81% vs 84%, p = 0.06; pT3a: 58% vs. 63%, p = 0.6; ≥pT3b: 22% vs. 27%, p = 0.99). No differences were found between the two groups in terms of sRFS (pT2: p = 0.1; pT3a: p = 0.4; ≥pT3b: p = 0.4) (Fig. 1B, Table 2), and MTS (pT2: p = 0.3; pT3a: p = 0.6; ≥pT3b: p = 0.9). The NeuroSAFE-navigated patients reported a better 1-yr EF than non-NeuroSAFE (68% vs. 58%, p = 0.02) and no differences in 1-yr and 2-yr continence rates (92.4% vs. 91.8%, and 93.4% vs. 93%, respectively). The main limitation is the retrospective study design., Conclusions: While the NeuroSAFE approach did not show significant improvements in long-term oncologic or continence outcomes, it did provide an opportunity for a higher proportion of patients to improve postoperative functional results, possibly through increased nerve-sparing procedures., (© 2024. The Author(s), under exclusive licence to Springer Nature Limited.)
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- 2024
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234. A randomized controlled study on acupuncture for peri-operative pain after open radical prostatectomy.
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Maurer J, Friedemann T, Chen Y, Ambrosini F, Knipper S, Maurer T, Heinzer H, Thederan I, and Schroeder S
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- Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Aged, Acupuncture Therapy methods, Pain Measurement, Pain Management methods, Prostatic Neoplasms surgery, Acupuncture Analgesia methods, Quality of Life, Prostatectomy adverse effects, Prostatectomy methods, Pain, Postoperative etiology
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Objectives: To evaluate the advantages of adding acupuncture to standard postoperative pain management for open radical prostatectomy (RP)., Materials and Methods: A randomized controlled trial (1:1:1) comparing routine postoperative analgesic care (control [CON]) vs the addition of press tack needle acupuncture (ACU) or press tack placebo acupressure (SHAM) for pain management after open RP was performed. A total of 126 patients were enrolled between February 2020 and April 2021. After open RP, the CON group received standard postoperative analgesia, the ACU group received long-term acupuncture with press tacks at specific points (P-6, Shenmen and SP-6) along with standard analgesia, and the SHAM group received placebo press tacks at the same acupuncture points alongside standard analgesia. The primary endpoint was postoperative pain measured on a numeric rating scale, the NRS-11, calculated as the area under the curve. The cumulative use of routine postoperative analgesics, time to first defaecation, and quality of life were analysed using the Kruskal-Wallis rank sum test, Fisher's exact test, and Pearson's chi-squared test., Results: The ACU group reported significantly less postoperative pain compared to the SHAM (P = 0.007) and CON groups (P = 0.02). There were no significant difference in median (interquartile range) cumulative pain medication usage, time to first defaecation (CON: 37 [33, 44] h; SHAM: 37 [33, 42] h; ACU: 37 [33, 41] h; P > 0.9), or health status at discharge (EuroQol five-dimension, five-level general health assessment questionnaire: CON: 70 [65-83]; SHAM: 70 [60-80]; ACU: 70 [50-80])., Conclusion: Incorporating acupuncture into postoperative pain management can improve patient postoperative outcomes., (© 2024 BJU International.)
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- 2024
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235. Robot-assisted vs open retropubic radical prostatectomy: a propensity score-matched comparative analysis based on 15 years and 18,805 patients.
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Ambrosini F, Knipper S, Tilki D, Heinzer H, Salomon G, Michl U, Steuber T, Pose RM, Budäus L, Maurer T, Terrone C, Tennstedt P, Graefen M, and Haese A
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- Male, Humans, Propensity Score, Treatment Outcome, Prostatectomy methods, Robotics, Robotic Surgical Procedures methods
- Abstract
Purpose: To compare oncological, functional, and surgical outcomes of a large cohort of patients who underwent open retropubic radical prostatectomy (ORP) or robot-assisted radical prostatectomy (RARP)., Materials and Methods: Data from 18,805 RPs performed with either the open or the robot-assisted approaches at a single tertiary referral center between 2008 and 2022 were analyzed. The impact of surgical approach on biochemical recurrence-free survival, salvage radiotherapy-free survival, and metastasis-free survival was analyzed by log-rank test and Kaplan-Meier analysis in a propensity score (PS)-based matched cohort. Intraoperative and postoperative surgical outcomes were assessed. One-week, 3-month, and 12-month continence rates and 12-month erectile function (EF) were analyzed., Results: No statistically significant differences in oncological outcomes were found between ORP and RARP. A slight statistically significant difference in favor of RARP was noted in urinary continence at 3 months (RARP vs. ORP: 81% vs. 77%, p = 0.007) and 12 months (91% vs. 89.3%, p = 0.008), respectively. The rate of EF was statistically significantly higher (60%) after RARP than after ORP (45%, p < 0.001)., Conclusion: Both RARP and ORP yielded similar oncological outcomes. RARP offered a slight advantage in terms of continence recovery, but its clinical significance may be less meaningful. RARP resulted in significantly improved postoperative EF, suggesting a potential influence of both surgical experience and minimally invasive approach., (© 2024. The Author(s), under exclusive licence to Springer-Verlag GmbH Germany, part of Springer Nature.)
