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Type 1 diabetes (T1D) is precipitated by the autoimmune destruction of the insulin-producing beta-cells in the pancreatic islets of Langerhans. Chemokines have been identified as major conductors of the islet infiltration by autoaggressive leukocytes, including antigen-presenting cells and islet autoantigen-specific T cells. We have previously generated a roadmap of the gene expression in the islet microenvironment during T1D in a mouse model and found that most of the chemokine axes are chronically upregulated during T1D. We focused our attention on CXCL10/CXCR3, CCL5/CCR5, CXCL16/CCR6, CX3CL1/CX3CR1, and XCL1/XCR1. First, we found that the absence of CCR6 and of CX3CR1 diminished T1D incidence in a mouse model for T1D. Further, the XCL1/XCR1 chemokine axis is of particular interest, since XCR1 is exclusively expressed on convention dendritic cells type 1 (cDC1) that excel by their high capacity for T cell activation. Here we demonstrate that cDC1 expressing XCR1 are present in and around the islets of patients with T1D and of islet-autoantibody positive individuals. Further, in an inducible mouse model for T1D, we show that XCL1 plays an important role in the attraction of highly potent dendritic cells expressing XCR1 to the islets. XCL1-deficient mice display a diminished infiltration of XCR1+ cDC1 and subsequently also a reduced magnitude and activity of islet autoantigen-specific T cells. XCR1-deficient mice display a reduced magnitude and activity of islet autoantigen-specific T cells. A 3D-visualization of the entire pancreas reveals that both XCL1-deficient mice and XCR1-deficient mice indeed maintain most of their functional islets after induction of the disease. Thus, the absence of XCL1 results in a profound decrease in T1D incidence. The XCR1-deficiency also reduces T1D incidence, even if in a less drastic way compared to XCL1-deficiency. An interference with the XCL1/XCR1 chemokine axis might constitute a novel target for the therapy for T1D.
Throughout the entire life, new neurons of the granule cell type (GCs) are continu-ously generated in the mammalian hippocampal dentate gyrus (DG). As a part of the limbic system, the hippocampus is concerned with spatial and declarative memory for-mation. Increasing evidence exists, that adult born granule cells (ABGCs) play an im-portant role in this process. An especially critical period, when these ABGCs are 4-6 weeks old, has come into the focus of research. It is during this specific time-span that the ABGCs express enhanced excitability and synaptic plasticity as well as a lowered threshold for the induction of long term potentiation (LTP), a mechanism associated to learning and memory formation.
This study investigates the time course and dynamics of synaptic integration in ABGCs and mature GCs together with which differences exist between them at various cell ages. Furthermore, spine plasticity following high frequency stimulation (HFS) is analysed focusing on a critical phase of enhanced excitability in 4-5 week old ABGCs.
In this thesis, two approaches at studying the synaptic integration and structural plas-ticity of ABGCs in rats were investigated. This work was performed on fixed brain ma-terial that was provided by two laboratories that performed the in vivo labelling, stimu-lation procedures and brain fixation. In the first project, 6, 12 and 35 weeks old XdU-labelled ABGCs were studied. Adult rats were exposed to an enriched environment and received unilateral intrahippocampal delta burst stimulation (DBS) and LTP induction. The ABGCs and a control population of mature GCs were immunohistologically ana-lysed for Egr1 (early growth response 1) expression. Egr1 is an immediate early gene (IEG), expressed after LTP induction and marks neuronal excitation.
It was found, that unilateral stimulation of the perforant path of the hippocampus re-sults in an increase of Egr1 expression in ABGCs of both hemispheres. It could be shown that the enhanced expression intensity of Egr1 in ABGCs is not a usual state of young GCs but a reaction to DBS. ABGCs from unstimulated control animals and mature GCs expressed lower levels of Egr1. Interestingly, the stimulation induced a similar degree of Egr1 expression intensity in all ABGC age groups. Furthermore, it was found that young ABGC from the infrapyramidal dentate gyrus (DG) express a higher excita-bility than those from the suprapyramidal DG.
In the second project, fixed brain sections were analysed. They stemmed from rat brains containing 28 and 35 day old ABGC that had been transfected with intrahippo-campal RV-GFP (retroviral-green fluorescent protein) injections and had received uni-lateral high frequency stimulation of the medial perforant path in vivo. Nuclear Egr1 expression intensity was analysed in a cell specific manner. Dendritic spine size was measured in the inner-, middle- and outer molecular layer (IML, MML, OML). It was found that in ABGC, stimulation induced Egr1 expression increase is lower than in ma-ture GC. Following HFS, a significant homosynaptic spine enlargement was observed in the MML indicating homosynaptic LTP, while heterosynaptic spine shrinkage was found in the adjacent IML and OML. The latter corresponds to heterosynaptic long term depression (LTD). Homosynaptic plasticity describes an input-specific potentiation of synapses that received direct activation. The weakening of synapses not stimulated dur-ing homosynaptic potentiation is oppositely coined heterosynaptic plasticity1.
