106 results on '"Doostkam S"'
Search Results
2. Teaching Neuroimages: Inflammatory CAA
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Duman, I. E., Coenen, V. A., Doostkam, S., and Urbach, H.
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- 2019
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3. Freiburg Neuropathology Case Conference: Cystic Posterior Fossa Tumor
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Taschner, Christian A., Doostkam, S., Shah, J. M., Urbach, H., Jäger, M., and Prinz, M.
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- 2017
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4. Zur Rolle von CXCR4, CXCR5, CXCR7 und CD44 beim Homing von primären vitreoretinalen Lymphomzellen in einem Xenograft Mausmodell
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Babst, Neele, Isbell, L., Rommel, F., Tura, A., Ranjbar, M., Grisanti, S., Tschuch, C., Schueler, J., Doostkam, S., Reinacher, P. C., Duyster, J., Kakkassery, V., and von Bubnoff, N.
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ddc: 610 ,Medicine and health - Abstract
Hintergrund: Das primäre vitreoretinale Lymphom (PVRL) ist eine seltene und aggressive Krebserkrankung des Auges. Das PVRL weist enge Verwandtschaft mit den primären ZNS-Lymphomen (PZNSL) auf. Die Pathogenese des PVRL ist weitgehend ungeklärt. Am wahrscheinlichsten scheint, dass die Lymphomzellen [zum vollständigen Text gelangen Sie über die oben angegebene URL]
- Published
- 2022
5. Freiburg Neuropathology Case Conference: Spinal Cord Compression Due to a Lesion Adjacent to the Dens Axis
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Taschner, C. A., Doostkam, S., Hubbe, U., Schaefer, H. E., Urbach, H., Beck, C., and Prinz, M.
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- 2016
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6. Zur Rolle von CXCR4, CXCR5, CXCR7 und CD44 beim Homing von primären vitreoretinalen Lymphomzellen in einem Xenograft Mausmodell
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Babst, N, Isbell, L, Rommel, F, Tura, A, Ranjbar, M, Grisanti, S, Tschuch, C, Schueler, J, Doostkam, S, Reinacher, PC, Duyster, J, Kakkassery, V, von Bubnoff, N, Babst, N, Isbell, L, Rommel, F, Tura, A, Ranjbar, M, Grisanti, S, Tschuch, C, Schueler, J, Doostkam, S, Reinacher, PC, Duyster, J, Kakkassery, V, and von Bubnoff, N
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- 2022
7. Teaching Neuroimages: “Filling out” in Cavernous Hemangioma of the Cavernous Sinus
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Meincke, J., Lützen, N., Doostkam, S., and Urbach, H.
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- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
8. Freiburg Neuropathology Case Conference: Multiple Small Ring-Enhancing Lesions in a 75-Year-Old Patient
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Taschner, C. A., Doostkam, S., Weyerbrock, A., Schaefer, H. E., Urbach, H., Keuler, A., and Prinz, M.
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- 2014
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9. First long term in vivo study on subdurally implanted Micro-ECoG electrodes, manufactured with a novel laser technology
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Henle, C., Raab, M., Cordeiro, J. G., Doostkam, S., Schulze-Bonhage, A., Stieglitz, T., and Rickert, J.
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- 2011
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10. Correlation of 18F-fluoroethyl tyrosine positron-emission tomography uptake values and histomorphological findings by stereotactic serial biopsy in newly diagnosed brain tumors using a refined software tool
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Lopez WO, Cordeiro JG, Albicker U, Doostkam S, Nikkhah G, Kirch RD, Trippel M, and Reithmeier T
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18F-FET-PET ,biopsy-targeting ,Stereotactic serial biopsy ,management of brain tumors ,new software module ,lcsh:Neoplasms. Tumors. Oncology. Including cancer and carcinogens ,lcsh:RC254-282 ,newly diagnosed brain lesions - Abstract
William Omar Contreras Lopez,1,2 Joacir Graciolli Cordeiro,1 Ulrich Albicker,3 Soroush Doostkam,4 Guido Nikkhah,1,5 Robert D Kirch,6 Michael Trippel,1 ThomasReithmeier1,7 1Department of Stereotactic and Functional Neurosurgery, University Medical Center Freiburg, Freiburg im Breisgau, Germany; 2Division of Functional Neurosurgery, Department of Neurology, Hospital das Clinicas, University of São Paulo Medical School, São Paulo, Brazil; 3Inomed, Emmendingen, 4Department of Neuropathology, University Medical Center Freiburg, Freiburg im Breisgau, 5Department of Neurosurgery, University Clinic Erlangen, Erlangen, 6Neuroelectronic Systems, Department of Neurosurgery, University Medical Center Freiburg, Freiburg im Breisgau, 7Department of Neurosurgery, Schwabing Academic Teaching Hospital of Technical University and Ludwig Maximilian University of Munich, Munich, Germany Background: Magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) is the standard neuroimaging method to diagnose neoplastic brain lesions, as well as to perform stereotactic biopsy surgical planning. MRI has the advantage of providing structural anatomical details with high sensitivity, though histological specificity is limited. Although combining MRI with other imaging modalities, such as positron-emission tomography (PET), has proven to increment specificity, exact correlation between PET threshold uptake ratios (URs) and histological diagnosis and grading has not yet been described.Objectives: The aim of this study was to correlate exactly the histopathological criteria of the biopsy site to its PET uptake value with high spatial resolution (mm3), and to analyze the diagnostic value of PET using the amino acid O-(2-[18F]fluoroethyl)-L-tyrosine (18F-FET) PET in patients with newly diagnosed brain lesions in comparison to histological findings obtained from stereotactic serial biopsy.Patients and methods: A total of 23 adult patients with newly diagnosed brain tumors on MRI were enrolled in this study. Subsequently to diagnoses, all patients underwent a 18F-FET PET-guided stereotactic biopsy, using an original newly developed software module, which is presented here. Conventional MRI, stereotactic computed tomography series, and 18F-FET PET images were semiautomatically fused, and hot-spot detection was performed for target planning. UR was determined using the uptake value from the biopsy sites in relation to the contralateral frontal white matter. UR values ≥1.6 were considered positive for glioma. High-grade glioma (HGG) was suspected with URs ≥3.0, while low-grade glioma (LGG) was suspected with URs between 1.6 and 3.0. Stereotactic serial biopsies along the trajectory at multiple sites were performed in millimeter steps, and the FET URs for each site were correlated exactly with a panel of 27 different histopathological markers. Comparisons between FET URs along the biopsy trajectories and the histological diagnoses were made with Pearson product-moment correlation coefficients. Analysis of variance was performed to test for significant differences in maximum UR between different tumor grades.Results: A total of 363 biopsy specimens were taken from 23 patients by stereotactic serial biopsies. Histological examination revealed eight patients (35%) with an LGG: one with a World Health Organization (WHO)-I lesion and seven with a WHO-II lesion. Thirteen (57%) patients revealed an HGG (two with a WHO-III and three with a WHO-IV tumor), and two patients (9%) showed a process that was neither HGG nor LGG (group X or no-grade group). The correlation matrix between histological findings and the UR revealed five strong correlations. Low cell density in tissue samples was found to have a significant negative correlation with the measured cortical uptake rate (r=-0.43, P=0.02), as well as moderate cell density (r=-0.48, P=0.02). Pathological patterns of proliferation (r=0.37, P=0.04), GFAP (r=0.37, P=0.04), and Olig2 (r=0.36, P=0.05) showed a significant positive correlation with cortical URs. Analysis of variance tests showed a significant difference between the LGG and the HGG groups (F=8.27, P
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- 2015
11. Long-term seizure outcome in pediatric patients with focal cortical dysplasia undergoing tailored and standard surgical resections
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Martinez-Lizana E, Fauser S, Brandt A, Schuler E, Wiegand G, Doostkam S, San Antonio-Arce MV, Jacobs J, Bast T, Shah M, Zentner J, and Schulze-Bonhage A
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Epilepsy surgery ,Children ,Long-term outcome ,Focal cortical dysplasia - Abstract
PURPOSE: Focal cortical dysplasia (FCD) is the major cause of focal intractable epilepsy in childhood. Here we analyze the factors influencing the success of surgical treatment in a large cohort of children with histologically ascertained FCD. METHOD: A retrospective study of the effects of FCD type, surgical intervention, and age at surgery in a pediatric cohort. RESULTS: A total of 113 patients (71 male; mean age at surgery 10.3 years; range 0-18) were analyzed; 45 had undergone lesionectomy, 42 lobectomy, 18 multi-lobectomy, and eight hemispherotomy. Complete seizure control (Engel Ia) was achieved in 56% after two years, 52% at five years, and 50% at last follow-up (18-204 months). Resections were more extensive in younger patients (40% of the surgeries affecting more than one lobe in patients aged nine years or younger vs. 22% in patients older than nine years). While resections were more limited in older children, their long-term outcome tended to be superior (42% seizure freedom in patients aged nine years or younger vs. 56% in patients older than nine years). The outcome in FCD I was not significantly inferior to that in FCD II. CONCLUSIONS: Our data confirm the long-term efficacy of surgery in children with FCD and epilepsy. An earlier age at surgery within this cohort did not predict a better long-term outcome, but it involved less-tailored surgical approaches. The data suggest that in patients with an unclear extent of the dysplastic area, later resections may offer advantages in terms of the precision of surgical-resection planning.