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- 2024
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236. Prevention of thromboembolic events after radical prostatectomy in patients with hereditary thrombophilia due to a factor V Leiden mutation by multidisciplinary coagulation management.
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Pose RM, Knipper S, Ekrutt J, Kölker M, Tennstedt P, Heinzer H, Tilki D, Langer F, and Graefen M
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Objective: To examine the perioperative impact of factor V Leiden mutation on thromboembolic events' risk in radical prostatectomy (RP) patients. With an incidence of about 5%, factor V Leiden mutation is the most common hereditary hypercoagulability among Caucasians and rarer in Asia. The increased risk of thromboembolic events is three- to seven-fold in heterozygous and to 80-fold in homozygous patients., Methods: Within our prospectively collected database, we analysed 33 006 prostate cancer patients treated with RP between December 2001 and December 2020. Of those, patients with factor V Leiden mutation were identified. All patients received individualised recommendation of haemostaseologists for perioperative anticoagulation. Thromboembolic complications (deep vein thrombosis and pulmonary embolism) were assessed during hospital stay, as well as according to patient reported outcomes within the first 3 months after RP., Results: Overall, 85 (0.3%) patients with known factor V Leiden mutation were identified. Median age was 65 (interquartile range: 61-68) years. There was at least one thrombosis in 53 (62.4%) patients and 31 (36.5%) patients had at least one embolic event in their medical history before RP. Within all 85 patients with factor V Leiden mutation, we experienced no thromboembolic complications within the first 3 months after surgery., Conclusion: In our cohort of patients with factor V Leiden mutation, no thromboembolic events were observed after RP with an individualised perioperative coagulation management concept. This may reassure patients with this hereditary condition who are counselled for RP., Competing Interests: The authors declare no conflict of interest., (© 2024 Editorial Office of Asian Journal of Urology. Production and hosting by Elsevier B.V.)
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- 2024
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237. [Role of nutrition in urological prehabilitation].
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Thederan I, Zyriax BC, and Heinzer H
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Nutritional intervention plays an important role in prehabilitation, a multimodal concept designed to improve the physical condition of the patient prior to treatment in order to influence the outcome of surgery. The focus is on reducing the postoperative complication rate, while simultaneously shortening the hospital stay and the rehabilitation phase. The nutritional status should be optimized through individual counseling and the targeted intake of calories, protein, and nutritional supplements. A good nutritional status contributes to the strengthening of the immune system and improves wound healing. Especially after surgery, muscle mass declines rapidly. Adequate protein intake accompanying strength exercises can best preserve muscle and promote development of muscular fitness during prehabilitation. Despite the positive effects of nutritional interventions, prehabilitation programs with nutritional components in uro-oncology are rare and the evidence of the programs is therefore insufficient. Results from initial studies appear promising, but further prospective, randomized studies of high quality and with defined program content on the various types of cancer are needed., (© 2023. The Author(s), under exclusive licence to Springer Medizin Verlag GmbH, ein Teil von Springer Nature.)
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- 2023
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238. Outcome of patients with epithelialized cavity formation after excessive vesicourethral anastomotic leak post radical prostatectomy.
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Filipas DK, Graefen M, Fisch M, Steuber T, Heinzer H, Schulz RJ, Kachanov M, Tennstedt P, Hahn L, Ludwig TA, Marks P, Hohenhorst LJ, and Pose RM
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- Male, Humans, Middle Aged, Aged, Constriction, Pathologic surgery, Retrospective Studies, Urethra surgery, Postoperative Complications etiology, Prostatectomy adverse effects, Anastomosis, Surgical adverse effects, Anastomotic Leak surgery, Prostatic Neoplasms complications
- Abstract
Purpose: Excessive vesicourethral anastomotic leak (EVAL) is a rare but severe complication after radical prostatectomy (RP). Epithelialized vesicourethral cavity formation (EVCF) usually develops during prolonged catheterization. To our knowledge, there is no description of postoperative outcomes, complications, or functional assessment of these patients who received conservative therapy after EVAL., Methods: We identified 70 patients (0.56%) with radiographic evidence of EVCF out of 12,434 patients who received RP in 2016-2020 at our tertiary care center. Postoperative radiographic cystograms (CG) were retrospectively re-examined by two urologists individually. We assessed urinary continence (UC), the need for intervention due to anastomotic stricture formation, urinary tract infection (UTI), and symphysitis during the first year of follow-up post-RP., Results: The median age was 66 years [interquartile range (IQR) 61-70 years], the median body mass index was 27.8 kg/m
2 (IQR 25.5-30.3 kg/m2 ), and the median prostate specific antigen before RP was 7.1 ng/ml (IQR 4.7-11.8 ng/ml). The median catheter insertion time was 44.5 days (IQR 35.2-54 days). One-year continence follow-up was available for 27 patients (38.6%), of which 22 (81.5%) reported the use of ≤ one pad, two patients reported the use of two (7.4%) pads/24 h, and three (11.1%) patients reported use > two pads/24 h. Overall, four (5.7%) patients needed surgical reintervention for anastomotic stricture, eight (11.5%) patients presented with symphysitis, and 55 (77.1%) presented with UTI., Conclusion: UC in 81.5% 1-year post-RP suggests that conservative treatment in EVAL is a treatment option with an acceptable outcome on UC and should be considered before reintervention for anastomotic insufficiency., (© 2023. The Author(s), under exclusive licence to Springer-Verlag GmbH Germany, part of Springer Nature.)- Published
- 2023
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239. Feasibility, acceptability, and behavioral outcomes of a multimodal intervention for prostate cancer patients: Experience from the MARTINI lifestyle program.