A positive correlation between an increase in nuclear Egr1 expression intensity and spine enlargement due to homosynaptic plasticity induced by HFS could be shown. Concomitant heterosynaptic plasticity, as indicated by spine shrinkage was observed. Spine shrinkage in the IML and OML showed a negative correlation to a decrease in Egr1 intensity.
Taken together, the results provide detailed information on the gradual integration of ABGC with ongoing maturation. Cell specific proof for homo- and heterosynaptic plas-ticity following HFS was found in the critical period of synaptic integration of ABGCs.
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.
The genetic mutation of the coagulation factor VIII (fVIII) results in a defective or missing protein, leading to a malfunctioning blood coagulation. The resulting disease is called hemophilia A. Depending on the severity of the mutation, affected patients experience an increased risk of pathologic bleeding after minor trauma or even sudden bleeding events. Substitution therapies with extrinsic fVIII exist using plasmatic or recombinant fVIII products. Due to an insufficient immune tolerance towards substituted fVIII, about 30 % of patients develop allogenic neutralizing antibodies (inhibitors) against substituted fVIII products. The gold standard of treating inhibitors is the immune tolerance induction (ITI), where patients are given frequent, high doses of fVIII to induce an immune tolerance. ITI therapy fails in about 30 % of patients. Mechanisms of action of ITI are part of research, as insufficient knowledge about mechanisms and prognostic factors complicate treatment. For example, the development of anti-idiotypic antibodies, which occur naturally as a regulatory mechanism of the immune system, are being studied. Such anti-idiotypes have been detected in immunoglobuline preparations and in patients after successful ITI.
Inhibitors interfere with fVIII function in coagulation by binding functional epitopes within fVIII domains. Inhibitors against the A2 and C2 domain are predominantly found, however also the C1 domain has been shown to be highly immunogenic in some patients. The polyclonality of inhibitors aggravates the understanding and treatment of these. The present project therefore focusses on the selection of synthetic anti-idiotypic antibodies to target inhibitors in patients. The phage display method was applied to, for one, isolate anti-idiotypic single chain variable fragments (scFvs) specific against human polyclonal anti-fVIII antibodies and second against two C1 domain-specific inhibitory monoclonal antibodies (mAbs).
In the first project, anti-fVIII antibodies were purified from human plasma to serve as target molecules. A previous project showed that using full plasma as a target did not yield anti-idiotypic antibodies from phage display. For the purification, protein A chromatography and fVIII coupled Affi Gel® chromatography were applied. The isolated antibodies were next used as targets for the selection of anti-idiotypic scFvs. Analysis revealed that none of the selected phages solely bound the anti-fVIII antibody target. Consequently, the test protocol was modified, which resulted in a reduction of unspecific binders. Yet, no target-specific binders were isolated from phage pools. Reason for this may have been the high diversity of the polyclonal antibody target and the limited diversity of the phage libraries.
The aim of the second project, was the selection and characterization of scFvs, that target the paratopes of C1 domain-specific mAbs GMA8011 and LE2E9. From a therapeutic viewpoint, the preparation of an anti-idiotypic antibody pool, tailored to each patient’s inhibitor population, could help neutralize inhibitors in patients. Ultimately, one GMA8011-specific scFv-carrying phage clone (H2C1) and two specifics to LE2E9 (H3G7, H3F10) were isolated. In further experiments, only the GMA8011-specific scFv showed competitive behavior in presence of fVIII, pointing towards an anti-idiotypic binding to the inhibitor paratope. The LE2E9-specific scFvs did not prevent binding of the inhibitor to fVIII. Hence, no anti-idiotypic behavior could be determined. For further characterization, selected scFvs were genetically fused to Fc antibody fragments and recombinantly produced. In this antibody format, all three scFvs showed concentration dependent binding to the target and the isotype control. The binding specificity to the target, observed in phage context, could not be reproduced. Competition experiments with fVIII confirmed that none of the scFvs bound the paratope of their target inhibitor.
The selection of anti-idiotypic scFvs from phage display libraries proves to be effortful. Polyclonal anti-fVIII antibodies purified from hemophilic plasma appear to be unsuitable as a target for phage display, likely due to the high diversity of the target molecules. Furthermore, the preparation of an individualized anti-idiotypic pools for patients by selecting scFvs against single inhibitory mAbs proves to be difficult. The selection of scFvs against anti-C1 inhibitors GMA8011 and LE2E9 produced three promising scFv-carrying phages. However, analysis could not detect anti-idiotypic behavior. Further research with inhibitors, monoclonal and polyclonal, and anti-idiotypic antibodies should be performed to bring better insight into the highly complex paratope-epitope interaction.
