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Aim: The aim of this study was to measure cortico-cortical connectivity in multiple sclerosis (MS) patients by TMS-evoked potential (TEP) latencies in EEG evoked by transcranial magnetic stimulation (TMS) of the hand area of the primary motor cortex of one hemisphere. TEPs were recorded on the stimulated- and at the homologue site in the non-stimulated contralateral hemisphere. Both interhemispheric directions were tested. Interhemispheric latencies of the two main reproducible TEPs, the positive component at 60 ms and the negative component at 100 ms (P60 and N100, respectively), were expected to be significantly prolonged in MS-patients compared to healthy volunteers.
Material and methods: The study compared interhemispheric propagation of P60 and N100 in groups of 12 patients with early-stage relapsing-remitting MS (RRMS) and 16 age- and gender-matched healthy controls. The study was approved by the Ethics Committee of the Medical Faculty of the Goethe-University of Frankfurt/Main and conformed to the latest revision of the Declaration of Helsinki of 2008. TEPs were recorded by means of EEG and their latencies were statistically evaluated in 10 channels around the stimulation site and in 10 corresponding electrodes in the non-stimulated contralateral hemisphere. Interhemispheric conduction time was calculated by the difference of TEP latency in non-stimulated vs. stimulated hemisphere.
Results: An ANOVA on interhemispheric conduction time showed a significant prolongation for the N100 from left to right hemisphere in MS compared to controls, while no group differences were found for the P60 and the N100 from right to left hemisphere.
Conclusion: The results provide first evidence that the N100 may constitute an interesting marker to measure interhemispheric conduction delays in early-stage RRMS. The specificity of the present finding and its relation to fiber tract pathology should be examined in further correlative analyses with diffusion tensor imaging and other structural MRI data.
Slack (sequence like a Ca2+ -activated K + channel; also termed Slo2.2, Kcnt1, or KNa 1.1) is a Na+ -activated K + channel that is highly expressed in the peripheral and central nervous system. Previous studies have shown that Slack is enriched in the isolectin B4binding, non-peptidergic subpopulation of C-fiber sensory neurons and that Slack controls the sensory input in neuropathic pain. Recent single-cell RNA-sequencing studies suggested that Slack is highly co-expressed with transient receptor potential (TRP) ankyrin 1 (TRPA1) in sensory neurons. By using in situ hybridization and immunostaining we confirmed that Slack is highly co-localized with TRPA1 in sensory neurons, but only to a minor extent with TRP vanilloid 1. Mice lacking Slack globally or conditionally in sensory neurons (SNS-Slack─/─ ), but not mice lacking Slack conditionally in neurons of the spinal dorsal horn (Lbx1-Slack─/─ ), displayed increased pain behavior after intraplantar injection of the TRPA1 activator allyl isothiocyanate. Patch-clamp recordings with cultured primary neurons and in a HEK-293 cell line transfected with TRPA1 and Slack revealed that Slack-dependent K + currents are modulated in a TRPA1-dependent manner. Taken together, these findings highlight Slack as a modulator of TRPA1-mediated activation of sensory neurons.
Furthermore, we investigated the contribution of Slack in the spinal dorsal horn to pain processing. Lbx1-Slack ─/─ mice demonstrated normal basal pain sensitivity and Complete Freund’s Adjuvant-induced inflammatory pain. Interestingly, we observed a significantly increased spared nerve injury (SNI)-induced neuropathic pain hypersensitivity in Lbx1-Slack ─/─ mutants compared to control littermates. Moreover, we tested the effects of pharmacological Slack activation in the SNI model. Systemic and intrathecal, but not intraplantar administration of the Slack opener loxapine significantly alleviated SNI-induced hypersensitivity in control mice, but only slightly in Lbx1Slack ─/─ mice, further supporting the inhibitory function of Slack in spinal dorsal horn neurons in neuropathic pain processing.