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Thederan I, Pott A, Krueger A, Chandrasekar T, Tennstedt P, Knipper S, Tilki D, Heinzer H, Schulz KH, Makarova N, and Zyriax BC
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- Male, Humans, Pilot Projects, Feasibility Studies, Life Style, Quality of Life, Prostatic Neoplasms surgery, Prostatic Neoplasms pathology
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Background: Prostate cancer (PCa) is the most frequently diagnosed malignant tumor in men. The potential benefit of a healthy lifestyle contrasts sharply with the observed poor adherence to current international lifestyle guidelines. Thus, well-designed sustainable interventions of aftercare that can be translated into routine practice are highly recommended. The present pilot study aimed to evaluate the feasibility and acceptability of a multimodal lifestyle intervention program in PCa patients after radical prostatectomy (RP)., Methods: In a single-arm study, carried out at the Martini-Klinik of the University Medical Center Hamburg-Eppendorf, Germany, 59 eligible men with locally advanced PCa were recruited within 3-6 months after RP and assigned to a multimodal lifestyle program. The program consisted of 10 weekly 6-7 h course days, with a focus on dietary control, physical activity (per World Cancer Research Fund recommendations) and psychological support. Primary objectives were feasibility, acceptability, completion rate, and safety. In addition, changes in lifestyle, psychological well-being, clinical and laboratory values were assessed. The study was registered in the German Clinical Trials Register (No. DRK S00015288 [MARTINI-Lifestyle-cohort] [www.germanctr.de])., Results: A high program acceptance was observed. Only three participants (5%) dropped out of the program prematurely. Personal feedback reflected appreciation for participation, personal gain through new knowledge and through the group experience. Without exception, all participants have taken part in follow-up examinations and no adverse events or incidents occurred. In addition, changes in lifestyle habits, clinical parameters and improved quality of life were detected., Conclusion: The MARTINI lifestyle program appears feasible and safe, and acceptance of the multimodal intervention was high among PCa patients. These encouraging results favor conducting a large multicenter trial to implement the program into routine practice and to evaluate the effectiveness of the intervention on survival and quality of life., (© 2023 The Authors. The Prostate published by Wiley Periodicals LLC.)
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- 2023
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240. Automated Ki-67 labeling index assessment in prostate cancer using artificial intelligence and multiplex fluorescence immunohistochemistry.
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Blessin NC, Yang C, Mandelkow T, Raedler JB, Li W, Bady E, Simon R, Vettorazzi E, Lennartz M, Bernreuther C, Fraune C, Jacobsen F, Krech T, Marx A, Lebok P, Minner S, Burandt E, Clauditz TS, Wilczak W, Sauter G, Heinzer H, Haese A, Schlomm T, Graefen M, and Steurer S
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- Male, Humans, Ki-67 Antigen, Immunohistochemistry, Prognosis, Artificial Intelligence, Prostatic Neoplasms diagnosis, Prostatic Neoplasms pathology
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The Ki-67 labeling index (Ki-67 LI) is a strong prognostic marker in prostate cancer, although its analysis requires cumbersome manual quantification of Ki-67 immunostaining in 200-500 tumor cells. To enable automated Ki-67 LI assessment in routine clinical practice, a framework for automated Ki-67 LI quantification, which comprises three different artificial intelligence analysis steps and an algorithm for cell-distance analysis of multiplex fluorescence immunohistochemistry (mfIHC) staining, was developed and validated in a cohort of 12,475 prostate cancers. The prognostic impact of the Ki-67 LI was tested on a tissue microarray (TMA) containing one 0.6 mm sample per patient. A 'heterogeneity TMA' containing three to six samples from different tumor areas in each patient was used to model Ki-67 analysis of multiple different biopsies, and 30 prostate biopsies were analyzed to compare a 'classical' bright field-based Ki-67 analysis with the mfIHC-based framework. The Ki-67 LI provided strong and independent prognostic information in 11,845 analyzed prostate cancers (p < 0.001 each), and excellent agreement was found between the framework for automated Ki-67 LI assessment and the manual quantification in prostate biopsies from routine clinical practice (intraclass correlation coefficient: 0.94 [95% confidence interval: 0.87-0.97]). The analysis of the heterogeneity TMA revealed that the Ki-67 LI of the sample with the highest Gleason score (area under the curve [AUC]: 0.68) was as prognostic as the mean Ki-67 LI of all six foci (AUC: 0.71 [p = 0.24]). The combined analysis of the Ki-67 LI and Gleason score obtained on identical tissue spots showed that the Ki-67 LI added significant additional prognostic information in case of classical International Society of Urological Pathology grades (AUC: 0.82 [p = 0.002]) and quantitative Gleason score (AUC: 0.83 [p = 0.018]). The Ki-67 LI is a powerful prognostic parameter in prostate cancer that is now applicable in routine clinical practice. In the case of multiple cancer-positive biopsies, the sole automated analysis of the worst biopsy was sufficient. © 2023 The Authors. The Journal of Pathology published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd on behalf of The Pathological Society of Great Britain and Ireland., (© 2023 The Authors. The Journal of Pathology published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd on behalf of The Pathological Society of Great Britain and Ireland.)