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.
Abdominal aortic aneurysm (AAA) is the most common type of aortic aneurysm, which is defined as a dilation of the abdominal aorta over 3.0 cm or more. Surgical repair is the golden standard for the treatment of AAA, in which open surgical repair (OSR) and endovascular aneurysm repair (EVAR) are the main approaches. Technically speaking, the lesion segment of aueurysm is completely replaced by a graft during OSR, while in EVAR, the lesion is insulated by a stentgraft. EVAR is a less invasive treatment than OSR and shows a lower early mortality rate, although the long-term advantages of EVAR over OSR remain inconclusive.
Endoleak, especially the type II endoleak (T2EL), is a common complication after EVAR. According to research, 16-28% of the patients develop a T2EL after EVAR, and it accounts for nearly three in four of all types of endoleaks. Around 30-50% of the T2EL resolved spontaneously during the follow-up, however, it still causes a secondary intervention in many patients. Therefore, it is critical to monitor endoleaks after repair.
Patent aortic branches in the stent-overlapped area and vasa vasorum have been identified as potential sources of blood flow in T2EL. However, the mechanisms of biological changes or remodeling of the aneurysm sac after the repair are still not clear, but they have been considered to play an important role in the development of endoleaks. Unfortunately, it is impossible to obtain a tissue sample of the aortic wall in patients who underwent EVAR.
MicroRNAs (miRNAs) are a class of small single-stranded non-coding RNAs that inhibit the expression of target message RNA (mRNA). miR-29b/29c, miR-155, and miR-15a are miRNAs associated with regulating extracellular matrix (ECM) components, inflammation, and proliferation, respectively. All four miRNAs have been identified as biomarkers of AAA, not only in aneurysm tissue but also extracellular as circulating miRNAs. However, it is still unknown whether they can reflect the biological changes after AAA repair. Thus, we conducted a prospective study to investigate the changes in expression of circulating miR-29b, miR-29c, miR-155, and miR-15a before (T0), 3 days (T1), and 3 months (T2) after AAA repair.
A total of 39 patients were recruited for this study, 17 of whom were repaired by OSR and 22 of whom were repaired by EVAR. Four patients failed the T2 follow-up due to the Covid-19 pandemic. No significant changes were found in the expression of miR-29b, miR-29c, miR-155, and miR-15a. There were also no obvious differences between OSR and EVAR. However, the T1 expression of miR-15a was significantly lower in patients without endoleak after EVAR than in those who developed endoleak after EVAR and those who were repaired by OSR. Unfortunately, these differences did not persist to the T2 follow-up, and no other differences were found among these patients.
In summary, miR-15a is a miRNA that significantly changes in AAA patients. This study demonstrates that the expression of circulating miR-15a is lower in patients without endoleak three days after EVAR, compared to those who had endoleak after EVAR and those who underwent OSR. The results suggest that miR-15a might be involved in the early aortic remodeling after EVAR as an indicator of endoleak.
Facial expression recognition is linked to clinical and neurofunctional differences in autism
(2022)
Background: Difficulties in social communication are a defining clinical feature of autism. However, the underlying neurobiological heterogeneity has impeded targeted therapies, and requires new approaches to identifying clinically relevant bio-behavioural subgroups. In the largest autism cohort to date, we comprehensively examined difficulties in facial expression recognition, a key process in social communication, as a bio-behavioural stratification biomarker, and validated them against clinical features and neurofunctional responses.
Methods: Between 255 and 488 participants aged 6-30 years with autism, typical development and/or mild intellectual disability completed the Karolinska Directed Emotional Faces task, the Reading the Mind in the Eyes Task and/or the Films Expression Task. We first examined mean-group differences on each test. Then we used a novel intersection approach that compares two centroid and connectivity-based clustering methods to derive subgroups based on the combined performance across the three tasks. Measures and subgroups were then related to clinical features and neurofunctional differences measured using fMRI during a fearful face-matching task.
Results: We found significant mean-group differences on each expression recognition test. However, cluster analyses showed that these were driven by a low-performing autistic subgroup (~30% of autistic individuals who performed below 2SDs of the neurotypical mean on at least one test), while a larger subgroup (~70%) performed within 1SD on at least 2 tests. The low-performing subgroup also had on average significantly more social-communication difficulties and lower activation in the amygdala and fusiform gyrus than the high-performing subgroup.
Limitations: Findings of autism expression recognition subgroups and their characteristics require independent replication. This is currently not possible, as there is no other existing data set that includes all relevant measures. However, we demonstrated high internal robustness (91.6%) of findings between two clustering methods with fundamentally different assumptions, which is a critical pre-condition for independent replication.
Conclusions: We identified a subgroup of autistic individuals with expression recognition difficulties and showed that this related to clinical and neurobiological characteristics. If replicated, expression recognition may serve as bio-behavioural stratification biomarker and aid in the development of targeted interventions for a subgroup of autistic individuals.