Altogether, our data suggest that Slack in sensory neurons controls TRPA1-induced pain, whereas Slack in spinal dorsal horn neurons inhibits peripheral nerve injury induced neuropathic pain. These data provide further insights into the molecular mechanisms of pain sensation.
Background: In the Computer Tomography imaging, examinations for the diagnosis of lesions of the upper abdomen currently use water-soluble, iodinated, non-ionic contrast agents with low molecular weight. One possibility to reduce the time of the examination and X-ray exposure is to increase the injection rate. However, higher injections rates lead to increased hypersensitivity reactions and extravasation rates. Furthermore, cardiac pump function does not always allow for the transportation of such a large volume within one heartbeat. With a contrast agent of higher iodine concentration, the injection rate may be reduced without decreasing the iodine delivery rate while reducing the volume load of the heart.
Aim: to compare the performance and image quality of two injection protocols of contrast medium for multiphasic CT imaging of malignant hepatic lesions; one using Imeron 300 at an injection rate of 5 ml/ sec and the second using Imeron 400 at an injection rate of 3,7 ml/ sec, for multiphasic CT imaging of malignant hepatic lesions, in order to optimise the iodine concentration and injection rate of the contrast agent Imeron in the Multislice Spiral-CT of the upper abdomen.
Materials and methods: the current prospective, single centre, double-blinded, randomised and interindividual comparison study included 50 patients (29 males and 21 females) with a mean age of 63,3 years. Patients were randomised to one of the two injection protocols. Image evaluation included qualitative assessment (technical quality, presence of artefacts and overall contrast quality) and quantitative assessment (measuring the difference in HU between the lesion and the surrounding hepatic tissue). The difference between both protocols was tested for statistical significance using the Wilcoxon-Mann-Whitney test and the Two-Sample t-test.
Results: there was no statistically significant difference between both protocols regarding the technical quality of images, both in the AP (p = 0,46) and in the venous phase (p = 0,48). Additionally, no statistically significant difference was found regarding the presence of artefacts related to the contrast medium, both in the AP (p = 0,46) and in the venous phase (p = 0,46), as well as regarding the overall contrast quality of images both in the AP (p = 0,50) and in the venous phase (p = 0,48). Quantitative assessment showed no statistically significant difference regarding the difference in HU measurement between the hepatic lesion and the surrounding hepatic tissue, both in the AP (p = 0,36) and in the venous phase (p = 0,92).
Conclusion: in the multiphasic CT imaging of the liver, reducing the injection rate of the contrast medium Imeron from 5 ml/ sec to 3,7 ml/ sec while increasing the iodine strength of the agent from 300 to 400 mg/ml, respectively, and thus keeping the iodine injection flow rate constant, produces similar signal intensities and results in similar technical, image and overall contrast qualities..
Keywords: Contrast-medium, injection rate, iodine concentration, hepatic malignancy, multiphasic CT
Despite major improvements of the therapy, many B-cell Non-Hodgkin’s lymphoma (B-NHL) entities still have a poor prognosis. New therapeutic options are urgently needed. Therefore this study sets out to investigate oncogenic signalling pathways in the two B-NHL entities mantle cell lymphoma (MCL) and diffuse large B-cell lymphoma (DLBCL) in order to define new potential therapeutic targets.