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- 2018
12. Freiburg Neuropathology Case Conference
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Taschner, C. A., primary, Doostkam, S., additional, Reinacher, P. C., additional, Urbach, H., additional, Rau, A., additional, and Prinz, M., additional
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- 2019
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13. Teaching Neuroimages: Inflammatory CAA
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Duman, I. E., primary, Coenen, V. A., additional, Doostkam, S., additional, and Urbach, H., additional
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
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14. Atypical posterior reversible encephalopathy syndrome associated with chemotherapy with Bevacizumab, Gemcitabine and Cisplatin
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Dersch, R., Stich, O., Goller, K., Meckel, S., Dechent, F., Doostkam, S., Weiller, C., and Bardutzky, J.
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- 2013
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15. Sorafenib promotes graft-versus-leukemia activity in mice and humans through IL-15 production in FLT3-ITD-mutant leukemia cells
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Mathew, N.R., Baumgartner, F., Braun, L., O'Sullivan, D., Thomas, S., Waterhouse, M., Muller, T.A., Hanke, K., Taromi, S., Apostolova, P., Illert, A.L., Melchinger, W., Duquesne, S., Schmitt-Graeff, A., Osswald, L., Yan, K.L., Weber, A, Tugues, S., Spath, S., Pfeifer, D., Follo, M., Claus, R., Lubbert, M., Rummelt, C., Bertz, H., Wasch, R., Haag, J., Schmidts, A., Schultheiss, M., Bettinger, D., Thimme, R., Ullrich, E., Tanriver, Y., Vuong, G.L., Arnold, R., Hemmati, P., Wolf, D., Ditschkowski, M., Jilg, C., Wilhelm, K., Leiber, C., Gerull, S., Halter, J., Lengerke, C., Pabst, T., Schroeder, T., Kobbe, G., Rosler, W., Doostkam, S., Meckel, S., Stabla, K., Metzelder, S.K., Halbach, S., Brummer, T., Hu, Z, Dengjel, J., Hackanson, B., Schmid, C., Holtick, U., Scheid, C., Spyridonidis, A., Stolzel, F., Ordemann, R., Muller, L.P., Sicre-de-Fontbrune, F., Ihorst, G., Kuball, J., Ehlert, J.E., Feger, D., Wagner, E.M., Cahn, J.Y., Schnell, J., Kuchenbauer, F., Bunjes, D., Chakraverty, R., Richardson, S., Gill, S., Kroger, N., Ayuk, F., Vago, L., Ciceri, F., Muller, A.M., Kondo, T., Teshima, T., Klaeger, S., Kuster, B., Kim, D.D.H., Weisdorf, D., Velden, W.J. van der, Dorfel, D., Bethge, W., Hilgendorf, I., Hochhaus, A., Andrieux, G., Borries, M., Busch, H., Magenau, J., Reddy, P., Labopin, M., Antin, J.H., et al., Mathew, N.R., Baumgartner, F., Braun, L., O'Sullivan, D., Thomas, S., Waterhouse, M., Muller, T.A., Hanke, K., Taromi, S., Apostolova, P., Illert, A.L., Melchinger, W., Duquesne, S., Schmitt-Graeff, A., Osswald, L., Yan, K.L., Weber, A, Tugues, S., Spath, S., Pfeifer, D., Follo, M., Claus, R., Lubbert, M., Rummelt, C., Bertz, H., Wasch, R., Haag, J., Schmidts, A., Schultheiss, M., Bettinger, D., Thimme, R., Ullrich, E., Tanriver, Y., Vuong, G.L., Arnold, R., Hemmati, P., Wolf, D., Ditschkowski, M., Jilg, C., Wilhelm, K., Leiber, C., Gerull, S., Halter, J., Lengerke, C., Pabst, T., Schroeder, T., Kobbe, G., Rosler, W., Doostkam, S., Meckel, S., Stabla, K., Metzelder, S.K., Halbach, S., Brummer, T., Hu, Z, Dengjel, J., Hackanson, B., Schmid, C., Holtick, U., Scheid, C., Spyridonidis, A., Stolzel, F., Ordemann, R., Muller, L.P., Sicre-de-Fontbrune, F., Ihorst, G., Kuball, J., Ehlert, J.E., Feger, D., Wagner, E.M., Cahn, J.Y., Schnell, J., Kuchenbauer, F., Bunjes, D., Chakraverty, R., Richardson, S., Gill, S., Kroger, N., Ayuk, F., Vago, L., Ciceri, F., Muller, A.M., Kondo, T., Teshima, T., Klaeger, S., Kuster, B., Kim, D.D.H., Weisdorf, D., Velden, W.J. van der, Dorfel, D., Bethge, W., Hilgendorf, I., Hochhaus, A., Andrieux, G., Borries, M., Busch, H., Magenau, J., Reddy, P., Labopin, M., and Antin, J.H., et al.
- Abstract
Contains fulltext : 190745.pdf (publisher's version ) (Closed access), Individuals with acute myeloid leukemia (AML) harboring an internal tandem duplication (ITD) in the gene encoding Fms-related tyrosine kinase 3 (FLT3) who relapse after allogeneic hematopoietic cell transplantation (allo-HCT) have a 1-year survival rate below 20%. We observed that sorafenib, a multitargeted tyrosine kinase inhibitor, increased IL-15 production by FLT3-ITD(+) leukemia cells. This synergized with the allogeneic CD8(+) T cell response, leading to long-term survival in six mouse models of FLT3-ITD(+) AML. Sorafenib-related IL-15 production caused an increase in CD8(+)CD107a(+)IFN-gamma(+) T cells with features of longevity (high levels of Bcl-2 and reduced PD-1 levels), which eradicated leukemia in secondary recipients. Mechanistically, sorafenib reduced expression of the transcription factor ATF4, thereby blocking negative regulation of interferon regulatory factor 7 (IRF7) activation, which enhanced IL-15 transcription. Both IRF7 knockdown and ATF4 overexpression in leukemia cells antagonized sorafenib-induced IL-15 production in vitro. Human FLT3-ITD(+) AML cells obtained from sorafenib responders following sorafenib therapy showed increased levels of IL-15, phosphorylated IRF7, and a transcriptionally active IRF7 chromatin state. The mitochondrial spare respiratory capacity and glycolytic capacity of CD8(+) T cells increased upon sorafenib treatment in sorafenib responders but not in nonresponders. Our findings indicate that the synergism of T cells and sorafenib is mediated via reduced ATF4 expression, causing activation of the IRF7-IL-15 axis in leukemia cells and thereby leading to metabolic reprogramming of leukemia-reactive T cells in humans. Therefore, sorafenib treatment has the potential to contribute to an immune-mediated cure of FLT3-ITD-mutant AML relapse, an otherwise fatal complication after allo-HCT.
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- 2018
16. Functional and histological evaluation of µECoG in sheep
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Gierthmuehlen, M, Gkogkidis, A, Doostkam, S, Schuettler, M, Haberstroh, J, and Ball, T
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bmi ,ddc: 610 ,µecog ,aep ,610 Medical sciences ,Medicine - Abstract
Objective: Brain-Machine-Interfaces (BMI) require high temporal and spatial recordings of cortical neuroactivity. In opposition to invasive needle-electrodes, micro-electrocorticography (µECoG) is a promising technique with a limited extent of invasiveness. We recently developed a sheep model for[for full text, please go to the a.m. URL], 67. Jahrestagung der Deutschen Gesellschaft für Neurochirurgie (DGNC), 1. Joint Meeting mit der Koreanischen Gesellschaft für Neurochirurgie (KNS)
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- 2016
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17. Amyloid Deposits in Senile Vertebral Arteries, Immunohistological and Ultrastructural Findings
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Mahjoor Aa, Bohl, Sahraian A, and Doostkam S
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Adult ,Male ,Amyloid ,Pathology ,medicine.medical_specialty ,law.invention ,law ,mental disorders ,medicine ,Humans ,Arterial wall ,Aged ,Ultrasonography ,Aged, 80 and over ,biology ,Chemistry ,Cerebral Arteries ,Middle Aged ,Systemic amyloidosis ,Microscopy, Electron ,Polyclonal antibodies ,biology.protein ,Ultrastructure ,Immunohistochemistry ,Female ,Electron microscope ,Agronomy and Crop Science ,Elastin - Abstract
In a study on amyloid deposits in vertebral arteries, many elderly patients showed amyloid deposits in the perivascular tissue. These proved to be senile systemic amyloidosis of the transthyretin-type by immunohistochemistry. Amyloid deposits were also found in the arterial wall. These intramural amyloid deposits showed significant affinity to elastic material of the arterial wall. The intramural amyloid deposits did not react with any of the known or available antibodies to amyloid subtypes. Only a polyclonal antibody to human elastin could mark this type of amyloid. It may therefore be assumed that the precursor protein of this amyloid is derived from elastin molecules. By electron microscopy, the light microscopic amyloid deposits were of fibrillary structure, typical for amyloid with a direct contact to elastic material.