After entorhinal deafferentiation of the hippocampal dentate gyrus a reinnervation of the denervated neurons by axon collaterals can be observed. This process takes place in a matter of weeks. However, the overall functional effect on the hippocampal network is still unclear.
In an effort to investigate this effect of axonal sprouting on the neuronal network of the dentate gyrus we compared the electrophysiological response of the dentate gyrus after electric stimulation in wild-type mice (WT mice) with a normal post-lesion sprouting, with genetically modified mice with an overexpression of the growth-protein CAP23 (cytoskeleton-associated protein 23). CAP23 overexpressing mice (CAP23tg mice) are known to have an enhanced axonal growth and sprouting after lesion.
The mice (both the WT as well as the CAP23tg mice) were deeply anesthetized and a lesion of the perforant path was induced stereotactically with a wire knife. After that the mice were permitted to survive for 4-6 weeks for partial reinnervation of the dentate gyrus before they were again operated and evoked potentials were measured (extracellular recordings of evoked potentials in the dentate gyrus). Non-lesioned litter-mate mice were taken as reference. The sprouting and the correct position of the electrodes was confirmed histologically.
For electrophysiological investigation we assessed laminar profiles and calculated a current-source density (CSD). In lesioned CAP23tg mice compared to lesioned WT mice this CSD-analysis revealed a significant enhancement of the current sink in the area of deafferentiation (outer molecular layer) and a significant excitation in the granule-cell layer.
Our results show that axonal sprouting seems to enhance the excitability of granule-cells. Thus, even if an enhanced axonal sprouting might accelerate the reinnervation of denervated dendrites after lesion, but it also leads to posttraumatic hyperexcitability of the neuronal network. In a therapeutic approach of fascilitating axonal sprouting this hyperexcitability has to be taken into consideration.
Cancer is one of the leading causes of death across all countries and its diagnosis still yields fear for the affected patient. Although treatment of cancer has made marvelous progress compared to the agents available thirty years ago, a cure for cancer, however, is still a distant prospect. Modern therapy still is a burden for many patients due to heavy side effects. With the development of agents targeting specific molecular targets on cancer cells, a new field of cancer therapy was opened and a small success story in the history of cancer began.
Aurora kinases represent a relatively new target in cancer therapy. The kinase is a essential part of mitosis and cell cycle progression and its overexpression has been shown to be related to many kinds of malignancies. Allosteric inhibition of a kinase is an increasing pre-clinical approach not yet established in the treatment of patients. In this thesis, we combine allostery with another innovative approach that is drug repurposing. If repurposed, a drug can be permitted to fast track drug admission to clinical trials.
I set up a screening of 1280 FDA approved drugs to identify small molecule compounds that affect the binding of Aurora kinase A and its main physiologic binding partner, TPX2. Further, I characterized the positive hits in vitro for their capabilities to displace TPX2 from Aurora A, to inhibit Aurora kinase activity, to thermally stabilize the protein and performed assays to determine their dissociation constant. Last but not least, I tested the compounds in cells for their effect on the cell viability and cell cycle via flow cytometry. Comparing the hit-compounds with controls I found that ATP-competitive AurA inhibitor MLN 8237 strongly displaces the interaction of Aurora A with TPX2.
Summarized, we identified eight hit compounds allosterically affecting Aurora A, but no compound proved to be active in all assays. Just one compound, PS 731, identified in another screening performed by our group and further characterized in this thesis remains interesting, especially when put in context with recent publications released in the time between the start of experiments for this thesis and its finalization.
Identification of translationally deregulated proteins during inflammation-associated tumorigenesis
(2012)
The translation of mRNAs into proteins is an elaborate and highly regulated process. Translational regulation primarily takes place at the level of initiation. During initation the eukaryotic initiation factors (eIFs) form a complex that binds to the 5’end of the mRNA to scan for a start codon. Once recognized, the ribosome is recruited to the mRNA and protein synthesis starts. Initiation of translation can basically occur via two distinct mechanisms, i.e. cap-dependent and cap-independent that is mediated via internal ribosome entry sites (IRESs). The former is mediated by a 5’cap structure composed of a 7-methylguanylate which is added to every mRNA during transcription and recruits the initiation complex. IRES-dependent translation involves elements within the 5’untranslated region (UTR) of the mRNA that mostly bind IRES trans-acting factors (ITAFs) which associate either with the initiation complex or with the ribosome itself and consequently allow for internal initiation of translation.
During tumorigenesis the demand for proteins is increased due to rapid cell growth, which consequently requires enhanced translation. Many factors that regulate translation are overexpressed in tumors. Moreover, signaling pathways that trigger translation or further hyperactivated by the surrounding tumor microenvironment. This environment is largely generated by infiltration of immune cells such as macrophages that secrete cytokines and other mediators to promote tumorigenesis. As the effects of inflammatory conditions on the translation of specific targets are only poorly characterized, my study aimed at identifying translationally deregulated targets during inflammation-associated tumorigenesis.