MCL cells overexpress the anti-apoptotic protein BCL-2, thereby they evade apoptosis. With venetoclax, the first-in-class BCL-2 specific inhibitor was approved and achieved good response rates in MCL. However, some cases display intrinsic or acquired resistance to venetoclax. In order to improve the therapy, this study aimed to identify genes which confer sensitivity or resistance towards venetoclax upon their respective knockout. To this end, a genome-wide CRISPR/Cas9-based loss-of-function screen was conducted in the MCL cell line Maver-1. The E3 ubiquitin
ligase MARCH5 was identified as one of the top hits conferring sensitivity
towards venetoclax upon its knockout. This finding was validated in a competitive growth assay including two more MCL cell lines, Jeko-1 and Mino. MARCH5 knockout also sensitised Jeko-1 cells towards venetoclax even though this cell line was insensitive towards venetoclax in its wild-type form. Using BH3 profiling, an increased dependency on BCL-2 of MARCH5-depleted cells confirmed this finding. The sensitisation was found to be based on induction of apoptosis upon MARCH5 knockout and to an even higher extent upon additional treatment of MARCH5-depleted cells with venetoclax. As already described for epithelial cancer entities, the BCL-2 family members MCL-1 and NOXA were upregulated in MCL cell lines upon MARCH5 knockout. This led to the hypothesis that MARCH5 is a potential
regulator of intrinsic apoptosis with NOXA as a key component. A competitive growth assay with MARCH5 and NOXA co-depleted cells revealed a partial reversion of the BCL-2 sensitisation compared to MARCH5 knockout alone. Furthermore, mass spectrometry-based methods were used to gain more insight into other cellular pathways and networks which might be regulated in a MARCH5-dependent manner. In an interactome analysis, proteins which regulate mitochondrial morphology, such as Drp-1 were identified as MARCH5 interactors. Besides this expected finding, interaction between MARCH5 and several members of the BCL-2 family as well as a potential connection between MARCH5 and vesicular trafficking was discovered. As expected, an ubiquitinome analysis of MARCH5-depleted cells revealed decreased levels of MCL-1 and NOXA ubiquitination. Additionally, a potential role of MARCH5 in the ubiquitination of several members of the cell cycle regulatory
pathway was discovered. Based on the broad spectrum of cellular pathways which seem to be regulated in a MARCH5-dependent manner, it was hypothesised that MARCH5 primarily regulates BCL-2 family members which in turn regulate intrinsic apoptosis on the one hand and additionally are involved in the regulation of various other pathways on the other hand.
In summary, this study provides insight into a MARCH5-dependent MCL1-1/NOXA axis in MCL cells and potential implications into related cellular processes.
In addition to the anti-apoptotic pathways described above, B-cell receptor (BCR) signalling is known to provide a pro-survival signal to both normal and malignant B-cells. Targeting the BCR signalling pathway therefore is a promising therapeutic target for B-cell malignancies. In order to gain more insight into the differential modes of BCR signalling of ABC- and GCB-DLBCL cells, genes/proteins which displayed differential essentiality in ABC- and GCB-DLBCL cells were aimed to be defined. Consequently, data sets from a CRISPR/Cas9-based loss-of-function screen
were re-analysed. SASH3 was identified as a gene which was essential for GCB- but not for ABC-DLBCL cells. Since this protein is known to be involved in T-cell receptor (TCR)-signalling, SASH3 was assumed to play a potential role in BCR signalling as well and was therefore investigated in more detail. A competitive growth assay confirmed that SASH3 knockout was toxic exclusively for GCB-DLBCL cell lines. An interactome analysis in ABC- and GCB-DLBCL cells revealed interaction between SASH3 and many components of the proximal BCR signalling pathway as well as several downstream signalling pathways such as the PI3K or the NF-ΚB pathway.
An integration of the interactome with data from the CRISPR/Cas9-based loss-offunction screen revealed differential essentiality of the SASH3-interacting proteins in ABC- and GCB-DLBCL cells. It was hypothesised that SASH3 might regulate PI3K signalling on which GCB- but not ABC-DLBCL cells are known to dependent. Discontinuation of the regulation of PI3K signalling could therefore be exclusively toxic to GCB-DLBCL cells.
Taken together, this study describes a subtype-specific dependency of GCB-DLBCL cells on SASH3. Furthermore, the SASH3 interactome has been investigated in B-cells for the first time, thereby highlighting a potential role in proximal BCR signalling and involvement in specific BCR-related downstream signalling pathways.