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- 2008
18. Teaching Neuroimages: “Filling out” in Cavernous Hemangioma of the Cavernous Sinus
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Meincke, J., primary, Lützen, N., additional, Doostkam, S., additional, and Urbach, H., additional
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- 2017
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19. The stereotactic suboccipital transcerebellar approach
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Nakagawa, JM, Trippel, M, Doostkam, S, Coenen, VA, Reinacher, P, Nakagawa, JM, Trippel, M, Doostkam, S, Coenen, VA, and Reinacher, P
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- 2015
20. Das Spektrum der histopathologischen Befunde bei Patienten mit Achalasie reflektiert unterschiedliche Ätiologien
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Gockel, I, Bohl, JRE, Doostkam, S, Eckardt, VF, and Junginger, T
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ddc: 610 - Published
- 2005
21. NI-63 * GLIOMATOSIS CEREBRI: DIAGNOSIS, MANAGEMENT AND OUTCOMES IN THE LARGEST SERIES FROM A SINGLE EUROPEAN INSTITUTION
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Ohla, V., primary, Kasper, E., additional, Doostkam, S., additional, Volk, B., additional, and Ostertag, C., additional
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- 2014
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22. Intraindividual comparison of histopathological diagnosis obtained by stereotactic serial biopsy to open surgical resection specimen in patients with intracranial tumours
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Reithmeier, T., primary, Lopez, W.O., additional, Doostkam, S., additional, Machein, M.R., additional, Pinsker, M.O., additional, Trippel, M., additional, and Nikkhah, G., additional
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- 2013
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23. Treatment of Progressive Brain Stem Glioma With Bevacizumab: Radiological, Metabolic and Histopathological Aspects
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Reithmeier, T., additional, Rottenburger, C., additional, Doostkam, S., additional, Pinsker, M., additional, Trippel, M., additional, Bosche, B., additional, Weber, W., additional, Prinz, M., additional, and Nikkhah, G., additional
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- 2012
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24. Treatment of Progressive Brain Stem Glioma With Bevacizumab: Radiological, Metabolic and Histopathological Aspects
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Reithmeier, T., additional, Rottenburger, C., additional, Doostkam, S., additional, Pinsker, M., additional, Trippel, M., additional, Bosche, B., additional, Weber, W., additional, Prinz, M., additional, and Nikkhah, G., additional
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- 2011
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25. Das extraventrikuläre Neurozytom: eine seltene Ursache der Temporallappenepilepsie
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Treier, M., primary, Doostkam, S., additional, and Meckel, S., additional
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- 2011
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26. First long term in vivo study on subdurally implanted Micro-ECoG electrodes, manufactured with a novel laser technology
- Author
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Henle, C., primary, Raab, M., additional, Cordeiro, J. G., additional, Doostkam, S., additional, Schulze-Bonhage, A., additional, Stieglitz, T., additional, and Rickert, J., additional
- Published
- 2010
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27. Amyloid Deposits in Senile Vertebral Arteries, Immunohistological and Ultrastructural Findings
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Doostkam, S., primary, Bohl, J.R.E., additional, Sahraian, A., additional, and Mahjoor, A.A., additional
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- 2008
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
28. Das extraventrikuläre Neurozytom: eine seltene Ursache der Temporallappenepilepsie.
- Author
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Treier, M., Doostkam, S., and Meckel, S.
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- 2011
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29. Treatment of Progressive Brain Stem Glioma With Bevacizumab: Radiological, Metabolic and Histopathological Aspects
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Reithmeier, T., Rottenburger, C., Doostkam, S., Pinsker, M. O., Trippel, M., Bosche, B., Weber, W., Prinz, M., and Nikkhah, G.
- Published
- 2011
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30. Activation of canonical WNT/β-catenin signaling enhances in vitro motility of glioblastoma cells by activation of ZEB1 and other activators of epithelial-to-mesenchymal transition.
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Kahlert UD, Maciaczyk D, Doostkam S, Orr BA, Simons B, Bogiel T, Reithmeier T, Prinz M, Schubert J, Niedermann G, Brabletz T, Eberhart CG, Nikkhah G, Maciaczyk J, Kahlert, Ulf D, Maciaczyk, Donata, Doostkam, Soroush, Orr, Brent A, Simons, Brian, and Bogiel, Tomasz
- Abstract
Here we show that activation of the canonical WNT/β-catenin pathway increases the expression of stem cell genes and promotes the migratory and invasive capacity of glioblastoma. Modulation of WNT signaling alters the expression of epithelial-to-mesenchymal transition activators, suggesting a role of this process in the regulation of glioma motility. Using immunohistochemistry in patient-derived glioblastoma samples we showed higher numbers of cells with intranuclear signal for β-catenin in the infiltrating edge of tumor compared to central tumor parenchyma. These findings suggest that canonical WNT/β-catenin pathway is a critical regulator of GBM invasion and may represent a potential therapeutic target. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2012
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31. The Impact of Head Position on Neurological and Histopathological Outcome Following Controlled Automated Reperfusion of the Whole Body (CARL) in a Pig Model.
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Damjanovic D, Pooth JS, Liu Y, Frensch F, Wolkewitz M, Haberstroh J, Doostkam S, Cristina Schmitz HR, Foerster K, Taunyane I, Neubert T, Scherer C, Diel P, Benk C, Beyersdorf F, and Trummer G
- Abstract
Introduction: Based on extracorporeal circulation, targeted reperfusion strategies have been developed to improve survival and neurologic recovery in refractory cardiac arrest: Controlled Automated Reperfusion of the whoLe Body (CARL). Furthermore, animal and human cadaver studies have shown beneficial effects on cerebral pressure due to head elevation during conventional cardiopulmonary resuscitation. Our aim was to evaluate the impact of head elevation on survival, neurologic recovery and histopathologic outcome in addition to CARL in an animal model. Methods: After 20 min of ventricular fibrillation, 46 domestic pigs underwent CARL, including high, pulsatile extracorporeal blood flow, pH-stat acid-base management, priming with a colloid, mannitol and citrate, targeted oxygen, carbon dioxide and blood pressure management, rapid cooling and slow rewarming. N = 25 were head-up (HUP) during CARL, and N = 21 were supine (SUP). After weaning from ECC, the pigs were extubated and followed up in the animal care facility for up to seven days. Neuronal density was evaluated in neurohistopathology. Results: More animals in the HUP group survived and achieved a favorable neurological recovery, 21/25 (84%) versus 6/21 (29%) in the SUP group. Head positioning was an independent factor in neurologically favorable survival ( p < 0.00012). Neurohistopathology showed no significant structural differences between HUP and SUP. Distinct, partly transient clinical neurologic deficits were blindness and ataxia. Conclusions: Head elevation during CARL after 20 min of cardiac arrest independently improved survival and neurologic outcome in pigs. Clinical follow-up revealed transient neurologic deficits potentially attributable to functions localized in the posterior perfusion area, whereas histopathologic findings did not show corresponding differences between the groups. A possible explanation of our findings may be venous congestion and edema as modifiable contributing factors of neurologic injury following prolonged cardiac arrest.
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- 2023
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32. Diagnostic Accuracy of Epilepsy-dedicated MRI with Post-processing.
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Urbach H, Scheiwe C, Shah MJ, Nakagawa JM, Heers M, San Antonio-Arce MV, Altenmueller DM, Schulze-Bonhage A, Huppertz HJ, Demerath T, and Doostkam S
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- Humans, Gliosis, Sclerosis, Treatment Outcome, Seizures, Magnetic Resonance Imaging methods, Retrospective Studies, Epilepsy diagnostic imaging, Epilepsy surgery, Epilepsy pathology, Drug Resistant Epilepsy diagnostic imaging, Drug Resistant Epilepsy surgery, Hippocampal Sclerosis
- Abstract
Purpose: To evaluate the diagnostic accuracy of epilepsy-dedicated 3 Tesla MRI including post-processing by correlating MRI, histopathology, and postsurgical seizure outcomes., Methods: 3 Tesla-MRI including a magnetization-prepared two rapid acquisition gradient echo (MP2RAGE) sequence for post-processing using the morphometric analysis program MAP was acquired in 116 consecutive patients with drug-resistant focal epilepsy undergoing resection surgery. The MRI, histopathology reports and postsurgical seizure outcomes were recorded from the patient's charts., Results: The MRI and histopathology were concordant in 101 and discordant in 15 patients, 3 no hippocampal sclerosis/gliosis only lesions were missed on MRI and 1 of 28 focal cortical dysplasia (FCD) type II associated with a glial scar was considered a glial scar only on MRI. In another five patients, MRI was suggestive of FCD, the histopathology was uneventful but patients were seizure-free following surgery. The MRI and histopathology were concordant in 20 of 21 glioneuronal tumors, 6 cavernomas, and 7 glial scars. Histopathology was negative in 10 patients with temporal lobe epilepsy, 4 of them had anteroinferior meningoencephaloceles. Engel class IA outcome was reached in 71% of patients., Conclusion: The proposed MRI protocol is highly accurate. No hippocampal sclerosis/gliosis only lesions are typically MRI negative. Small MRI positive FCD can be histopathologically missed, most likely due to sampling errors resulting from insufficient harvesting of tissue., (© 2023. The Author(s).)