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- 2023
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241. Histopathological results of radical prostatectomy specimen of men younger than 50 years of age at the time of surgery: possible implications for prostate cancer screening programs?
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Mehring G, Tilki D, Heinzer H, Steuber T, Pose RM, Thederan I, Budäus L, Salomon G, Haese A, Michl U, Maurer T, Huland H, Graefen M, and Isbarn H
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- Male, Humans, Middle Aged, Prostate-Specific Antigen, Early Detection of Cancer, Prostate pathology, Prostatectomy methods, Neoplasm Grading, Prostatic Neoplasms pathology
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Introduction: Prostate cancer (PCa) detection is usually achieved by PSA measurement and, if indicated, further diagnostics. The recent EAU guidelines recommend a first PSA test at the age of 50 years, if no family history of PCa or BRCA2 mutation exists. However, some men might harbor significant PCa at younger age; thus we evaluated the histopathological results of men treated with radical prostatectomy (RP) in their 40 s at our institution., Materials and Methods: We relied on the data of all patients who underwent RP in our institution between 1992 and 2020 and were younger than 50 years at the time of surgery. The histopathological results are descriptively presented. Moreover, we tested the effect of a positive family history on the descriptive results., Results: Overall, 1225 patients younger than 50 years underwent RP at our institution. Median age was 47 years. Most patients showed favorable histopathological characteristics. However, 20% of patients had extraprostatic disease (≥ pT3a), 15% had ISUP Gleason grade group ≥ 3, and 7% had positive lymph nodes (pN1). Patients with a known positive family history did not have a higher rate of adverse disease as their counterparts with a negative family history., Discussion: Our data show that the majority of patients who were diagnosed with PCa at a very young age had favorable histopathological RP characteristics. However, a non-negligible proportion of patients already showed locally advanced disease and would have probably benefited from earlier PCa detection. This should be kept in mind when PCa screening recommendations are proposed., (© 2023. The Author(s).)
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- 2023
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242. Circulating Vitamin D and Selenium Levels and Outcome in Prostate Cancer Patients: Lessons from the MARTINI-Lifestyle Cohort.
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Thederan I, Chandrasekar T, Tennstedt P, Knipper S, Kuehl L, Tilki D, Augustin M, Heinzer H, and Zyriax BC
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- Disease-Free Survival, Humans, Life Style, Male, Neoplasm Recurrence, Local pathology, Prostate-Specific Antigen, Prostatectomy methods, Vitamin D, Prostatic Neoplasms pathology, Selenium
- Abstract
Background: Dietary agents, in particular vitamin D (Vit D) and selenium, are widely used by prostate cancer (PCa) patients to improve cancer outcomes., Objective: To investigate whether plasma Vit D and selenium levels prior to radical prostatectomy (RP) are associated with worse pathologic tumor characteristics and increased risk of disease recurrence., Design, Setting, and Participants: A total of 3849 men with PCa scheduled for RP in the Martini-Klinik at the University Hospital Hamburg-Eppendorf, Hamburg, Germany, between January 2014 and December 2018 were included in this study., Outcome Measurements and Statistical Analysis: Age, and clinical and laboratory values were collected prior to RP. Biochemical recurrence (BCR) was defined as prostate-specific antigen (PSA) ≥0.2 μg/l and rising after RP. Kaplan-Meier plots depicted BCR-free survival. Cox regression models (adjusted for age, preoperative PSA, pT stage, pN stage, pGG, surgical margin status, and year of surgery) tested the relationship between oncologic outcomes and Vit D and selenium levels., Results and Limitations: Median plasma Vit D and selenium levels were 19.3 and 71 μg/l, respectively. Circulating Vit D and selenium levels correlated inversely with PSA values. Histologic grade, pT stage, and pN stage were not associated with Vit D and selenium levels at the time of RP. In the overall cohort, BCR-free survival at 3 yr of follow-up was 82.9%. When stratified according to median Vit D levels, BCR-free survival at 3 yr of follow-up was 82.7% and 83.0% (p ≤ 0.59). Upon stratification according to median selenium levels, BCR-free survival was 82.2% and 83.7% (p = 0.19). In a multivariable Cox regression model predicting BCR, lower Vit D and selenium levels were not independent predictors of BCR., Conclusions: Plasma Vit D and selenium levels prior to RP were not associated with BCR-free survival., Patient Summary: The results of the MARTINI-Lifestyle cohort could not show a correlation between the occurrence of biochemical recurrence of prostate cancer after radical prostatectomy and the serum levels of vitamin D and selenium. A recommendation should therefore be made to compensate for a potential deficiency and not with the expectation of a reduction in the risk of progression., (Copyright © 2020 European Association of Urology. Published by Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.)
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- 2021
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243. Impact of Time to Castration Resistance on Survival in Metastatic Hormone Sensitive Prostate Cancer Patients in the Era of Combination Therapies.