Glioblastoma multiforme accounts for more than 80% of all malignant gliomas in adults and a minor fraction of new annual cases occurs in children. In the last decades, research shed light onto the molecular patterns underlying human malignancies which resulted in a better understanding of the disease and finally an improved long term survival for cancer patients. However, malignancies of the central nervous system and especially glioblastomas are still related to poor outcomes with median survivals of less than 6 months despite extensive surgery, chemotherapy and radiation. Hence, a better understanding of the molecular mechanism driving and sustaining cancerous mutations in glioblastomas is crucial for the development of targeted therapies. Apoptosis, a form of programmed cell death, is an important feature of eukaryotic cells and crucial for the maintenance of multicellular homeostasis. Because apoptosis is a highly complex and tightly regulated signaling pathway, resisting apoptotic stimuli and avoiding cell death is a hallmark of the cancerous transformation of cells. Hence, targeting molecular structures to reestablish apoptotic signaling in tumor cells is a promising approach for the treatment of malignancies. Smac mimetics are a group of small molecular protein inhibitors that structurally derive from an intracellular protein termed Smac and selectively block Inhibitor of apoptosis (IAP) proteins, which are often aberrantly expressed in cancer. Several studies confirmed the antitumoral effects of Smac mimetics in different human malignancies, including glioblastoma, and give rationales for the development of potent Smac mimetics and Smac mimetic-based combination protocols. This study investigates the antitumoral activity of the bivalent Smac mimetic BV6 in combination with Interferon α. Latter is a well characterized cytokine with an essential role in immunity, cell differentiation and apoptosis. This study further aims to address the molecular mechanisms underlying the antitumoral activity of the combination treatment by using well established molecular cell death assays, flow cytometry, western blot analysis, genetic approaches and selective pharmacological inhibition. Since different Smac mimetics and Smac mimetic-based combination therapies are currently under clinical evaluations, findings of this study may have broad implications for the application of Smac mimetics as clinical cancer therapeutics.
IL-38 is the latest discovered cytokine of the IL-1 family and has been added to the IL-36 subfamily. Since its discovery in 2001, increasing evidence suggests predominantly anti-inflammatory properties of IL-38, which are most likely exerted through three potential receptors, the IL-1 Receptor 1 (IL-1R1), IL-36 Receptor (IL-36R) and the IL-1 Receptor Accessory Protein Like 1 (IL-1RAPL1). However, to this date detailed knowledge of IL-38 functioning remains to be examined. Importantly, how IL-38 is processed, secreted from cells and the exact mechanisms of target receptor binding and intracellular signaling are not fully understood. Further, IL-38 has been associated with regulatory functions in autoimmune diseases like systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE) and psoriasis. At the same time however, connections between B cells as indispensable part of immunity and IL-38 remain rare.
In this study we examined the influence of IL-38 in peripheral human blood B cells differentiating into antibody secreting cells using a three-step in vitro differentiation process. We first show that all potential IL-38 binding receptors are present on peripheral blood B cells on a gene expression level and remain detectable throughout B cell differentiation. Next, while B cells treated with exogenous IL-38 depict no differences in early B cell activation markers, the process of B cell differentiation revealed significant alterations in B cell phenotype created by IL-38 treatment. Predominantly on day 7 of the differentiation process, IL-38 treated B cells showed significantly reduced CD38 expression which depicts an important step in development towards plasma cells. We hypothesize that IL-38 acts antagonistically on the IL-1R1 pathway reducing Nuclear factor kappa B (NFκB) expression and consequently decreasing CD38 expression. Further IL-38 reduced early antibody production while increasing IgM secretion at the end stages of differentiation. Next, we repeated the differentiation assays under the influence of additional IL-21 stimulation to further enhance plasma cell development. In these experiments, the impact of IL-38 on B cell differentiation and immunoglobulin production were reduced, indicating a comparatively moderate relevance of IL-38 for B cell differentiation. We then examined how proliferation and cell death were impacted by exogenous IL-38 during B cell differentiation. IL-38 treatment alone significantly reduced B cell survival which was further augmented by IL-21 stimulation. We conclude that IL-38 and IL-21 act synergistically in promoting B cell apoptosis, also depicting an anti-inflammatory property of IL-38. Finally, using a siRNA we successfully performed an IL-38 knockdown experiment of human blood B cells reducing IL-38 expression to 44% measured on day 4 of B cell differentiation. In these experiments we observed reversed tendencies of CD38 expression compared to exogenous IL-38 treatment. Here, IL-38 knockdown cells showed increased CD38 expression indicating endogenous regulatory properties of IL-38 in B cell differentiation.