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- 2023
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33. Patient-derived xenograft mouse models to investigate tropism to the central nervous system and retina of primary and secondary central nervous system lymphoma.
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Isbell LK, Tschuch C, Doostkam S, Waldeck S, Andrieux G, Shoumariyeh K, Lenhard D, Schaefer HE, Reinacher PC, Bartsch I, Pantic M, Vinnakota JM, Kakkassery V, Schorb E, Scherer F, Frey AV, Boerries M, Illerhaus G, Duyster J, Schueler J, and von Bubnoff N
- Subjects
- Humans, Animals, Mice, Heterografts, Vitreous Body metabolism, Vitreous Body pathology, Central Nervous System pathology, Retina metabolism, Retinal Neoplasms diagnosis, Retinal Neoplasms drug therapy, Retinal Neoplasms pathology, Central Nervous System Neoplasms pathology, Lymphoma, Large B-Cell, Diffuse drug therapy, Lymphoma, Large B-Cell, Diffuse genetics, Lymphoma, Large B-Cell, Diffuse pathology
- Abstract
Aims: How and why lymphoma cells home to the central nervous system and vitreoretinal compartment in primary diffuse large B-cell lymphoma of the central nervous system remain unknown. Our aim was to create an in vivo model to study lymphoma cell tropism to the central nervous system., Methods: We established a patient-derived central nervous system lymphoma xenograft mouse model and characterised xenografts derived from four primary and four secondary central nervous system lymphoma patients using immunohistochemistry, flow cytometry and nucleic acid sequencing technology. In reimplantation experiments, we analysed dissemination patterns of orthotopic and heterotopic xenografts and performed RNA sequencing of different involved organs to detect differences at the transcriptome level., Results: We found that xenografted primary central nervous system lymphoma cells home to the central nervous system and eye after intrasplenic transplantation, mimicking central nervous system and primary vitreoretinal lymphoma pathology, respectively. Transcriptomic analysis revealed distinct signatures for lymphoma cells in the brain in comparison to the spleen as well as a small overlap of commonly regulated genes in both primary and secondary central nervous system lymphoma., Conclusion: This in vivo tumour model preserves key features of primary and secondary central nervous system lymphoma and can be used to explore critical pathways for the central nervous system and retinal tropism with the goal to find new targets for novel therapeutic approaches., (© 2023 The Authors. Neuropathology and Applied Neurobiology published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd on behalf of British Neuropathological Society.)
- Published
- 2023
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34. CXCR4, CXCR5 and CD44 May Be Involved in Homing of Lymphoma Cells into the Eye in a Patient Derived Xenograft Homing Mouse Model for Primary Vitreoretinal Lymphoma.
- Author
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Babst N, Isbell LK, Rommel F, Tura A, Ranjbar M, Grisanti S, Tschuch C, Schueler J, Doostkam S, Reinacher PC, Duyster J, Kakkassery V, and von Bubnoff N
- Subjects
- Animals, Heterografts, Humans, Hyaluronan Receptors, Mice, Receptors, CXCR4, Receptors, CXCR5, Vitreous Body pathology, Central Nervous System Neoplasms, Lymphoma pathology, Retinal Neoplasms
- Abstract
Background: Primary vitreoretinal lymphoma (PVRL), a rare malignancy of the eye, is strongly related to primary central nervous system lymphoma (PCNSL). We hypothesized that lymphoma cells disseminate to the CNS and eye tissue via distinct homing receptors. The objective of this study was to test expression of CXCR4, CXCR5, CXCR7 and CD44 homing receptors on CD20 positive B-lymphoma cells on enucleated eyes using a PCNSL xenograft mouse model. Methods: We used indirect immunofluorescence double staining for CD20/CXCR4, CD20/CXCR5, CD20/CXCR7 and CD20/CD44 on enucleated eyes of a PCNSL xenograft mouse model with PVRL phenotype (PCNSL group) in comparison to a secondary CNS lymphoma xenograft mouse model (SCNSL group). Lymphoma infiltration was evaluated with an immunoreactive score (IRS). Results: 11/13 paired eyes of the PCNSL but none of the SCNSL group were infiltrated by CD20-positive cells. Particularly the choroid and to a lesser extent the retina of the PCNSL group were infiltrated by CD20+/CXCR4+, CD20+/CXCR5+, few CD20+/CD44+ but no CD20+/CXCR7+ cells. Expression of CXCR4 (p = 0.0205), CXCR5 (p = 0.0004) and CD44 (p < 0.0001) was significantly increased in the PCNSL compared to the SCNSL group. Conclusions: CD20+ PCNSL lymphoma cells infiltrating the eye co-express distinct homing receptors such as CXCR4 and CXCR5 in a PVRL homing mouse model. These receptors may be involved in PVRL homing into the eye., Competing Interests: Nikolas von Bubnoff received research support from Novartis and honoraria from Novartis, Takeda and from the Forum für Medizinische Fortbildung. Peter C Reinacher receives research support from Else Kröner-Fresenius Foundation (Germany) and Fraunhofer Foundation (Germany), received personal honoraria for lectures or advice from Boston Scientific (USA) and Brainlab (Germany) and is consultant for Boston Scientific (USA), Inomed (Germany) and Brainlab (Germany). Aysegül Tura receives financial support from Novartis Pharma GmbH, Germany. The other authors have no competing interests to declare that are relevant to the content of this article.
- Published
- 2022
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35. Early assessment of circulating tumor DNA after curative-intent resection predicts tumor recurrence in early-stage and locally advanced non-small-cell lung cancer.
- Author
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Waldeck S, Mitschke J, Wiesemann S, Rassner M, Andrieux G, Deuter M, Mutter J, Lüchtenborg AM, Kottmann D, Titze L, Zeisel C, Jolic M, Philipp U, Lassmann S, Bronsert P, Greil C, Rawluk J, Becker H, Isbell L, Müller A, Doostkam S, Passlick B, Börries M, Duyster J, Wehrle J, Scherer F, and von Bubnoff N
- Subjects
- Aged, Aged, 80 and over, Carcinoma, Non-Small-Cell Lung blood, Carcinoma, Non-Small-Cell Lung surgery, Female, High-Throughput Nucleotide Sequencing, Humans, Lung Neoplasms blood, Lung Neoplasms surgery, Male, Middle Aged, Mutation, Progression-Free Survival, Prospective Studies, Carcinoma, Non-Small-Cell Lung pathology, Circulating Tumor DNA blood, Lung Neoplasms pathology, Neoplasm Recurrence, Local genetics
- Abstract
Circulating tumor DNA (ctDNA) has demonstrated great potential as a noninvasive biomarker to assess minimal residual disease (MRD) and profile tumor genotypes in patients with non-small-cell lung cancer (NSCLC). However, little is known about its dynamics during and after tumor resection, or its potential for predicting clinical outcomes. Here, we applied a targeted-capture high-throughput sequencing approach to profile ctDNA at various disease milestones and assessed its predictive value in patients with early-stage and locally advanced NSCLC. We prospectively enrolled 33 consecutive patients with stage IA to IIIB NSCLC undergoing curative-intent tumor resection (median follow-up: 26.2 months). From 21 patients, we serially collected 96 plasma samples before surgery, during surgery, 1-2 weeks postsurgery, and during follow-up. Deep next-generation sequencing using unique molecular identifiers was performed to identify and quantify tumor-specific mutations in ctDNA. Twelve patients (57%) had detectable mutations in ctDNA before tumor resection. Both ctDNA detection rates and ctDNA concentrations were significantly higher in plasma obtained during surgery compared with presurgical specimens (57% versus 19% ctDNA detection rate, and 12.47 versus 6.64 ng·mL
-1 , respectively). Four patients (19%) remained ctDNA-positive at 1-2 weeks after surgery, with all of them (100%) experiencing disease progression at later time points. In contrast, only 4 out of 12 ctDNA-negative patients (33%) after surgery experienced relapse during follow-up. Positive ctDNA in early postoperative plasma samples was associated with shorter progression-free survival (P = 0.013) and overall survival (P = 0.004). Our findings suggest that, in early-stage and locally advanced NSCLC, intraoperative plasma sampling results in high ctDNA detection rates and that ctDNA positivity early after resection identifies patients at risk for relapse., (© 2021 The Authors. Molecular Oncology published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd on behalf of Federation of European Biochemical Societies.)- Published
- 2022
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36. Selective intra-carotid blood cooling in acute ischemic stroke: A safety and feasibility study in an ovine stroke model.
