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  • Brandts, Christian Hubertus (18)
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  • Finkelmeier, Fabian (4)
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  • Acute myeloid leukemia (3)
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Diagnostic and clinical relevance of the autophago-lysosomal network in human gliomas (2016)
Jennewein, Lukas ; Ronellenfitsch, Michael Wilfried ; Antonietti, Patrick ; Ilina, Elena ; Jung, Jennifer ; Stadel, Daniela ; Flohr, Lisa-Marie ; Zinke, Jenny ; Renesse, Janusz von ; Drott, Ulrich ; Baumgarten, Peter ; Braczynski, Anne Kristin ; Penski, Cornelia ; Burger, Michael Christian ; Theurillat, Jean-Philippe ; Steinbach, Joachim Peter ; Plate, Karl H. ; Đikić, Ivan ; Fulda, Simone ; Brandts, Christian Hubertus ; Kögel, Donat ; Behrends, Christian ; Harter, Patrick Nikolaus ; Mittelbronn, Michel Guy André
Recently, the conserved intracellular digestion mechanism ‘autophagy’ has been considered to be involved in early tumorigenesis and its blockade proposed as an alternative treatment approach. However, there is an ongoing debate about whether blocking autophagy has positive or negative effects in tumor cells. Since there is only poor data about the clinico-pathological relevance of autophagy in gliomas in vivo, we first established a cell culture based platform for the in vivo detection of the autophago-lysosomal components. We then investigated key autophagosomal (LC3B, p62, BAG3, Beclin1) and lysosomal (CTSB, LAMP2) molecules in 350 gliomas using immunohistochemistry, immunofluorescence, immunoblotting and qPCR. Autophagy was induced pharmacologically or by altering oxygen and nutrient levels. Our results show that autophagy is enhanced in astrocytomas as compared to normal CNS tissue, but largely independent from the WHO grade and patient survival. A strong upregulation of LC3B, p62, LAMP2 and CTSB was detected in perinecrotic areas in glioblastomas suggesting micro-environmental changes as a driver of autophagy induction in gliomas. Furthermore, glucose restriction induced autophagy in a concentration-dependent manner while hypoxia or amino acid starvation had considerably lesser effects. Apoptosis and autophagy were separately induced in glioma cells both in vitro and in vivo. In conclusion, our findings indicate that autophagy in gliomas is rather driven by micro-environmental changes than by primary glioma-intrinsic features thus challenging the concept of exploitation of the autophago-lysosomal network (ALN) as a treatment approach in gliomas.
Dabrafenib in patients with recurrent, BRAF V600E mutated malignant glioma and leptomeningeal disease (2017)
Burger, Michael Christian ; Ronellenfitsch, Michael Wilfried ; Lorenz, Nadja Irene ; Wagner, Marlies ; Voss, Martin ; Capper, David ; Tzaridis, Theophilos ; Herrlinger, Ulrich ; Steinbach, Joachim Peter ; Stoffels, Gabriele ; Langen, Karl-Josef ; Brandts, Christian Hubertus ; Senft, Christian Alexander ; Harter, Patrick Nikolaus ; Bähr, Oliver
BRAF V600E mutations occur frequently in malignant melanoma, but are rare in most malignant glioma subtypes. Besides, more benign brain tumors such as ganglioglioma, dysembryoblastic neuroepithelial tumours and supratentorial pilocytic astrocytomas, only pleomorphic xanthoastrocytomas (50-78%) and epitheloid glioblastoma (50%) regularly exhibit BRAF mutations. In the present study, we report on three patients with recurrent malignant gliomas harbouring a BRAF V600E mutation. All patients presented with markedly disseminated leptomeningeal disease at recurrence and had progressed after radiotherapy and alkylating chemotherapy. Therefore, estimated life expectancy at recurrence was a few weeks. All three patients received dabrafenib as a single agent and all showed a complete or nearly complete response. Treatment is ongoing and patients are stable for 27 months, 7 months and 3 months, respectively. One patient showed a dramatic radiologic and clinical response after one week of treatment. We were able to generate an ex vivo tumor cell culture from CSF in one patient. Treatment of this cell culture with dabrafenib resulted in reduced cell density and inhibition of ERK phosphorylation in vitro. To date, this is the first series on adult patients with BRAF-mutated malignant glioma and leptomeningeal dissemination treated with dabrafenib monotherapy. All patients showed a dramatic response with one patient showing an ongoing response for more than two years.