Our project, for the first time proves direct effects of IL-38 on human B cells. The results support previous research of IL-38 to act anti-inflammatory as it seems to modulate B cell differentiation, survival, and immunoglobulin production in a down-regulatory manner. These findings pave way for more detailed research on the connection between B cell homoeostasis and IL-38 function.
Many countries have restricted public life during the SARS-CoV2 pandemic. As related measures limited the access to sports facilities, this dissertation aimed (1) to examine changes in physical activity (PA) and well-being in affected countries, and (2) to determine the effectiveness of a digital home exercise program in this context.
Part 1 (PA/well-being) of the dissertation was a digital survey administered in 14 countries. Participants reported a 41 - 42% reduction of PA (NPAQ-SF) during restrictions (n=13,503 valid responses). Compliance with international PA guidelines decreased by nearly 19%. Mental well-being declined substantially (n=14,975 responses; 68.1 to 51.9 points on the WHO5 index) and the proportion of individuals at risk of depression tripled (14.2% to 45.2%). Physical well-being (SF-36 Pain) decreased slightly (85.8% to 81.3%). About two thirds (68.1%) of the respondents reported being interested in digital home exercise.
For Part 2 (digital home exercise) of the dissertation, an international multicenter randomized, controlled trial was performed allocating healthy adults (n=763; 33±12 years) to an intervention (IG) or control (CG) group. In contrast to the CG, the IG was offered live-streamed home exercise for four weeks. Subsequently, both groups had access to pre-recorded workouts for another four weeks. Outcomes were measured weekly using validated questionnaires. Mixed-models data analyses revealed an up to 1.65-fold (95% CI: 1.4-1.94; week 1) increase of PA relative to the CG. Moreover, small improvements in exercise motivation (SKK scale), psychological well-being (WHO-5 index), sleep quality (MOS Sleep Scale), and anxiety symptoms (GAD-7 Scale) were observed for IG.
The results of this dissertation suggest that public life restrictions associated with the pandemic had significant adverse effects on movement behavior and well-being. Digital home exercise can help to maintain and/or increase health- beneficial PA and well-being and may hence represent a supportive element of viral containment efforts.
Background and Aim: Genome-wide association studies revealed a strong association between cardiovascular diseases (CVD) and clonal hematopoiesis of indeterminate potential (CHIP), highlighting one of its most common CHIP-driving mutations-TET2 (ten-eleven translocation 2), as a target for CHIP related CVD research. Our lab has established the generation of self-organizing cardiac organoids (SCO), which demonstrate the cellular composition and organization of the native human heart, and mimics human myocardial responses to stress stimulation. This project aims to examine whether SCOs would be an appropriate CHIP model and decipher promising drugs for cardiovascular CHIP treatment.
Methods: To study TET2-mutant cardiovascular CHIP, we set up the TET2 cardiac-CHIP model through a knockdown (KD) of TET2 in myeloid cells that infiltrated our lab-made SCO. Immunofluorescence and qPCR were performed to ascertain TET2-KD myeloid cell infiltration, SCO fibrosis, and apoptosis assessments. SCO fibrosis was further analyzed by immunofluorescence staining, and cardiac contractile frequency and amplitude were determined by calcium flux analysis. Finally, RNAseq was performed to analyze transcriptomic changes in drug/vehicle-treated TET2-KD myeloid cells and the TET2 cardiac-CHIP model.