- Author
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Cattaneo GF, Herrmann AM, Eiden SA, Wieser M, Kellner E, Doostkam S, Süß P, Kiefer S, Fauth L, Maurer CJ, Wolfertz J, Nitzsche B, Büchert M, Jost T, Ihorst G, Haberstroh J, Mülling C, Strecker C, Niesen WD, Shah MJ, Urbach H, Boltze J, and Meckel S
- Subjects
- Angiography, Digital Subtraction methods, Animals, Carotid Artery, Common diagnostic imaging, Carotid Artery, Common pathology, Carotid Artery, Common surgery, Catheterization methods, Disease Models, Animal, Endovascular Procedures methods, Feasibility Studies, Hypothermia, Induced instrumentation, Infarction, Middle Cerebral Artery diagnostic imaging, Infarction, Middle Cerebral Artery pathology, Ischemic Stroke veterinary, Neuroprotective Agents pharmacology, Outcome Assessment, Health Care, Perfusion Imaging methods, Safety, Sheep, Thrombectomy methods, Cold Temperature adverse effects, Hypothermia, Induced adverse effects, Infarction, Middle Cerebral Artery therapy, Ischemic Stroke therapy
- Abstract
Selective therapeutic hypothermia (TH) showed promising preclinical results as a neuroprotective strategy in acute ischemic stroke. We aimed to assess safety and feasibility of an intracarotid cooling catheter conceived for fast and selective brain cooling during endovascular thrombectomy in an ovine stroke model.Transient middle cerebral artery occlusion (MCAO, 3 h) was performed in 20 sheep. In the hypothermia group (n = 10), selective TH was initiated 20 minutes before recanalization, and was maintained for another 3 h. In the normothermia control group (n = 10), a standard 8 French catheter was used instead. Primary endpoints were intranasal cooling performance (feasibility) plus vessel patency assessed by digital subtraction angiography and carotid artery wall integrity (histopathology, both safety). Secondary endpoints were neurological outcome and infarct volumes.Computed tomography perfusion demonstrated MCA territory hypoperfusion during MCAO in both groups. Intranasal temperature decreased by 1.1 °C/3.1 °C after 10/60 minutes in the TH group and 0.3 °C/0.4 °C in the normothermia group (p < 0.001). Carotid artery and branching vessel patency as well as carotid wall integrity was indifferent between groups. Infarct volumes (p = 0.74) and neurological outcome (p = 0.82) were similar in both groups.Selective TH was feasible and safe. However, a larger number of subjects might be required to demonstrate efficacy.
- Published
- 2021
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37. Glioblastoma evolving within 10 days following unremarkable computer tomography of the brain: a case report.
- Author
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Schröter N, Lützen N, Doostkam S, and Berger B
- Subjects
- Aged, Brain Neoplasms pathology, Female, Glioblastoma pathology, Humans, Ischemic Attack, Transient diagnostic imaging, Paresis diagnostic imaging, Time Factors, Tomography, X-Ray Computed, Brain Neoplasms diagnostic imaging, Disease Progression, Glioblastoma diagnostic imaging
- Abstract
Glioblastoma multiforme might develop radiologically within a few days following unremarkable CT scan of the brain. Glioblastoma multiforme is the most frequent primary brain tumor. Initial presentations are diverse, including headache, seizures and transient or persistent neurological deficits. Cerebral imaging followed by histological examination of a tissue specimen is the mainstay of diagnosis. We report the case of a 79-year-old female patient whose computer tomography (CT) of the brain was unremarkable at first clinical presentation with a transient hemiparesis of the right side, but revealed a cerebral space-occupying lesion ultimately diagnosed as glioblastoma only 10 days later. According to our case presentation glioblastoma might develop radiologically within a few days following unremarkable CT scan of the brain. Since clinical manifestation with a transient ischemic attack (TIA)-like episode was preceding CT manifestation, this case indicates, that a magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) should be routinely performed in all patients presenting with TIA.
- Published
- 2021
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38. Mossy fiber sprouting into the hippocampal region CA2 in patients with temporal lobe epilepsy.
- Author
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Freiman TM, Häussler U, Zentner J, Doostkam S, Beck J, Scheiwe C, Brandt A, Haas CA, and Puhahn-Schmeiser B
- Subjects
- Animals, CA1 Region, Hippocampal, CA2 Region, Hippocampal, Hippocampus, Humans, Kainic Acid toxicity, Mice, Mossy Fibers, Hippocampal, Epilepsy, Temporal Lobe, RGS Proteins
- Abstract
Hippocampal sclerosis (HS) in Temporal Lobe Epilepsy (TLE) shows neuronal death in cornu ammonis (CA)1, CA3, and CA4. It is known that granule cells and CA2 neurons survive and their axons, the mossy fibers (MF), lose their target cells in CA3 and CA4 and sprout to the granule cell layer and molecular layer. We examined in TLE patients and in a mouse epilepsy model, whether MF sprouting is directed to the dentate gyrus or extends to distant CA regions and whether sprouting is associated with death of target neurons in CA3 and CA4. In 319 TLE patients, HS was evaluated by Wyler grade and International League against Epilepsy (ILAE) types using immunohistochemistry against neuronal nuclei (NeuN). Synaptoporin was used to colocalize MF. In addition, transgenic Thy1-eGFP mice were intrahippocampally injected with kainate and sprouting of eGFP-positive MFs was analyzed together with immunocytochemistry for regulator of G-protein signaling 14 (RGS14). In human HS Wyler III and IV as well as in ILAE 1, 2, and 3 specimens, we found synaptoporin-positive axon terminals in CA2 and even in CA1, associated with the extent of granule cell dispersion. Sprouting was seen in cases with cell death of target neurons in CA3 and CA4 (classical severe HS ILAE type 1) but also without this cell death (atypical HS ILAE type 2). Similarly, in epileptic mice eGFP-positive MFs sprouted to CA2 and beyond. The presence of MF terminals in the CA2 pyramidal cell layer and in CA1 was also correlated with the extent of granule cell dispersion. The similarity of our findings in human specimens and in the mouse model highlights the importance and opens up new chances of using translational approaches to determine mechanisms underlying TLE., (© 2021 The Authors. Hippocampus published by Wiley Periodicals LLC.)
- Published
- 2021
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39. Spinal paraganglioma as unusual finding in von Hippel-Lindau disease.
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Klingler JH, Elsheikh S, Doostkam S, Krüger MT, Blaß BI, and Steiert C
- Subjects
- Back Pain etiology, Diagnosis, Differential, Humans, Laminectomy, Magnetic Resonance Imaging, Male, Paraganglioma etiology, Paraganglioma surgery, Peripheral Nervous System Neoplasms surgery, Spinal Nerves surgery, Young Adult, Paraganglioma pathology, Peripheral Nervous System Neoplasms pathology, Spinal Nerves pathology, von Hippel-Lindau Disease pathology
- Abstract
A 20-year-old patient with a history of von Hippel-Lindau disease reported on thoracic back pain radiating to the left shoulder for 10 weeks. Magnetic resonance imaging revealed a progressive contrast-enhancing tumor (14 × 21 × 28 mm) compressing the spinal cord and extending into the left neural foramen at T5/6. After embolization of supplying vessels, the tumor was completely resected via hemilaminectomy of T5. The postoperative course was uneventful without surgery related morbidity. The pathological examination disclosed a paraganglioma WHO grade I. We discuss the differential diagnoses and pitfalls of this unexpected finding in this patient with von Hippel-Lindau disease., (Copyright © 2020 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2020
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40. Carbon Monoxide Exerts Functional Neuroprotection After Cardiac Arrest Using Extracorporeal Resuscitation in Pigs.
- Author
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Wollborn J, Steiger C, Doostkam S, Schallner N, Schroeter N, Kari FA, Meinel L, Buerkle H, Schick MA, and Goebel U
- Subjects
- Animals, Male, Cerebrovascular Circulation physiology, Swine, Treatment Outcome, Brain blood supply, Carbon Monoxide metabolism, Carbon Monoxide therapeutic use, Cardiopulmonary Resuscitation methods, Extracorporeal Membrane Oxygenation methods, Heart Arrest therapy
- Abstract
Objectives: Neurologic damage following cardiac arrest remains a major burden for modern resuscitation medicine. Cardiopulmonary resuscitation with extracorporeal circulatory support holds the potential to reduce morbidity and mortality. Furthermore, the endogenous gasotransmitter carbon monoxide attracts attention in reducing cerebral injury. We hypothesize that extracorporeal resuscitation with additional carbon monoxide application reduces neurologic damage., Design: Randomized, controlled animal study., Setting: University research laboratory., Subjects: Landrace-hybrid pigs., Interventions: In a porcine model, carbon monoxide was added using a novel extracorporeal releasing system after resuscitation from cardiac arrest., Measurements and Main Results: As markers of cerebral function, neuromonitoring modalities (somatosensory-evoked potentials, cerebral oximetry, and transcranial Doppler ultrasound) were used. Histopathologic damage and molecular markers (caspase-3 activity and heme oxygenase-1 expression) were analyzed. Cerebral oximetry showed fast rise in regional oxygen saturation after carbon monoxide treatment at 0.5 hours compared with extracorporeal resuscitation alone (regional cerebral oxygen saturation, 73% ± 3% vs 52% ± 8%; p < 0.05). Median nerve somatosensory-evoked potentials showed improved activity upon carbon monoxide treatment, whereas post-cardiac arrest cerebral perfusion differences were diminished. Histopathologic damage scores were reduced compared with customary resuscitation strategies (hippocampus: sham, 0.4 ± 0.2; cardiopulmonary resuscitation, 1.7 ± 0.4; extracorporeal cardiopulmonary resuscitation, 2.3 ± 0.2; extracorporeal cardiopulmonary resuscitation with carbon monoxide application [CO-E-CPR], 0.9 ± 0.3; p < 0.05). Furthermore, ionized calcium-binding adaptor molecule 1 staining revealed reduced damage patterns upon carbon monoxide treatment. Caspase-3 activity (cardiopulmonary resuscitation, 426 ± 169 pg/mL; extracorporeal cardiopulmonary resuscitation, 240 ± 61 pg/mL; CO-E-CPR, 89 ± 26 pg/mL; p < 0.05) and heme oxygenase-1 (sham, 1 ± 0.1; cardiopulmonary resuscitation, 2.5 ± 0.4; extracorporeal cardiopulmonary resuscitation, 2.4 ± 0.2; CO-E-CPR, 1.4 ± 0.2; p < 0.05) expression were reduced after carbon monoxide exposure., Conclusions: Carbon monoxide application during extracorporeal resuscitation reduces injury patterns in neuromonitoring and decreases histopathologic cerebral damage by reducing apoptosis. This may lay the basis for further clinical translation of this highly salutary substance.