For this purpose, I cocultured MCF7 breast tumor cells with conditioned medium of activated monocyte-derived U937 macrophages (CM). Polysome profiling and microarray analysis identified 42 targets to be regulated at the level of translation. The results were validated by quantitative PCR and one target - early growth response 2 (EGR2) - was chosen for in depth analysis of the mechanism leading to its enhanced translation.
In order to identify upstream signaling molecules causing enhanced EGR2 protein synthesis the cytokine profile of CM was analyzed and the impact of several cytokines on EGR2 translation was examined. Preincubation of CM with neutralizing antibodies revealed that lowering interleukin 6 (IL-6) had only little effect, whereas depletion of IL 1β significantly reduced EGR2 translation. This finding was corroborated by the fact that treatment with recombinant IL-1β enhanced EGR2 translation to virtually the same extend as CM. Further experiments revealed that this effect was mediated via the p38-MAPK signaling cascade.
Interestingly, I observed that the mTOR inhibitor rapamycin, which reduces cap-dependent translation, specifically stimulated EGR2 translation. This result argued for an IRES-dependent mechanism that might account for EGR2 translation. The use of bicistronic reporter assays verified this hypothesis. In line with the above mentioned results, CM, IL-1β and p38-MAPK induced EGR2-IRES activity.
Since IRESs commonly require ITAFs to mediate translation initiation, the binding of proteins to the 5’UTR was analyzed using mass spectrometry. Among others, several previously described ITAFs, such as polypyrimidine tract-binding protein (PTB) and heterogeneous nuclear ribonucleoprotein A1 (hnRNP-A1) were identified to directly bind to the EGR2-5’UTR. Furthermore, overexpression of hnRNP-A1 enhanced EGR2-IRES activity whereas a dominant negative form of hnRNP-A1 significantly decreased it, thus, showing its importance for EGR2 translation.
In summary, my data provide evidence that EGR2 expression can be controlled by IRES-dependent translational regulation, which is responsive to an inflammatory environment. The identified mechanism may not be exclusive for one target but might be representative for gene expression regulation mechanisms during tumorigenesis. This is of special interest for the treatment of cancer patients and development of more specific therapies to reduce tumor outcome.
The interleukin (IL)-1 family has been described for its numerous involvement in the regulation of inflammatory processes. Certain members are able to induce inflammation, whereas others have the capacity to inhibit inflammation. The newly discovered IL-1 family member IL-38 shows interesting and innovative properties. While most of these cytokines are pro-inflammatory mediators, IL-38 appears to enter the smaller circle of anti-inflammatory mediators. As a pattern, IL-38 appears to suppress IL-17-driven chronic or auto-inflammation by working as receptor antagonist. These properties, as well as its beneficial effects in models of inflammatory and autoimmune diseases suggest the possibility of IL-38-based therapies. Nevertheless, its role in the resolution of acute inflammation, thereby preventing chronic inflammation, remains unclear.
The first part of my thesis elucidated the role of IL-38 in the resolution of inflammation. I found that the complete absence of IL-38 in IL-38 KO mice leads to a delayed resolution of inflammation in the zymosan-induced peritonitis mouse model, compared to WT mice. This was marked by a persistent neutrophilia and a lower production of pro-resolving mediators during the resolution phase, such as TGFβ1 production from macrophages following efferocytosis of apoptotic cells. Reduced TGFβ1 production from macrophages coincided with reduced levels of regulatory T cells (Tregs), which are known to promote the resolution of inflammation. Unexpectedly, the TGFβ1 production capacity of macrophages did not influence the induction of Tregs from naïve T cells. Rather, IL-38 KO mice had an accumulation of Tregs in the thymus compared to WT mice. This was caused by an impairment of CD62L expression at the surface of Tregs, which is required for Tregs migration outside of the thymus. Higher Treg numbers in the thymus correlated with lower level of Tregs in peripheral lymphoid organs. Importantly, CD62L expression at the surface of IL-38 KO Tregs in the thymus was restored by injecting IL-38 i.p. for 24h. These data indicate a potential key function of IL-38 in the regulation of Treg migration, which is triggered in many cases of autoimmunity.
The second part of my thesis was to study the role of IL-38 in experimental autoimmune encephalomyelitis (EAE) development, given that EAE is IL-17-dependent. Unexpectedly, IL-38-deficient mice showed strongly reduced clinical scores and histological markers of EAE. This came with reduced inflammatory cell infiltrates, as well as reduced expression of inflammatory markers in the spinal cord. IL-38 mRNA was detected in the spinal cord, mainly by resident and infiltrated phagocytes, but also by other cells, such as ependymal cells. IL-38 was upregulated upon pro-inflammatory stimulation of bone marrow-derived macrophages, and its presence was necessary for a complete activation of inflammatory macrophages. My data suggest an alternative cell-intrinsic role of IL-38 in macrophages to promote inflammation in the central nervous system.