Feasibility of azacitidine added to standard chemotherapy in older patients with acute myeloid leukemia - a randomised SAL pilot study (2012)
Krug, Utz ; Koschmieder, Anja ; Schwammbach, Daniela ; Gerss, Joachim ; Tidow, Nicola ; Steffen, Björn ; Bug, Gesine ; Brandts, Christian Hubertus ; Schaich, Markus ; Röllig, Christoph ; Thiede, Christian ; Noppeney, Richard ; Stelljes, Matthias ; Büchner, Thomas ; Koschmieder, Steffen ; Dührsen, Ulrich ; Serve, Hubert ; Ehninger, Gerhard ; Berdel, Wolfgang E. ; Müller-Tidow, Carsten
INTRODUCTION: Older patients with acute myeloid leukemia (AML) experience short survival despite intensive chemotherapy. Azacitidine has promising activity in patients with low proliferating AML. The aim of this dose-finding part of this trial was to evaluate feasibility and safety of azacitidine combined with a cytarabine- and daunorubicin-based chemotherapy in older patients with AML. TRIAL DESIGN: Prospective, randomised, open, phase II trial with parallel group design and fixed sample size. PATIENTS AND METHODS: Patients aged 61 years or older, with untreated acute myeloid leukemia with a leukocyte count of <20,000/µl at the time of study entry and adequate organ function were eligible. Patients were randomised to receive azacitidine either 37.5 (dose level 1) or 75 mg/sqm (dose level 2) for five days before each cycle of induction (7+3 cytarabine plus daunorubicine) and consolidation (intermediate-dose cytarabine) therapy. Dose-limiting toxicity was the primary endpoint. RESULTS: Six patients each were randomised into each dose level and evaluable for analysis. No dose-limiting toxicity occurred in either dose level. Nine serious adverse events occurred in five patients (three in the 37.5 mg, two in the 75 mg arm) with two fatal outcomes. Two patients at the 37.5 mg/sqm dose level and four patients at the 75 mg/sqm level achieved a complete remission after induction therapy. Median overall survival was 266 days and median event-free survival 215 days after a median follow up of 616 days. CONCLUSIONS: The combination of azacitidine 75 mg/sqm with standard induction therapy is feasible in older patients with AML and was selected as an investigational arm in the randomised controlled part of this phase-II study, which is currently halted due to an increased cardiac toxicity observed in the experimental arm.
Hemolysis is associated with low reticulocyte production index and predicts blood transfusion in severe malarial anemia (2010)
Fendel, Rolf ; Brandts, Christian Hubertus ; Rudat, Annika ; Kreidenweiss, Andrea ; Steur, Claudia ; Appelmann, Iris ; Ruehe, Bettina ; Schröder, Paul ; Berdel, Wolfgang E. ; Kremsner, Peter G. ; Mordmüller, Benjamin
Background: Falciparum Malaria, an infectious disease caused by the apicomplexan parasite Plasmodium falciparum, is among the leading causes of death and morbidity attributable to infectious diseases worldwide. In Gabon, Central Africa, one out of four inpatients have severe malarial anemia (SMA), a life-threatening complication if left untreated. Emerging drug resistant parasites might aggravate the situation. This case control study investigates biomarkers of enhanced hemolysis in hospitalized children with either SMA or mild malaria (MM). Methods and Findings: Ninety-one children were included, thereof 39 SMA patients. Strict inclusion criteria were chosen to exclude other causes of anemia. At diagnosis, erythrophagocytosis (a direct marker for extravascular hemolysis, EVH) was enhanced in SMA compared to MM patients (5.0 arbitrary units (AU) (interquartile range (IR): 2.2–9.6) vs. 2.1 AU (IR: 1.3–3.9), p<0.01). Furthermore, indirect markers for EVH, (i.e. serum neopterin levels, spleen size enlargement and monocyte pigment) were significantly increased in SMA patients. Markers for erythrocyte ageing, such as CD35 (complement receptor 1), CD55 (decay acceleration factor) and phosphatidylserine exposure (annexin-V-binding) were investigated by flow cytometry. In SMA patients, levels of CD35 and CD55 on the red blood cell surface were decreased and erythrocyte removal markers were increased when compared to MM or reconvalescent patients. Additionally, intravascular hemolysis (IVH) was quantified using several indirect markers (LDH, alpha-HBDH, haptoglobin and hemopexin), which all showed elevated IVH in SMA. The presence of both IVH and EVH predicted the need for blood transfusion during antimalarial treatment (odds ratio 61.5, 95% confidence interval (CI): 8.9–427). Interestingly, this subpopulation is characterized by a significantly lowered reticulocyte production index (RPI, p<0.05). Conclusions: Our results show the multifactorial pathophysiology of SMA, whereby EVH and IVH play a particularly important role. We propose a model where removal of infected and non-infected erythrocytes of all ages (including reticulocytes) by EVH and IVH is a main mechanism of SMA. Further studies are underway to investigate the mechanism and extent of reticulocyte removal to identify possible interventions to reduce the risk of SMA development.