Results: The TET2 cardiac-CHIP model resulted in significantly increased inflammation in SCO, accompanied by fibrosis and more cleaved Caspase-3, causing cardiomyocytes apoptosis and promoting the release of cTNT. The shortlisted drugs revealed a reduction of proliferation in TET2-KD myeloid cells, decreased pro-inflammatory cytokines, and a higher apoptosis level. Furthermore, the TET2 cardiac-CHIP model treated with selected drugs showed a remarkable decline in TET2-KD myeloid cell infiltration and pro-inflammation cytokines, cardiomyocyte apoptosis, fibrosis, and lowered cTNT levels, while drug control groups were not affected. Moreover, the drug treatment groups improved the heartbeat frequency and amplitude accessed by the calcium transient assay. RNAseq data also validated the above findings.
Conclusions & Discussion: Our results indicate that SCOs are an efficient pre-clinical model for studying and validating CHIP genes and drug interactions. Our data revealed that TET2-KD myeloid cells invade SCO and secrete pro-inflammatory cytokines, which promote apoptosis of cardiomyocytes and the release of cTNT. In this regard, our TET2 cardiac-CHIP model matches the inflammatory phenotype previously characterized in CHIP patients. Nevertheless, this phenotype could be rescued using positive drug candidates (Clopidogrel, R406, and Lanatoside C) selected by this project, emphasizing the significant value of our TET2 cardiac-CHIP model for drug screens and pre-clinical validation studies. Furthermore, among these three drug candidates, we found Lancatoside C, as proved by FDA/EMA, showed an unmet possibility for clinical therapeutic demand, insinuating potential benefit in repurposing Lanatoside C for the treatment of TET2-mutant cardiovascular CHIP.
Cancer is the major cause of death besides cardiovascular disease. Leukaemia represents the most prevalent malignancy in children with a frequency of 30 % and is one of the ten leading types of cancer in adults. Philadelphia Chromosome-positive B-ALL (Ph+ B-ALL) is driven by the cytogenetic aberration of the reciprocal chromosomal translocation t(9;22)(q34;q11) leading to the formation of the Philadelphia chromosome with a BCR-ABL1 fusion gene. This fusion gene encodes a BCR-ABL1 oncoprotein which is characterized by a constitutively enhanced tyrosine kinase activity promoting amplified proliferation, differentiation arrest and resistance to cell death. Ph+ B-ALL is considered the most aggressive ALL subtype with a long-term survival rate in the range of only 30 % despite intensive standard of care including chemotherapy in combination with a tyrosine kinase inhibitor (TKI) followed by allogeneic stem cell transplantation after remission for clinically fit patients.
The efficacy of chemotherapy has long been mainly attributed to tumour cell toxicity while immune modulating effects have been overlooked, especially in light of known immunosuppressive properties. Accumulative evidence, however, emphasizes the ability of chemotherapeutic agents, including TKIs, to normalise or re-educate a dysfunctional tumour microenvironment (TME) resulting in enhanced anti-tumour immunity. One of the underlying mechanisms of immune modulation is the induction of immunogenic cell death (ICD). ICD is an anti-tumour agent-induced cell death modality determined by the capacity to convert cancer cells into anti-cancer vaccines. The induction of ICD relies on the release of damage-associated molecular patterns (DAMPs) from dying tumour cells succumbing to ICD. Translocation of CALR to the cell surface, extracellular secretion of ATP and release of HMGB1 from the nucleus are key hallmarks of ICD that mediate anti-tumour immunity upon binding to antigen presenting cells resulting in a tumour antigen-specific immune response. Besides these molecular determinants, ICD is functionally defined by the inhibition of tumour growth in a vaccination assay in which mice are injected with tumour cells exposed to the potential ICD inducer in-vitro and then re-challenged with live tumour cells of the same cancer type. Both molecular and functional criteria determine the gold standard approach to assess ICD. By increasing the immunogenicity of cancer cells, ICD contributes to the restoration of immunosurveillance as an essential feature of tumour rejection, which is clinically reflected by improved therapeutic efficacy and disease outcome in patients. Therefore, identifying novel ICD inducers is an objective of interest in the context of cancer therapy.