In the last part of my thesis, I initiated a project on the function of IL-38 in B cell physiology and antibody production, given the fact that IL-38 is expressed by B cells. I generated preliminary data showing that the absence of IL-38 in mice decreased antibody production. Furthermore, I showed that IL-38 is particularly expressed by plasma cells in human tonsils. This project remains open and further studies will be conducted to investigate how IL-38 regulates antibody production, both in physiological and autoimmune settings. Understanding the role of IL-38 in autoantibody production could lead to original and innovative therapy for patients suffering from auto-inflammatory disease.
In summary, the different projects of my thesis provide evidence that the pro-resolving function of IL-38 may be indirectly linked to the retention of Tregs in the thymus. Moreover, a possible intracellular role of IL-38 within macrophages was described showing opposite properties in the regulation of inflammation. This function could be causatively involved in EAE development. However, further studies remain to be done to find the mechanism of action by which IL-38 regulates Tregs egression and how it influences the EAE development. Complete understanding of the IL-38 biology and differentiation between its extra- vs potential intracellular functions could make it a promising therapeutic target for chronic inflammatory or autoimmune diseases.
Bipolar disorder (BD) and major depressive disorder (MDD) are severe mood disorders that belong to the most debilitating diseases worldwide. Differentiating both mood disorders often poses a major clinical challenge, leading to frequent misdiagnoses. Objective biomarkers able to differentiate individuals with BD and MDD therefore represent a psychiatric research field of utmost importance. Recent studies have applied resting-state fMRI paradigms and found promising results differentiating both disorders based on the acquired data. However, most of these studies have focused their efforts on acutely depressed patients. Thus, it remains unclear whether the aberrations remain in a symptomless disease state.
The here presented study addresses these issues by evaluating the ability to differentiate both disorders from one another by conducting a between-group comparison of functional brain network connectivity (FNC) obtained from resting-state fMRI data. Data were collected from 20 BD, 15 MDD patients and 30 age- and gender-matched healthy controls (HC). Graph theoretical analyses were applied to detect differences in functional network organization between the groups on a global and regional network level.
Network analysis detected frontal, temporal and subcortical nodes in emotion regulation areas such as the limbic system and associated regions exhibiting significant differences in network integration and segregation in BD compared to MDD patients and HC. Participants with MDD and HC only differed in frontal and insular network centrality.
These results indicate that a significantly altered brain network topology in the limbic system might be a trait marker specific to BD. Brain network analysis in these regions may therefore be used to differentiate euthymic BD not only from HC but also from patients with MDD.
Current research on medical biomaterials have shown that the physical and chemical characteristics of biomaterials determine the body inflammatory cellular reaction after their implantation. The aim of this study was to evaluate the individual effects of the physical characteristics over the initial biomaterial-cellular interaction and the inflammatory cellular reaction. For this purpose, an equine-derived collagen hemostatic sponge (E-CHS) was modified by pressing and evaluated using ex vivo, in vitro and in vivo methods.
The E-CHS was pressed by applying constant pressure (6.47± 0.85 N) for 2 min using a sterile stainless-steel cylinder and cut in segments of 1cm2. Subsequently, E-CHS and the pressed equine-derived collagen hemostatic sponge (P-E-CHS) were studied as two independent biomaterials and compared to a control group (CG).
A blood concentrate containing inflammatory cells known as platelet rich fibrin (PRF) was used to mimic the initial biomaterial-cell interaction and to measure the absorption coefficient of the biomaterials to liquid PRF (iPAC). Additionally, the biomaterials were cultivated together with PRF for 3 and 6 days to measure the induction of pro-inflammatory cytokines (TNF-α and IL-8). The results were obtained through enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA) and histological methods. PRF cultivated without biomaterials served as the CG. Additionally, the biomaterials were evaluated in vivo using a subcutaneous model in Wistar rats and compared to sham operated animals (CG) representing physiologic wound healing. After 3, 15 and 30 days, the explanted samples were evaluated using histochemical and immunohistochemical (IHC) staining using the following markers: CD68 (pan macrophages), CCR7 (pro-inflammatory macrophages, M1), CD206 (pro-wound healing macrophages, M2) and α-Smooth Muscle Actin (α-SMA; vessel identification).