Functional dominance of CHIP-mutated hematopoietic stem cells in patients undergoing autologous transplantation (2019)
Ortmann, Christina Ann ; Dorsheimer, Lena ; Abou-El-Ardat, Khalil ; Hoffrichter, Jennifer ; Aßmus, Birgit ; Bönig, Halvard-Björn ; Scholz, Anica ; Pfeifer, Heike ; Martin, Hans ; Schmid, Tobias ; Brüne, Bernhard ; Scheich, Sebastian ; Steffen, Björn ; Riemann, Julia ; Hermann, Stella ; Dukat, Alexandra ; Bug, Gesine ; Brandts, Christian Hubertus ; Wagner, Sebastian Alexander ; Serve, Hubert ; Rieger, Michael A.
Clonal hematopoiesis of indeterminate potential (CHIP) is caused by recurrent somatic mutations leading to clonal blood cell expansion. However, direct evidence of the fitness of CHIP-mutated human hematopoietic stem cells (HSCs) in blood reconstitution is lacking. Because myeloablative treatment and transplantation enforce stress on HSCs, we followed 81 patients with solid tumors or lymphoid diseases undergoing autologous stem cell transplantation (ASCT) for the development of CHIP. We found a high incidence of CHIP (22%) after ASCT with a high mean variant allele frequency (VAF) of 10.7%. Most mutations were already present in the graft, albeit at lower VAFs, demonstrating a selective reconstitution advantage of mutated HSCs after ASCT. However, patients with CHIP mutations in DNA-damage response genes showed delayed neutrophil reconstitution. Thus, CHIP-mutated stem and progenitor cells largely gain on clone size upon ASCT-related blood reconstitution, leading to an increased future risk of CHIP-associated complications.
Patterns of care, toxicity and outcome in the treatment of salivary gland carcinomas: long-term experience from a tertiary cancer center (2021)
Müller-von der Grün, Jens ; Winkelmann, Anne Ria ; Rödel, Franz ; Balster, Sven ; Neumayer, Thomas Peter Michael ; Ghanaati, Shahram ; Brandts, Christian Hubertus ; Burck, Iris ; Martin, Daniel ; Rödel, Claus ; Kesar, Nikolina ; Balermpas, Panagiotis
Background; Salivary gland carcinomas (SGC) cover a heterogeneous group of malignancies with a lack of data of high-level evidence. Methods; Clinical data of 127 patients treated for SGC at a university cancer center between 2002 and 2017 were analyzed retrospectively. The association of clinicopathological characteristics, treatment modalities, adverse events, and outcome was assessed. Results: Patients received surgery (n = 65), surgery followed by (chemo-)radiotherapy (n = 56), or primary (chemo-)radiotherapy (n = 6). Injury to the cranial nerves or their branches was the most frequent surgical complication affecting 40 patients (33.1%). Ten year overall and progression-free survival rates were 73.2% and 65.4%, respectively. Parotid tumor site, advanced tumor, and positive nodal stage remained independent negative prognostic factors for overall survival, loco-regional and distant tumor control in multivariate analysis. Conclusions: Optimizing treatment strategies for SGC, depending on distinct clinicopathological factors, remains challenging due to the low incidence rates of the disease.