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Wenzel M, Preisser F, Hoeh B, Schroeder M, Würnschimmel C, Steuber T, Heinzer H, Banek S, Ahrens M, Becker A, Karakiewicz PI, Chun FKH, Kluth LA, and Mandel P
- Abstract
Background: To evaluate the impact of time to castration resistance (TTCR) in metastatic hormone-sensitive prostate cancer (mHSPC) patients on overall survival (OS) in the era of combination therapies for mHSPC., Material and Methods: Of 213 mHSPC patients diagnosed between 01/2013-12/2020 who subsequently developed metastatic castration resistant prostate cancer (mCRPC), 204 eligible patients were analyzed after having applied exclusion criteria. mHSPC patients were classified into TTCR <12, 12-18, 18-24, and >24 months and analyzed regarding OS. Moreover, further OS analyses were performed after having developed mCRPC status according to TTCR. Logistic regression models predicted the value of TTCR on OS., Results: Median follow-up was 34 months. Among 204 mHSPC patients, 41.2% harbored TTCR <12 months, 18.1% for 12-18 months, 15.2% for 18-24 months, and 25.5% for >24 months. Median age was 67 years and median PSA at prostate cancer diagnosis was 61 ng/ml. No differences in patient characteristics were observed (all p>0.05). According to OS, TTCR <12 months patients had the worst OS, followed by TTCR 12-18 months, 18-24 months, and >24 months, in that order (p<0.001). After multivariable adjustment, a 4.07-, 3.31-, and 6.40-fold higher mortality was observed for TTCR 18-24 months, 12-18 months, and <12 months patients, relative to TTCR >24 months (all p<0.05). Conversely, OS after development of mCRPC was not influenced by TTCR stratification (all p>0.05)., Conclusion: Patients with TTCR <12 months are at the highest OS disadvantage in mHSPC. This OS disadvantage persisted even after multivariable adjustment. Interestingly, TTCR stratified analyses did not influence OS in mCRPC patients., Competing Interests: The 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 Wenzel, Preisser, Hoeh, Schroeder, Würnschimmel, Steuber, Heinzer, Banek, Ahrens, Becker, Karakiewicz, Chun, Kluth and Mandel.)
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- 2021
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244. Overexpression of the TRIM24 E3 Ubiquitin Ligase is Linked to Genetic Instability and Predicts Unfavorable Prognosis in Prostate Cancer.
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Höflmayer D, Fraune C, Hube-Magg C, Simon R, Schroeder C, Büscheck F, Möller K, Dum D, Weidemann S, Wittmer C, Schlomm T, Huland H, Heinzer H, Graefen M, Haese A, Sauter G, Burandt E, Clauditz TS, Steurer S, Minner S, Wilczak W, and Polonski A
- Subjects
- Aged, Disease-Free Survival, Follow-Up Studies, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Retrospective Studies, Survival Rate, Carrier Proteins biosynthesis, Carrier Proteins genetics, Gene Expression Regulation, Enzymologic, Gene Expression Regulation, Neoplastic, Genomic Instability, Neoplasm Proteins biosynthesis, Neoplasm Proteins genetics, Prostatic Neoplasms enzymology, Prostatic Neoplasms genetics, Prostatic Neoplasms mortality, Ubiquitin-Protein Ligases biosynthesis, Ubiquitin-Protein Ligases genetics
- Abstract
Tripartite motif containing 24 (TRIM24) is a multifunctional protein involved in p53 degradation, chromatin binding, and transcriptional modulation of nuclear receptors. Emerging research has revealed that upregulation of TRIM24 in numerous tumor types is linked to poor prognosis, attributing an important role to TRIM24 in tumor biology. In order to better understand the role of TRIM24 in prostate cancer, we analyzed its immunohistochemical expression on a tissue microarray containing >17,000 prostate cancer specimens. TRIM24 immunostaining was detectable in 61% of 15,321 interpretable cancers, including low expression in 46% and high expression in 15% of cases. TRIM24 upregulation was associated with high Gleason grade, advanced pathologic tumor stage, lymph node metastasis, higher preoperative prostate-specific antigen level, increased cell proliferation as well as increased genomic instability, and predicted prognosis independent of clinicopathologic parameters available at the time of the initial biopsy (all P<0.0001). TRIM24 upregulation provides additional prognostic information in prostate cancer, particularly in patients with low Gleason grade tumors who may be eligible for active surveillance strategies, suggesting promising potential for TRIM24 in the routine diagnostic work-up of these patients., Competing Interests: The authors declare no conflict of interest., (Copyright © 2021 Wolters Kluwer Health, Inc. All rights reserved.)
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- 2021
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245. Oncological outcomes of pathologically organ-confined, lymph node-positive prostate cancer after radical prostatectomy.