After the mixture of liquid PRF with both biomaterials for 15 minutes, the ex vivo results showed that E-CHS was penetrated by cells, whereas P-E-CHS was cell-occlusive. Additionally, P-E-CHS induced a higher release of pro-inflammatory cytokines compared to liquid PRF alone (CG) and E-CHS after 3 days (P< 0.05). Although the biomaterial was pressed, the difference of the iPAC value did not show statistical differences. In vivo, the CG induced at day 3 a higher inflammatory response compared to the experimental groups (EG) (P< 0.05). The intergroup comparison showed that P-E-CHS induced a higher presence of macrophages (CD68+/CC7+) compared to E-CHS at day 3 (P< 0.05). Only CD68+/CCR7+ mononuclear cells (MNCs) were observed without multinucleated giant cells (MNGCs). After 15 days, the presence of macrophages (CD68+ P<0.01 /CCR7+ P<0.001 /CD206+ P<0.05) reduced considerably in the CG. On the contrary, the inflammatory response increased in the EGs (CD68+/CCR7+). The intergroup comparison showed that this increment was statistically significant when comparing E-CHS and P-E-CHS to the CG at day 15 (P<0.01 and P< 0.05 respectively). At this time point, a reduced number of MNGCs were observed in the EGs. In the CG no MNGCs were observed. Furthermore, E-CHS showed a faster degradation rate and was fully invaded by cells and vessels formed in its interior region. On the other hand, P-E-CHS remained occlusive to cell penetration and vessels were formed only in the periphery. After 30 days, the cellular reaction shifted to a higher number of M2 macrophages (CD260+) in all groups and a reduced presence of CD68+ and CCR7+ MNCs. Both biomaterials degraded and only small fragments were found in the implantation bed surrounded by MNGCs (CCR7+).
These results are of high clinical relevance and show that changes in biomaterial properties have a significant impact on their interaction with the body. They also serve as insight into the possibility to develop versatile biomaterials with different applications. For example, E-CHs can be applied to support hemostasis in a bleeding alveolar socket and P-E-CHs by being cell occlusive and having a delayed degradation rate can be applied for guided bone and tissue regeneration.
The visual system encompasses about 20% of the cerebral cortex1 and plays a pivotal role in higher-order cognitive processes such as attention and working memory. Cognitive impairments constitute a central role in neuropsychiatric disorders such as schizophrenia (SZ). Impairments are described in visual perceptual processes including contrast, and emotion discrimination as well as in the ability to identify visual irregularities and in higher-order cognition like visual attention and working memory. Furthermore, perceptual and higher-order cognitive processes are part of the Research Domain Criteria (RDoC) project that aims to develop dimensional and transdiagnostic constructs with defined links to specific brain circuits.Therefore, the detailed study of the visual system using functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) is essential to understand the processes in healthy individuals but also in populations with neuropsychiatric disorders. Visual mapping techniques include functional localizer tasks to map functionally defined regions like the fusiform face area (FFA), retinotopic mapping to map specific brain regions that are retinotopically organized in full, and visual-field localizer paradigms to define circumscribed areas within retinotopically organized areas.Thus, the latter allow studying local information processing in early visual areas. Despite advances in neuroimaging techniques, analyses of fMRI data at the group-level are impeded by interindividual macroanatomical variability. This reduces the reliability to accurately define visual areas particularly at the group-level and decreases statistical power. Single-subject based solutions for this problem are not appropriate. Analyses after volume-based alignment (VBA) and primary surface-based analyses without macroanatomical alignment do not increase macroanatomical correspondence sufficiently. Cortex-based alignment (CBA) approaches are recommended as an alternative technique to address this obstacle. However, CBA has not been evaluated for visual-field localizer paradigms. Therefore, we aimed to evaluate potential benefits of CBA for an attention-enhanced visual field localizer paradigm that maps circumscribed regions in retinotopically organized visual areas. Since previous studies solely compared surface-based data before and after CBA, we aimed to compare all three techniques: (1) a volume-based alignment (VBA), (2) a surface-based data set without (SBAV) and (3) a surface- based data set with macroanatomical alignment (CBA). Furthermore, we sought to define regions of interest (ROI) that subsequently can be used for the study of higher-order cognitive processes. Also, we aimed to investigate whether CBA facilitates the study of functional asymmetries in early visual areas as these were described in previous studies. Healthy volunteers (n=50) underwent fMRI in a 3- Tesla Siemens Trio scanner while performing an attention-enhanced visual field localizer paradigm. Our task consisted of a series of flickering, black-and white colored checkerboard stimuli that randomly appeared at one of four locations comprising the participants’ visual quadrants. In 25% of the trials the centrally located squares briefly changed their color to yellow (target trial). Participants had to indicate detection of a target by button press. Data analysis was conducted using Brain Voyager 20.6. Our approach for macroanatomical alignment included a high-resolution, multiscale curvature driven alignment procedure minimizing interindividual macroanatomical variability. Here, each folding pattern was aligned to a dynamically updated group average. Thus, we counteracted a possible confounding effect of a suboptimal selection of an individual target brain with a folding pattern deviating considerably from the cohort average. Group ROIs after CBA showed increased spatial consistency, vertical symmetry, and an increase of size. This was corroborated by an increase in the probability of activation overlap of up to 86%. CBA increased macroanatomical correspondence and thus ameliorated results of multi-subject ROI analyses. Functional differences in the form of a downward bias in visual hemifields were measured with increased reliability. In summary, our findings provide clear evidence for the superiority of CBA for the study of local information processing in early visual cortex at the group-level. This approach is of relevance for the study of visual dysfunction in neuropsychiatric disorders including schizophrenia as they show impaired visual processing that in turn impacts higher-order cognitive processes and in consequence functional outcome. In addition, our attention-enhanced visual field localizer paradigm will be useful for machine learning approaches such as multivariate pattern analysis decoding local information processes and connectivity patterns.