Defective homologous recombination DNA repair as therapeutic target in advanced chordoma (2019)
Gröschel, Stefan ; Hübschmann, Daniel ; Raimondi, Francesco ; Horak, Peter ; Warsow, Gregor ; Fröhlich, Martina ; Klink, Barbara ; Gieldon, Laura ; Hutter, Barbara ; Kleinheinz, Kortine ; Bonekamp, David ; Marschal, Oliver ; Chudasama, Priya ; Mika, Jagoda ; Groth, Marie ; Uhrig, Sebastian ; Krämer, Stephen ; Heining, Christoph ; Heilig, Christoph E. ; Richter, Daniela ; Reisinger, Eva ; Pfütze, Katrin ; Eils, Roland ; Wolf, Stephan ; Kalle, Christof von ; Brandts, Christian Hubertus ; Scholl, Claudia ; Weichert, Wilko ; Richter, Stephan ; Bauer, Sebastian ; Penzel, Roland ; Schröck, Evelin ; Stenzinger, Albrecht ; Schlenk, Richard Friedrich ; Brors, Benedikt ; Russell, Robert B. ; Glimm, Hanno ; Schlesner, Matthias ; Fröhling, Stefan
Chordomas are rare bone tumors with few therapeutic options. Here we show, using whole-exome and genome sequencing within a precision oncology program, that advanced chordomas (n = 11) may be characterized by genomic patterns indicative of defective homologous recombination (HR) DNA repair and alterations affecting HR-related genes, including, for example, deletions and pathogenic germline variants of BRCA2, NBN, and CHEK2. A mutational signature associated with HR deficiency was significantly enriched in 72.7% of samples and co-occurred with genomic instability. The poly(ADP-ribose) polymerase (PARP) inhibitor olaparib, which is preferentially toxic to HR-incompetent cells, led to prolonged clinical benefit in a patient with refractory chordoma, and whole-genome analysis at progression revealed a PARP1 p.T910A mutation predicted to disrupt the autoinhibitory PARP1 helical domain. These findings uncover a therapeutic opportunity in chordoma that warrants further exploration, and provide insight into the mechanisms underlying PARP inhibitor resistance.
FLT3 mutations in Early T-Cell Precursor ALL characterize a stem cell like leukemia and imply the clinical use of tyrosine kinase inhibitors (2013)
Neumann, Martin ; Coskun, Ebru ; Fransecky, Lars ; Mochmann, Liliana H. ; Bartram, Isabelle ; Sartangi, Nasrin Farhadi ; Heesch, Sandra ; Gökbuget, Nicola ; Schwartz, Stefan ; Brandts, Christian Hubertus ; Schlee, Cornelia ; Haas, Rainer ; Dührsen, Ulrich ; Griesshammer, Martin ; Döhner, Hartmut ; Ehninger, Gerhard ; Burmeister, Thomas ; Blau, Olga ; Thiel, Eckhard ; Hoelzer, Dieter ; Hofmann, Wolf-Karsten ; Baldus, Claudia D.
Early T-cell precursor acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ETP-ALL) has been identified as high-risk subgroup of acute T-lymphoblastic leukemia (T-ALL) with a high rate of FLT3-mutations in adults. To unravel the underlying pathomechanisms and the clinical course we assessed molecular alterations and clinical characteristics in a large cohort of ETP-ALL (n = 68) in comparison to non-ETP T-ALL adult patients. Interestingly, we found a high rate of FLT3-mutations in ETP-ALL samples (n = 24, 35%). Furthermore, FLT3 mutated ETP-ALL was characterized by a specific immunophenotype (CD2+/CD5-/CD13+/CD33-), a distinct gene expression pattern (aberrant expression of IGFBP7, WT1, GATA3) and mutational status (absence of NOTCH1 mutations and a low frequency, 21%, of clonal TCR rearrangements). The observed low GATA3 expression and high WT1 expression in combination with lack of NOTCH1 mutations and a low rate of TCR rearrangements point to a leukemic transformation at the pluripotent prothymocyte stage in FLT3 mutated ETP-ALL. The clinical outcome in ETP-ALL patients was poor, but encouraging in those patients with allogeneic stem cell transplantation (3-year OS: 74%). To further explore the efficacy of targeted therapies, we demonstrate that T-ALL cell lines transfected with FLT3 expression constructs were particularly sensitive to tyrosine kinase inhibitors. In conclusion, FLT3 mutated ETP-ALL defines a molecular distinct stem cell like leukemic subtype. These data warrant clinical studies with the implementation of FLT3 inhibitors in addition to early allogeneic stem cell transplantation for this high risk subgroup.