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Stolzenbach LF, Knipper S, Mandel P, Ascalone L, Deuker M, Tian Z, Heinzer H, Tilki D, Maurer T, Graefen M, Karakiewicz PI, and Steuber T
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- Aged, Humans, Lymphatic Metastasis, Male, Middle Aged, Neoplasm Staging, Retrospective Studies, Treatment Outcome, Prostatectomy methods, Prostatic Neoplasms pathology, Prostatic Neoplasms surgery
- Abstract
Background: The aim of this study was to investigate the impact of lymph-node involvement on oncological outcomes in patients with pathologically organ-confined prostate cancer (pT2 CaP) after radical prostatectomy (RP)., Methods: We retrospectively analyzed 9,631 pT2 CaP patients who underwent RP at a single institution between 1998 and 2018. Kaplan-Meier plots and Cox regression models (CRMs) assessed biochemical recurrence (BCR)-free survival and metastasis-free survival (MFS) according to N-stage. In subgroup analyses of N1 patients, Kaplan-Meier plots and CRMs were stratified according to adjuvant treatment., Results: Of 9,631 pT2 staged patients, 241 (2.5%) harbored lymph-node metastases after RP (pN1). The median follow-up was 60.8 months. No pT2 N1-staged patient died due to CaP. The 5-year BCR-free survival rates were 54.7 vs. 88.4% in pT2 N1 vs. pT2 N0 patients, respectively (P < 0.001). The 5-year MFS rates were 92.5 vs. 98.9% in pT2 N1 vs. pT2 N0 patients, respectively (P < 0.001). Within pT2 N1 patients, presence of ≥3 positive lymph nodes was an independent risk factor for BCR (hazard ratio [HR] 3.4, P < 0.001) and for metastatic progression (HR 1.7, P = 0.04). Finally, 3-year BCR-free survival was improved in pT2 N1 patients treated with adjuvant radiation therapy (87.1% vs. 63.7% for patients who received other treatment options [P < 0.001])., Conclusion: Patients with pathologically organ-confined but lymph node-positive CaP exhibited favorable oncological outcomes after RP. Presence of ≥3 positive LNs predicted higher rates of BCR and metastatic progression. In consequence, in pT2 N1 patients treated with RP with ≥3 positive LNs, adjuvant treatment may be considered.9., (Copyright © 2020 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)
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- 2021
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246. Reduced anoctamin 7 (ANO7) expression is a strong and independent predictor of poor prognosis in prostate cancer.
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Marx A, Koopmann L, Höflmayer D, Büscheck F, Hube-Magg C, Steurer S, Eichenauer T, Clauditz TS, Wilczak W, Simon R, Sauter G, Izbicki JR, Huland H, Heinzer H, Graefen M, Haese A, Schlomm T, Bernreuther C, Lebok P, and Bonk S
- Subjects
- Aged, Anoctamins metabolism, Biomarkers, Tumor metabolism, Humans, Immunohistochemistry, Male, Middle Aged, Neoplasm Grading, Prognosis, Proportional Hazards Models, Prostatectomy, Prostatic Neoplasms metabolism, Prostatic Neoplasms pathology, Prostatic Neoplasms surgery, Tissue Array Analysis, Anoctamins genetics, Biomarkers, Tumor genetics, Prostatic Neoplasms genetics
- Abstract
Objective: Anoctamin 7 (ANO7) is a calcium
2+ -dependent chloride ion channel protein. Its expression is restricted to prostate epithelial cells. The exact function is unknown. This study aimed to analyze ANO7 expression and its clinical significance in prostate cancer (PCa)., Methods: ANO7 expression was assessed by immunohistochemistry in 17,747 clinical PCa specimens., Results: ANO7 was strongly expressed in normal prostate glandular cells but often less abundant in cancer cells. ANO7 staining was interpretable in 13,594 cancer tissues and considered strong in 34.4%, moderate in 48.7%, weak in 9.3%, and negative in 7.6%. Reduced staining was tightly linked to adverse tumor features [high classical and quantitative Gleason grade, lymph node metastasis, advanced tumor stage, high Ki67 labeling index, positive surgical margin, and early biochemical recurrence ( P < 0.0001 each)]. The univariate Cox hazard ratio for prostate-specific antigen (PSA) recurrence after prostatectomy in patients with negative vs. strong ANO7 expression was 2.98 (95% confidence interval 2.61-3.38). The prognostic impact was independent of established pre- or postoperatively available parameters ( P < 0.0001). Analysis of annotated molecular data showed that low ANO7 expression was linked to TMPRSS2:ER G fusions ( P < 0.0001), elevated androgen receptor expression ( P < 0.0001), as well as presence of 9 of 11 chromosomal deletions ( P < 0.05 each). A particularly strong association of low ANO7 expression with phosphatase and tensin homolog (PTEN) deletion may indicate a functional relationship with the PTEN/AKT pathway., Conclusions: These data identify reduced ANO7 protein expression as a strong and independent predictor of poor prognosis in PCa. ANO7 measurement, either alone or in combination, might provide clinically useful prognostic information in PCa., Competing Interests: Conflict of interest statement No potential conflicts of interest are disclosed., (Copyright: © 2021, Cancer Biology & Medicine.)- Published
- 2021
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247. Chromosome 5 harbors two independent deletion hotspots at 5q13 and 5q21 that characterize biologically different subsets of aggressive prostate cancer.