- Published
- 2020
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41. Fibrinogen induces neural stem cell differentiation into astrocytes in the subventricular zone via BMP signaling.
- Author
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Pous L, Deshpande SS, Nath S, Mezey S, Malik SC, Schildge S, Bohrer C, Topp K, Pfeifer D, Fernández-Klett F, Doostkam S, Galanakis DK, Taylor V, Akassoglou K, and Schachtrup C
- Subjects
- Animals, Astrocytes metabolism, Bone Morphogenetic Protein Receptors, Type I genetics, Bone Morphogenetic Proteins metabolism, Gene Expression Regulation, Hippocampus cytology, Hippocampus metabolism, Lateral Ventricles metabolism, Mice, Mice, Inbred C57BL, Neural Stem Cells metabolism, Signal Transduction, Astrocytes cytology, Bone Morphogenetic Protein Receptors, Type I metabolism, Fibrinogen metabolism, Lateral Ventricles cytology, Neural Stem Cells cytology, Neurogenesis
- Abstract
Neural stem/progenitor cells (NSPCs) originating from the subventricular zone (SVZ) contribute to brain repair during CNS disease. The microenvironment within the SVZ stem cell niche controls NSPC fate. However, extracellular factors within the niche that trigger astrogliogenesis over neurogenesis during CNS disease are unclear. Here, we show that blood-derived fibrinogen is enriched in the SVZ niche following distant cortical brain injury in mice. Fibrinogen inhibited neuronal differentiation in SVZ and hippocampal NSPCs while promoting astrogenesis via activation of the BMP receptor signaling pathway. Genetic and pharmacologic depletion of fibrinogen reduced astrocyte formation within the SVZ after cortical injury, reducing the contribution of SVZ-derived reactive astrocytes to lesion scar formation. We propose that fibrinogen is a regulator of NSPC-derived astrogenesis from the SVZ niche via BMP receptor signaling pathway following injury.
- Published
- 2020
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42. New Variant of MELAS Syndrome With Executive Dysfunction, Heteroplasmic Point Mutation in the MT-ND4 Gene (m.12015T>C; p.Leu419Pro) and Comorbid Polyglandular Autoimmune Syndrome Type 2.
- Author
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Endres D, Süß P, Maier SJ, Friedel E, Nickel K, Ziegler C, Fiebich BL, Glocker FX, Stock F, Egger K, Lange T, Dacko M, Venhoff N, Erny D, Doostkam S, Komlosi K, Domschke K, and Tebartz van Elst L
- Subjects
- Addison Disease complications, Adult, Cognitive Dysfunction complications, DNA, Mitochondrial genetics, Fatigue complications, Female, Gastritis complications, Hashimoto Disease complications, Headache complications, Humans, Seizures complications, MELAS Syndrome complications, MELAS Syndrome genetics, NADH Dehydrogenase genetics, Point Mutation, Polyendocrinopathies, Autoimmune complications
- Abstract
Background: Mitochondrial diseases are caused by dysfunctions in mitochondrial metabolic pathways. MELAS syndrome is one of the most frequent mitochondrial disorders; it is characterized by encephalopathy, myopathy, lactic acidosis, and stroke-like episodes. Typically, it is associated with a point mutation with an adenine-to-guanine transition at position 3243 of the mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA; m.3243A>G) in the mitochondrially encoded tRNA leucine 1 (MT-TL1) gene. Other point mutations are possible and the association with polyglandular autoimmune syndrome type 2 has not yet been described. Case presentation: We present the case of a 25-year-old female patient with dysexecutive syndrome, muscular fatigue, and continuous headache. Half a year ago, she fought an infection-triggered Addison crisis. As the disease progressed, she had two epileptic seizures and stroke-like episodes with hemiparesis on the right side. Cerebral magnetic resonance imaging showed a substance defect of the parieto-occipital left side exceeding the vascular territories with a lactate peak. The lactate ischemia test was clearly positive, and a muscle biopsy showed single cytochrome c oxidase-negative muscle fibers. Genetic testing of blood mtDNA revealed a heteroplasmic base exchange mutation in the mitochondrially encoded NADH:ubiquinone oxidoreductase core subunit 4 (MT-ND4) gene (m.12015T>C; p.Leu419Pro; heteroplasmy level in blood 12%, in muscle tissue: 15%). The patient suffered from comorbid autoimmune polyglandular syndrome type 2 with Hashimoto's thyroiditis, Addison's disease, and autoimmune gastritis. In addition, we found increased anti-glutamic acid decarboxylase 65, anti-partial cell, anti-intrinsic factor, and anti-nuclear antibodies. Conclusion: We present an atypical case of MELAS syndrome with predominant symptoms of a dysexecutive syndrome, two stroke-like episodes, and fast-onset fatigue. The symptoms were associated with a not yet described base and aminoacid exchange mutation in the MT-ND4 gene (m.12015T>C to p.Leu419Pro). The resulting changed protein complex in our patient is part of the respiratory chain multicomplex I and might be the reason for the mitochondriopathy. However, different simulations for pathogenetic relevance are contradictory and rather speak for a benign variant. To our knowledge this case report is the first reporting MELAS syndrome with comorbid polyglandular autoimmune syndrome type 2. Screening for autoimmune alterations in those patients is important to prevent damage to end organs.
- Published
- 2019
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43. Multilobar Resections for 3T MRI-Negative Epilepsy: Worth the Trouble?
- Author
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Kogias E, Schmeiser B, Doostkam S, Brandt A, Hammen T, Zentner J, and Ramantani G
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Adult, Drug Resistant Epilepsy pathology, Electroencephalography, Epilepsies, Partial pathology, Female, Humans, Magnetic Resonance Imaging, Male, Malformations of Cortical Development pathology, Multimodal Imaging, Postoperative Care, Preoperative Care, Reoperation statistics & numerical data, Retrospective Studies, Tomography, Emission-Computed, Single-Photon, Treatment Outcome, Young Adult, Drug Resistant Epilepsy surgery, Epilepsies, Partial surgery
- Abstract
Objective: Multilobar resection in magnetic resonance imaging (MRI)-negative drug-resistant epilepsy warrants attention because they account for up to one third of MRI-negative epilepsy surgery. Despite their high prevalence, data are sparse, and the risk/benefit ratio continues to be debated. The present study investigated the postoperative seizure outcomes in this especially challenging subgroup., Methods: We retrospectively analyzed the data of 4 consecutive patients with 3T MRI-negative findings and drug-resistant focal epilepsy who had undergone multilobar epilepsy surgery at our institution., Results: The mean age at first surgery was 28.5 years (range, 14-48); 1 patient required 2 consecutive reoperations. The final resection was in the frontotemporal and temporo-parieto-occipital regions in 2 patients each. Histopathological examination revealed mild malformations of cortical development in 2 patients and focal cortical dysplasia type Ia and type IIa in 1 patient each. At the last follow-up examination (median, 3.3 years; range, 1-11), 2 patients were completely seizure free (Engel class Ia), 1 patient had experienced some disabling seizures after surgery but had been free of disabling seizures for 2 years at the last follow-up examination (Engel class Ic), and 1 patient had experienced worthwhile improvement (Engel class IIb) and had been seizure free for 1 year at the last follow-up examination. No surgical complications developed., Conclusions: Our results have demonstrated that multilobar epilepsy surgery is effective for lasting seizure control for selected 3T MRI-negative candidates, leading to favorable outcomes for all 4 of our patients. Comprehensive multimodal preoperative evaluation is a prerequisite for postoperative success. Reevaluation should be considered for patients with seizure recurrence, because reoperation could be especially beneficial for selected patients who have not responded to an initially limited resection., (Copyright © 2018 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2019
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44. Cerebral granulomatosis as a manifestation of Crohn's disease.