SOCS1 function in BCR-ABL mediated myeloproliferative disease is dependent on the cytokine environment (2017)
Demirel, Özlem ; Ballo, Olivier Karl Friedrich ; Pavan Kumar Reddy, N. G. ; Vakhrusheva, Olesya ; Zhang, Jing ; Eichler, Astrid ; Fernandes, Ramona ; Badura, Susanne ; Serve, Hubert ; Brandts, Christian Hubertus
Treatment with tyrosine kinase inhibitors is the standard of care for Philadelphia chromosome positive leukemias. However the eradication of leukemia initiating cells remains a challenge. Circumstantial evidence suggests that the cytokine microenvironment may play a role in BCR-ABL mediated leukemogenesis and in imatinib resistance. Gene expression analyses of BCR-ABL positive ALL long-term cultured cells revealed strong reduction of SOCS mRNA expression after imatinib treatment, thereby demonstrating a strong inhibition of cytokine signaling. In this study we employed SOCS1—a strong inhibitor of cytokine signaling—as a tool to terminate external cytokine signals in BCR-ABL transformed cells in vitro and in vivo. In colony formation assays with primary bone marrow cells, expression of SOCS1 decreased colony numbers under pro-proliferative cytokines, while it conferred growth resistance to anti-proliferative cytokines. Importantly, co-expression of SOCS1 with BCR-ABL led to the development of a MPD phenotype with a prolonged disease latency compared to BCR-ABL alone in a murine bone marrow transplantation model. Interestingly, SOCS1 co-expression protected 20% of mice from MPD development. In summary, we conclude that under pro-proliferative cytokine stimulation at the onset of myeloproliferative diseases SOCS1 acts as a tumor suppressor, while under anti-proliferative conditions it exerts oncogenic function. Therefore SOCS1 can promote opposing functions depending on the cytokine environment.
Fluid overload is associated with increased 90-day mortality in AML patients undergoing induction chemotherapy (2021)
Ballo, Olivier Karl Friedrich ; Eladly, Fagr ; Koschade, Sebastian E. ; Büttner, Stefan ; Stratmann, Jan Alexander ; Brunnberg, Uta ; Kreisel, Eva-Maria ; Frank, Franziska ; Wagner, Sebastian ; Steffen, Björn ; Serve, Hubert ; Finkelmeier, Fabian ; Brandts, Christian Hubertus
Treatment‐related complications contribute substantially to morbidity and mortality in acute myeloid leukemia (AML) patients undergoing induction chemotherapy. Although AML patients are susceptible to fluid overload (FO) (e.g., in the context of chemotherapy protocols, during sepsis treatment or to prevent tumor lysis syndrome), little attention has been paid to its role in AML patients undergoing induction chemotherapy. AML patients receiving induction chemotherapy between 2014 and 2019 were included in this study. FO was defined as ≥5% weight gain on day 7 of induction chemotherapy compared to baseline weight determined on the day of admission. We found FO in 23 (12%) of 187 AML patients undergoing induction chemotherapy. Application of >100 ml crystalloid fluids/kg body weight until day 7 of induction chemotherapy was identified as an independent risk factor for FO. AML patients with FO suffered from a significantly increased 90-day mortality rate and FO was demonstrated as an independent risk factor for 90-day mortality. Our data suggests an individualized, weight-adjusted calculation of crystalloid fluids in order to prevent FO-related morbidity and mortality in AML patients during induction chemotherapy. Prospective trials are required to determine the adequate fluid management in this patient population.
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