In respect of these considerations, the aim addressed in the present work is the examination of the second-generation TKI Nilotinib for the ability to induce ICD. The thesis is set in the context of the group's research on the role of Gas6/TAM signalling within the TME regarding the pathogenesis of acute leukaemia. In in-vivo experiments of our research group it has been consistently observed that the use of Nilotinib enhances the anti-leukaemic immunity mediated by a deletion of Gas6. Against the background of increasing importance of chemotherapeutic agents as potent modulators of a dysregulated TME, it was hypothesized that Nilotinib may synergize with a Gas6-deficient environment by inducing ICD in Ph+ B-ALL cells.
In growth inhibition and Annexin V/Propidium iodide cell death assays Nilotinib was shown to induce cell death in concentration-dependent manner that occurs bimodally in terms of cell death modality ranging between apoptosis and necrosis. By ICD marker analysis, comprising flow-cytometric detection of CALR exposure, chemoluminescence-based ATP measurement and immunoblotting for HMGB1, it was found that Nilotinib-induced cell death is not accompanied by CALR exposure and ATP secretion, but is associated with the release of HMGB1. In macrophages co-culture experiments with Nilotinib-treated leukaemic cells, no relevant shift in terms of macrophages activation and polarisation was observed in either a juxtacrine or paracrine setup. In consistency with the results obtained in the in-vitro experiments, Nilotinib was not potent to elicit a protective immune response in mice within a vaccination assay.
Conclusively, Nilotinib was identified to not qualify as bona fide ICD inducer. The role of Nilotinib-induced cell death and HMGB1 release are proposed as objective for further investigation concerning the synergistic interplay between Nilotinib and a Gas6-deficient environment. Efforts addressing exploration and optimisation of the immunological potential of chemotherapeutic agents are a promising approach aimed at providing cancer patients with the best possible treatment in future.
Background: Previous studies have demonstrated that CF (Cystic Fibrosis) prognosis is dependent of three major parameters: FEV1 (Forced Expiratory Pressure in one second), BMI (Body Mass Index) and need of intravenous antibiotic therapy. The CF centres of Frankfurt, Germany, and Moscow, Russia, care for cystic fibrosis patients. We decided to investigate and compare both centers from 1990 to 2015. No comparable study has been published so far.
Method: German patient data was collected from the national cystic fibrosis database “Muko.web”. Missing values were extracted from the Hospital Information System. Russian patient data were taken directly from the medical records in Moscow. In a descriptive statistical analysis with Bias and R Studio the values were compared.
Result: A total of 428 patients from Moscow (217 male, 211 female; 348 (81,3%) were P. aeruginosa positive) and 159 patients from Frankfurt (92 male, 67 female; 137 (86,2%) with P. aeruginosa positive) were compared with regard to P. aeruginosa positivity, BMI, FEV1 and need of intravenous antibiotic therapy. CF patients in Moscow stratified by age groups had lower BMI than CF patients in Frankfurt (age 16-18: p=0,003; age 19-22: p=0,004; age 23-29: p<0,001; age 30-35: p<0,001; age 36-66: p=0,024). In a matching pairs analysis including 100 patients from Frankfurt and 100 patients from Moscow for the year 2015 FEV1 was significantly lower in Moscow patients (p<0,001).
Conclusion: BMI, FEV1 and need of intravenous therapy have significant impact on survival and on quality of life of CF patients. A lower BMI and a lower FEV1 result in a worse survival and determine the prognosis. This study showed a significant difference in prognostic parameters between Frankfurt and Moscow in the crosssectional analysis for the year 2015. A further study should evaluate this difference to show whether this difference will be found over a longer period of time.