- Author
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Whittaker K, Guggenberger K, Venhoff N, Doostkam S, Schaefer HE, and Fritsch B
- Subjects
- Adrenal Cortex Hormones therapeutic use, Adult, Azathioprine therapeutic use, Brain Diseases pathology, Disease Progression, Female, Granuloma pathology, Humans, Immunosuppressive Agents therapeutic use, Methotrexate therapeutic use, Vasculitis, Central Nervous System complications, Brain Diseases etiology, Crohn Disease complications, Granuloma etiology
- Abstract
Background: Crohn's disease (CD) is associated with a variety of extra-intestinal manifestations. Most commonly these involve the eye, skin, joints, coagulation system and liver. Cerebral manifestations of CD have been reported to a far lesser extent. The extensive detrimental impact of neurological symptoms on a patient's quality of life makes an early diagnosis and treatment particularly important. In previous case-reports, diagnosis of cerebral manifestations in CD often relied upon magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) and computed tomography (CT) alone. To our knowledge, only one case-report has documented a histologically confirmed case of cerebral lesions associated with CD so far., Case Presentation: A 39-year-old right-handed woman with a history of CD was referred to our hospital with etiologically unexplained Gadolinium (Gd)-enhancing cortical lesions, triggering epileptic seizures. A CT-scan of the thorax and bronchoalveolar lavage found no signs of sarcoidosis. Lumbar punctures and laboratory testing found no underlying infection or coincidental autoimmune disorders and MRI-scans showed progression of lesion load. Consequently, the patient underwent stereotactic biopsy of a cortical lesion. Histological examination revealed a mixed lympho-histiocytic and tuberculoid granulomatous inflammation surrounding small vessels and no signs for infection. After exclusion of other granulomatous diseases and the typical histological findings we diagnosed a cerebral granulomatosis as a manifestation of CD. The patient was initially started on azathioprine, which had to be switched to corticosteroids and methotrexate because of an azathioprine related pancreatitis. The patient has not suffered any further epileptic seizures to date., Conclusion: Cerebral manifestation of CD is a possibly underreported entity that may respond well to immunosuppressive treatment. In contrast to earlier reports of cerebral manifestations in CD, our patient showed no coincident gastrointestinal symptoms indicating an activity of CD during the progression of cortical lesion load, suggesting that similar to other extra-intestinal manifestations in CD, the activity of gastrointestinal symptoms does not necessarily reflect the activity of CD associated cerebral vasculitis. Therefore, diagnosis and therapy of cerebral manifestation may be delayed when focusing on gastrointestinal symptoms alone.
- Published
- 2018
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45. CD59 deficiency presenting as polyneuropathy and Moyamoya syndrome with endothelial abnormalities of small brain vessels.
- Author
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Klemann C, Kirschner J, Ammann S, Urbach H, Moske-Eick O, Zieger B, Lorenz MR, Schwarz K, Doostkam S, Ehl S, and Korinthenberg R
- Subjects
- Anemia, Hemolytic genetics, CD59 Antigens deficiency, CD59 Antigens genetics, Child, Child, Preschool, Fatal Outcome, Female, Guillain-Barre Syndrome genetics, Hemoglobinuria genetics, Humans, Infant, Infant, Newborn, Male, Mutation, Turkey, Anemia, Hemolytic complications, Brain pathology, Hemoglobinuria complications, Moyamoya Disease genetics, Polyradiculoneuropathy, Chronic Inflammatory Demyelinating genetics, Stroke genetics
- Abstract
CD59 is involved in lymphocyte signal transduction and regulates complement-mediated cell lysis by inhibiting the membrane attack complex. In the cases reported so far, congenital isolated CD59 deficiency was associated with recurrent episodes of hemolytic anemia, peripheral neuropathy, and strokes. Here, we report on a patient from a consanguineous Turkish family, who had a first episode of hemolytic anemia at one month of age and presented at 14 months with acute Guillain-Barré syndrome (GBS). The child suffered repeated infection-triggered relapses leading to the diagnosis of chronic inflammatory demyelinating polyneuropathy (CIDP). Although partly steroid-responsive, the polyneuropathy failed to be stabilized by a number of immunosuppressive agents. At the age of 6 years, he developed acute hemiparesis and showed progressive stenosis of proximal cerebral arteries, evolving into Moyamoya syndrome (MMS) with recurrent infarctions leading to death at 8 years of age. Post-mortem genetic analysis revealed a pathogenic p.(Asp49Valfs*31) mutation in CD59. Re-analysis of brain biopsy specimens showed absent CD59 expression and severe endothelial damage. Whereas strokes are a known feature of CD59 deficiency, MMS has not previously been described in this condition. Therefore, we conclude that in MMS combined with hemolysis or neuropathy CD59 deficiency should be considered. Establishing the diagnosis and targeted therapy with eculizumab might have prevented the lethal course in our patient., (Copyright © 2018 European Paediatric Neurology Society. Published by Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2018
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46. Erratum: Sorafenib promotes graft-versus-leukemia activity in mice and humans through IL-15 production in FLT3-ITD-mutant leukemia cells.
- Author
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Mathew NR, Baumgartner F, Braun L, O'Sullivan D, Thomas S, Waterhouse M, Müller TA, Hanke K, Taromi S, Apostolova P, Illert AL, Melchinger W, Duquesne S, Schmitt-Graeff A, Osswald L, Yan KL, Weber A, Tugues S, Spath S, Pfeifer D, Follo M, Claus R, Lübbert M, Rummelt C, Bertz H, Wäsch R, Haag J, Schmidts A, Schultheiss M, Bettinger D, Thimme R, Ullrich E, Tanriver Y, Vuong GL, Arnold R, Hemmati P, Wolf D, Ditschkowski M, Jilg C, Wilhelm K, Leiber C, Gerull S, Halter J, Lengerke C, Pabst T, Schroeder T, Kobbe G, Rösler W, Doostkam S, Meckel S, Stabla K, Metzelder SK, Halbach S, Brummer T, Hu Z, Dengjel J, Hackanson B, Schmid C, Holtick U, Scheid C, Spyridonidis A, Stölzel F, Ordemann R, Müller LP, Sicre-de-Fontbrune F, Ihorst G, Kuball J, Ehlert JE, Feger D, Wagner EM, Cahn JY, Schnell J, Kuchenbauer F, Bunjes D, Chakraverty R, Richardson S, Gill S, Kröger N, Ayuk F, Vago L, Ciceri F, Müller AM, Kondo T, Teshima T, Klaeger S, Kuster B, Kim DDH, Weisdorf D, van der Velden W, Dörfel D, Bethge W, Hilgendorf I, Hochhaus A, Andrieux G, Börries M, Busch H, Magenau J, Reddy P, Labopin M, Antin JH, Henden AS, Hill GR, Kennedy GA, Bar M, Sarma A, McLornan D, Mufti G, Oran B, Rezvani K, Shah O, Negrin RS, Nagler A, Prinz M, Burchert A, Neubauer A, Beelen D, Mackensen A, von Bubnoff N, Herr W, Becher B, Socié G, Caligiuri MA, Ruggiero E, Bonini C, Häcker G, Duyster J, Finke J, Pearce E, Blazar BR, and Zeiser R
- Abstract
This corrects the article DOI: 10.1038/nm.4484.
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- 2018
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47. Histopathology of 3 Tesla MRI-negative extratemporal focal epilepsies.
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Kogias E, Altenmüller DM, Klingler JH, Schmeiser B, Urbach H, and Doostkam S
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Adult, Biopsy, Child, Female, Humans, Magnetic Resonance Imaging, Male, Malformations of Cortical Development pathology, Middle Aged, Retrospective Studies, Seizures etiology, Seizures pathology, Drug Resistant Epilepsy etiology, Drug Resistant Epilepsy pathology, Malformations of Cortical Development complications
- Abstract
Background: Information about the histopathology in 3 Tesla MRI negative extratemporal epilepsies is relatively limited. Most common histopathological findings in earlier (mixed 1.5 or 3 Tesla) MRI-negative series are focal cortical dysplasia (FCD), gliosis or normal findings. These series mostly use the older Palmini criteria for classification and grading. We focus on histopathology of only 3 Tesla MRI-negative extratemporal epilepsies according to the current ILAE criteria and investigate potential correlation to seizure outcome 1 year postoperatively., Materials and Methods: Sixteen substrates of 3 Tesla MRI-negative extratemporal epilepsies were examined in two steps. Standard stains and immunohistochemical reactions and Palmini criteria were used prospectively during the initial examination. Retrospectively, all specimens were re-examined and re-evaluated. Phospho-6 and calretinin stains and ILAE criteria were used during the review examination., Results: Initial examination revealed 5 FCDs Palmini 1b, two 1a, five 2a and 4 cases of gliosis. The review examination according to ILAE criteria revealed 6 FCDs type IIa, 2 FCDs Ib and 7 mild malformations of cortical development (mMCD) type II. None of our cases was labelled as isolated gliosis after the review examination. The incidence of FCD, after the review examination per ILAE criteria, was reduced to 56%; versus 75% per Palmini., Conclusions: In "true" 3 Tesla MRI-negative extratemporal epilepsies, incidence of FCD may be lower than in earlier MRI-negative series that included weaker MRI-field. Furthermore, consistent review examination may confirm the diagnosis of mMCD type II as substrate in cases diagnosed as "gliosis" or "normal" in the past., (Copyright © 2018 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.)