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Möller K, Kluth M, Ahmed M, Burkhardt L, Möller-Koop C, Büscheck F, Weidemann S, Tsourlakis MC, Minner S, Heinzer H, Huland H, Graefen M, Sauter G, Schlomm T, Dum D, and Simon R
- Subjects
- Humans, Lymphatic Metastasis, Male, Neoplasm Staging, Prognosis, Prostatic Neoplasms genetics, Tissue Array Analysis, Chromosomes, Human, Pair 5 genetics, In Situ Hybridization, Fluorescence methods, Prostatic Neoplasms pathology, Sequence Deletion
- Abstract
Deletion of chromosome 5q is common in prostate cancer and is linked to aggressive disease. Most previous studies focused on 5q21 where CHD1 is located, but deletion of mapping studies has identified a second deletion hotspot at 5q13. To clarify the prevalence and clinical relevance of 5q13 deletions and to determine the relative importance of 5q13 and 5q21 abnormalities, a tissue microarray containing samples from 12 427 prostate cancers was analyzed by fluorescence in situ hybridization. Deletion of 5q13 and 5q21 was found in 13.5% and 10%, respectively, of 7932 successfully analyzed cancers. Deletion was restricted to 5q13 in 49.4% and to 5q21 in 32.0% of cancers with a 5q deletion. Only 18.6% of 5q-deleted cancers had deletions of both loci. Both 5q13 and 5q21 deletions were significantly linked to advanced tumor stage, high Gleason grade, nodal metastasis and early biochemical recurrence (P < .005 each). Cancers with co-deletion of 5q13 and 5q21 had a worse prognosis than cancers with isolated 5q13 or 5q21 deletion (P = .0080). Comparison with TMPRSS2:ERG fusion status revealed that 5q21 deletions were tightly linked to ERG negativity (P < .0001) while 5q13 deletions were unrelated to the ERG status. In summary, 5q13 deletion and 5q21 deletion are common, but independent genomic alterations with different functional effects lead to aggressive prostate cancer., (© 2020 The Authors. International Journal of Cancer published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd on behalf of Union for International Cancer Control.)
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- 2021
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248. Enumeration and Changes in Circulating Tumor Cells and Their Prognostic Value in Patients Undergoing Cytoreductive Radical Prostatectomy for Oligometastatic Prostate Cancer-Translational Research Results from the Prospective ProMPT trial.
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Mandel PC, Huland H, Tiebel A, Haese A, Salomon G, Budäus L, Tilki D, Chun F, Heinzer H, Graefen M, Pantel K, Riethdorf S, and Steuber T
- Subjects
- Biomarkers blood, Humans, Male, Prevalence, Prognosis, Prospective Studies, Prostatic Neoplasms epidemiology, Prostatic Neoplasms pathology, Robotic Surgical Procedures, Translational Research, Biomedical, Cytoreduction Surgical Procedures methods, Neoplastic Cells, Circulating, Prostatectomy methods, Prostatic Neoplasms surgery
- Abstract
Background: The prognostic value of circulating tumor cells (CTCs) in patients with hormone-naïve oligometastatic prostate cancer (HNoMPC) undergoing cytoreductive radical prostatectomy (CRP) is unknown., Objective: To determine the pre- and postoperative prognostic value of CTC enumeration in patients undergoing CRP., Design, Setting, and Participants: Thirty-three patients with HNoMPC from the prospective, single-arm ProMPT trial who underwent CRP between 2014 and 2015 at the Martini-Klinik were evaluated. Follow-up visits for all patients were conducted every 6 mo up to 36 mo after CRP and included serial detection of CTCs in 7.5 ml blood samples using the CellSearch system., Intervention: CRP., Outcome Measurements and Statistical Analysis: CTC enumerations before and after CRP, and their prognostic value on metastatic castration-resistant prostate cancer-free survival and overall survival (OS) were analyzed using Kaplan-Meier plots and univariable Cox-regression analysis., Results and Limitations: Sixteen patients (48.5%) had positive CTCs prior to CRP. A CTC count of ≥2 before or 6 mo after CRP was a prognostic factor for worse oncologic outcome. Compared with other biomarkers (prostate-specific antigen, lactate dehydrogenase, and bone-specific alkaline phosphatase), the prognostic value of CTCs was highest using Harrell's C for OS (0.69), while the highest C-index could be achieved for a combination of conventional markers and CTC count (0.74). After progression to metastatic castration-resistant prostate cancer, CTC enumeration of ≥5 was prognostic for OS. The main limitation is the small sample size., Conclusions: CTC enumeration contributes to prognostic information, which might help select HNoMPC patients who might benefit most from CRP., Patient Summary: In this report, we looked at the value of circulating tumor cell (CTC) determination in patients undergoing radical prostatectomy for oligometastatic prostate cancer. We could show that the number of CTCs was a prognostic factor at all analyzed time points and was more closely associated with prognosis than other biomarkers commonly used in daily clinical practice., (Copyright © 2019 European Association of Urology. Published by Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.)
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- 2021
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249. Epithelial splicing regulatory protein 1 and 2 (ESRP1 and ESRP2) upregulation predicts poor prognosis in prostate cancer.
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Freytag M, Kluth M, Bady E, Hube-Magg C, Makrypidi-Fraune G, Heinzer H, Höflmayer D, Weidemann S, Uhlig R, Huland H, Graefen M, Bernreuther C, Wittmer C, Tsourlakis MC, Minner S, Dum D, Hinsch A, Luebke AM, Simon R, Sauter G, Schlomm T, and Möller K
- Subjects
- Aged, Biomarkers, Tumor genetics, Case-Control Studies, Follow-Up Studies, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Prognosis, Prostatic Neoplasms metabolism, Prostatic Neoplasms surgery, RNA-Binding Proteins genetics, Survival Rate, Biomarkers, Tumor metabolism, Prostatectomy methods, Prostatic Neoplasms pathology, RNA-Binding Proteins metabolism
- Abstract
Background: Epithelial splicing regulatory protein 1 (ESRP1) and 2 (ESRP2) regulate alternative splicing events of various pre-mRNAs. Some of these targets play a role in cancer-associated processes, including cytoskeleton reorganization and DNA-repair processes. This study was undertaken to estimate the impact of ESRP1 and ESRP2 alterations on prostate cancer patient prognosis., Methods: A tissue microarray made from 17,747 individual cancer samples with comprehensive, pathological, clinical and molecular data was analyzed by immunohistochemistry for ESRP1 and ESRP2., Results: Nuclear staining for ESRP1 was seen in 38.6% (36.0% low, 2.6% high) of 12,140 interpretable cancers and in 41.9% (36.4% low, 5.3% high) of 12,962 interpretable cancers for ESRP2. Nuclear protein expression was linked to advanced tumor stage, high Gleason score, presence of lymph node metastasis, early biochemical recurrence, and ERG-positive cancers (p < 0.0001 each). Expression of ESRPs was significantly linked to 11 (ESRP1)/9 (ESRP2) of 11 analyzed deletions in all cancers and to 8 (ESRP1)/9 (ESRP2) of 11 deletions in ERG-negative cancers portending a link to genomic instability. Combined ESRPs expression analysis suggested an additive effect and showed the worst prognosis for cancers with high ESRP1 and ESRP2 expression. Multivariate analyses revealed that the prognostic impact of ESRP1, ESRP2 and combined ESRP1/ESRP2 expression was independent of all established pre- and postoperative prognostic features., Conclusions: Our data show a striking link between nuclear ESRP expression and adverse features in prostate cancer and identifies expression of ESRP1 and/or ESRP2 as independent prognostic markers with a potential for routine application.
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- 2020
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250. Upregulation of the heterogeneous nuclear ribonucleoprotein hnRNPA1 is an independent predictor of early biochemical recurrence in TMPRSS2:ERG fusion-negative prostate cancers.
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Möller K, Wecker AL, Höflmayer D, Fraune C, Makrypidi-Fraune G, Hube-Magg C, Kluth M, Steurer S, Clauditz TS, Wilczak W, Simon R, Sauter G, Huland H, Heinzer H, Haese A, Schlomm T, Weidemann S, Luebke AM, Minner S, Bernreuther C, Bonk S, and Marx A
- Subjects
- Aged, Biomarkers, Tumor blood, Cell Proliferation, Humans, Immunohistochemistry, Kallikreins blood, Lymphatic Metastasis, Male, Margins of Excision, Middle Aged, Neoplasm Grading, Neoplasm Recurrence, Local, Neoplasm Staging, Predictive Value of Tests, Prostate-Specific Antigen blood, Prostatectomy, Prostatic Neoplasms blood, Prostatic Neoplasms genetics, Prostatic Neoplasms surgery, Risk Factors, Tissue Array Analysis, Treatment Outcome, Up-Regulation, Biomarkers, Tumor analysis, Biomarkers, Tumor genetics, Gene Fusion, Heterogeneous Nuclear Ribonucleoprotein A1 analysis, Oncogene Proteins, Fusion genetics, Prostatic Neoplasms chemistry
- Abstract
Heterogeneous nuclear ribonucleoprotein A1 (hnRNPA1) is a ubiquitous RNA splicing factor that is overexpressed and prognostically relevant in various human cancer types. To study the impact of hnRNPA1 expression in prostate cancer, we analyzed a tissue microarray containing 17,747 clinical prostate cancer specimens by immunohistochemistry. hnRNPA1 was expressed in normal prostate glandular cells but often overexpressed in cancer cells. hnRNPA1 immunostaining was interpretable in 14,258 cancers and considered strong in 33.4%, moderate in 45.9%, weak in 15.3%, and negative in 5.4%. Moderate to strong hnRNPA1 immunostaining was strongly linked to adverse tumor features including high classical and quantitative Gleason score, lymph node metastasis, advanced tumor stage, positive surgical margin, and early biochemical recurrence (p < 0.0001 each). The prognostic impact of hnRNPA1 immunostaining was independent of established preoperatively or postoperatively available prognostic parameters (p < 0.0001). Subset analyses revealed that all these associations were strongly driven by the fraction of cancers lacking the TMPRSS2:ERG gene fusion. Comparison with other key molecular data that were earlier obtained on the same TMA showed that hnRNPA1 overexpression was linked to high levels of androgen receptor (AR) expression (p < 0.0001) as well as presence of 9 of 11 chromosomal deletions (p < 0.05 each). A strong association between hnRNPA1 upregulation and tumor cell proliferation that was independent from the Gleason score supports a role for tumor cell aggressiveness. In conclusion, hnRNPA1 overexpression is an independent predictor of poor prognosis in ERG-negative prostate cancer. hnRNPA1 measurement, either alone or in combination, might provide prognostic information in ERG-negative prostate cancer.
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- 2020
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