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- 2018
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48. Architectural B-cell organization in skeletal muscle identifies subtypes of dermatomyositis.
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Radke J, Koll R, Preuße C, Pehl D, Todorova K, Schönemann C, Allenbach Y, Aronica E, de Visser M, Heppner FL, Weis J, Doostkam S, Maisonobe T, Benveniste O, Goebel HH, and Stenzel W
- Abstract
Objective: To study the B-cell content, organization, and existence of distinct B-cell subpopulations in relation to the expression of type 1 interferon signature related genes in dermatomyositis (DM)., Methods: Evaluation of skeletal muscle biopsies from patients with adult DM (aDM) and juvenile DM (jDM) by histology, immunohistochemistry, electron microscopy, and quantitative reverse-transcription PCR., Results: We defined 3 aDM subgroups-classic (containing occasional B cells without clusters), B-cell-rich, and follicle-like aDM-further elucidating IM B-lymphocyte maturation and immunity. The quantity of B cells and formation of ectopic lymphoid structures in a subset of patients with aDM were associated with a specific profile of cytokines and chemokines involved in lymphoid neogenesis. Levels of type 1 interferon signature related gene expression paralleled B-cell content and architectural organization and link B-cell immunity to the interferon type I signature., Conclusion: These data corroborate the important role of B cells in DM, highlighting the direct link between humoral mechanisms as key players in B-cell immunity and the role of type I interferon-related immunity.
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- 2018
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49. Sorafenib promotes graft-versus-leukemia activity in mice and humans through IL-15 production in FLT3-ITD-mutant leukemia cells.
- Author
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Mathew NR, Baumgartner F, Braun L, O'Sullivan D, Thomas S, Waterhouse M, Müller TA, Hanke K, Taromi S, Apostolova P, Illert AL, Melchinger W, Duquesne S, Schmitt-Graeff A, Osswald L, Yan KL, Weber A, Tugues S, Spath S, Pfeifer D, Follo M, Claus R, Lübbert M, Rummelt C, Bertz H, Wäsch R, Haag J, Schmidts A, Schultheiss M, Bettinger D, Thimme R, Ullrich E, Tanriver Y, Vuong GL, Arnold R, Hemmati P, Wolf D, Ditschkowski M, Jilg C, Wilhelm K, Leiber C, Gerull S, Halter J, Lengerke C, Pabst T, Schroeder T, Kobbe G, Rösler W, Doostkam S, Meckel S, Stabla K, Metzelder SK, Halbach S, Brummer T, Hu Z, Dengjel J, Hackanson B, Schmid C, Holtick U, Scheid C, Spyridonidis A, Stölzel F, Ordemann R, Müller LP, Sicre-de-Fontbrune F, Ihorst G, Kuball J, Ehlert JE, Feger D, Wagner EM, Cahn JY, Schnell J, Kuchenbauer F, Bunjes D, Chakraverty R, Richardson S, Gill S, Kröger N, Ayuk F, Vago L, Ciceri F, Müller AM, Kondo T, Teshima T, Klaeger S, Kuster B, Kim DDH, Weisdorf D, van der Velden W, Dörfel D, Bethge W, Hilgendorf I, Hochhaus A, Andrieux G, Börries M, Busch H, Magenau J, Reddy P, Labopin M, Antin JH, Henden AS, Hill GR, Kennedy GA, Bar M, Sarma A, McLornan D, Mufti G, Oran B, Rezvani K, Shah O, Negrin RS, Nagler A, Prinz M, Burchert A, Neubauer A, Beelen D, Mackensen A, von Bubnoff N, Herr W, Becher B, Socié G, Caligiuri MA, Ruggiero E, Bonini C, Häcker G, Duyster J, Finke J, Pearce E, Blazar BR, and Zeiser R
- Subjects
- Animals, CD8-Positive T-Lymphocytes immunology, Cellular Reprogramming genetics, Gene Expression Regulation, Neoplastic drug effects, Graft vs Host Disease drug therapy, Graft vs Host Disease genetics, Graft vs Host Disease pathology, Hematopoietic Stem Cell Transplantation adverse effects, Humans, Leukemia, Myeloid, Acute genetics, Leukemia, Myeloid, Acute pathology, Mice, Sorafenib administration & dosage, Sorafenib adverse effects, Tandem Repeat Sequences genetics, Transplantation, Homologous adverse effects, Activating Transcription Factor 4 genetics, Interferon Regulatory Factor-7 genetics, Interleukin-15 genetics, Leukemia, Myeloid, Acute drug therapy, fms-Like Tyrosine Kinase 3 genetics
- Abstract
Individuals with acute myeloid leukemia (AML) harboring an internal tandem duplication (ITD) in the gene encoding Fms-related tyrosine kinase 3 (FLT3) who relapse after allogeneic hematopoietic cell transplantation (allo-HCT) have a 1-year survival rate below 20%. We observed that sorafenib, a multitargeted tyrosine kinase inhibitor, increased IL-15 production by FLT3-ITD
+ leukemia cells. This synergized with the allogeneic CD8+ T cell response, leading to long-term survival in six mouse models of FLT3-ITD+ AML. Sorafenib-related IL-15 production caused an increase in CD8+ CD107a+ IFN-γ+ T cells with features of longevity (high levels of Bcl-2 and reduced PD-1 levels), which eradicated leukemia in secondary recipients. Mechanistically, sorafenib reduced expression of the transcription factor ATF4, thereby blocking negative regulation of interferon regulatory factor 7 (IRF7) activation, which enhanced IL-15 transcription. Both IRF7 knockdown and ATF4 overexpression in leukemia cells antagonized sorafenib-induced IL-15 production in vitro. Human FLT3-ITD+ AML cells obtained from sorafenib responders following sorafenib therapy showed increased levels of IL-15, phosphorylated IRF7, and a transcriptionally active IRF7 chromatin state. The mitochondrial spare respiratory capacity and glycolytic capacity of CD8+ T cells increased upon sorafenib treatment in sorafenib responders but not in nonresponders. Our findings indicate that the synergism of T cells and sorafenib is mediated via reduced ATF4 expression, causing activation of the IRF7-IL-15 axis in leukemia cells and thereby leading to metabolic reprogramming of leukemia-reactive T cells in humans. Therefore, sorafenib treatment has the potential to contribute to an immune-mediated cure of FLT3-ITD-mutant AML relapse, an otherwise fatal complication after allo-HCT.- Published
- 2018
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50. The stereotactic suboccipitaltranscerebellar approach to lesions of the brainstem and the cerebellum.
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Nakagawa JM, Trippel M, Doostkam S, Mader I, Coenen VA, and Reinacher PC
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- Adolescent, Adult, Aged, Aged, 80 and over, Brain Stem diagnostic imaging, Cerebellum diagnostic imaging, Child, Child, Preschool, Female, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Occipital Lobe diagnostic imaging, Retrospective Studies, Young Adult, Brain Stem surgery, Cerebellum surgery, Imaging, Three-Dimensional methods, Occipital Lobe surgery, Stereotaxic Techniques
- Abstract
Objective: The stereotactic suboccipital-transcerebellar approach is widely regarded as technically demanding requiring substantial modifications of the standard stereotactic methods thus often making a transfrontal approach preferable. In this comprehensive series we aim to present our experience with the stereotactic suboccipital-transcerebellar approach to lesions of the brainstem or cerebellum using two standard stereotactic systems., Patients and Methods: In the period of 2000-2015 overall 80 patients (mean age 43.95 ± 23.76 years) with lesions of the brainstem or cerebellum underwent stereotactic surgery for diagnostic or therapeutic purposes via a suboccipital approach. In 59 patients stereotactic surgery was performed using the Riechert-Mundinger Stereotactic Frame, the Leksell Stereotactic Frame was used in 21 patients. For both frames standard systems were used without modification. Retrospective analysis of intraoperative stereotactic technique, achievement of the predefined surgical objectives and perioperative complications was carried out., Results: In this series, the stereotactic suboccipital-transcerebellar approach proved to be feasible with two standard stereotactic systems. Using either frame the predefined surgical objective was achieved in 90.0%. A verified neuropathological diagnosis was obtained in 89.6%. Minor transient perioperative complications occurred in 8.75%. There was no surgery-related permanent morbidity or mortality., Conclusion: In this comprehensive series the stereotactic suboccipital-transcerebellar approach using a standard stereotactic system proved to be a favorable stereotactic approach with a high diagnostic success rate and no surgery-related permanent morbidity., (Copyright © 2018 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.)
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- 2018
- Full Text
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