The postthrombotic syndrome (PTS) is beside the venous thromboembolism (VTE) recurrence and chronic thromboembolic pulmonary hypertension (CTEPH) a long-term adverse outcome and chronic complication of deep vein thrombosis (DVT) in the lower extremities and can occur in up to 20–50% of patients within 2 years after DVT. The prevalence of PTS in the adult population is expected to increase due to the growing incidence of VTE in the elderly. Although not life threatening it can impose significant morbidity and can be associated with a negative impact on quality of life associated with disease severity. From an economic point of view, PTS is an important predictor of increased health care costs after VTE.
Factors potentially related to the development of the PTS are older age, obesity, a history of previous ipsilateral DVT, iliofemoral location of the current thrombosis, failure to promptly recover from the acute symptoms and insufficient quality of oral anticoagulant therapy. Furthermore, it is known that the severity of PTS correlates with the location of the DVT, the more proximal the more severe.
PTS induces a range of symptoms and clinical signs, which can be assessed in different scales. The Villalta scale is one of the most suitable scales for defining the presence and severity of subjective symptoms and physical signs of PTS.
In the last century, various therapeutic strategies have been developed to prevent mortality due to VTE or long-term morbidity due to PTS.
Conservative treatment today consists of anticoagulation - usually using direct oral anticoagulants - and compression therapy. One of the first invasive treatments with the aim of thrombus removal was surgical venous thrombectomy by Läwen in 1938. Mahorner and Fontaine improved the technique in the 1950s combining it with a course of anticoagulant treatment to prevent rethrombosis and PTS.
Mechanical thrombectomy by the use of Fogarty balloons, which started in 1963, or the creation of a transient arteriovenous fistula, performed since 1974, are now no longer recommended due to the high invasiveness, risk of fatal intraoperative embolism and a high rethrombosis rate.
In current practice, early thrombus removal mainly relies on the use of catheter-directed pharmacologic thrombolytic therapy. Another approach currently is the endovenous, device-driven thrombectomy and stenting in case of venous obstruction. There is an ongoing broad discussion as to whether these invasive therapies should be offered to patients with iliofemoral thrombosis (IFT), which remains controversial.
IFT, the major target for endovenous thrombectomy respectively pharmacologic thrombolytic therapy, is not enough represented in current literature because the used definition of proximal DVT does not necessarily include the iliac veins. In consequence, it may not be representative enough concerning questions like prevalence and severity of PTS or the effects on quality of life.
The present registry – the Iliaca-PTS registry – addresses exactly these patients and tries to answer these questions. The data of 85 patients who had suffered an IFT in the past were evaluated in the prospective registry documenting the severity of PTS, the occurrence of iliac vein compression syndrome in left-sided IFT and quality of life. A significant predictor for the development of severe PTS or venous claudication in our patient population is a high BMI.
The results of this registry show that IFT is frequently observed and only ten percent develop a moderate or severe PTS respectively venous claudication. In conclusion, the conservative treatment strategy with optimal effective anticoagulant therapy can lead to a low incidence of PTS and a high quality of life.
Mitochondrial RNA granules (MRGs) are membraneless, highly specialized compartments that play an essential role in the post-transcriptional regulation of mitochondrial gene expression. This regulation is crucial for maintaining energy production, controlling metabolic functions and ensuring homeostasis in cells. Dysregulation of mitochondrial genes has been linked to various human diseases, including neurodegenerative and metabolic disorders as well as certain types of cancer.
MRGs are composed of different RNA species, including mitochondrial precursor RNA (pre-RNA), mature tRNAs, rRNAs and mRNAs complexed with multiple proteins involved in RNA processing and mitoribosome assembly. However, despite the significance of MRGs, their protein composition, structural organization, stability and dynamics during stress conditions remain elusive. In the study reported here, I adopted a three-step approach to address the aforementioned fundamental issues.
First and foremost, I identified the protein composition of MRGs and unveiled their architectural complexity. To characterize the MRG proteome, I applied the cutting-edge TurboID-based proximity labeling approach combined with quantitative mass spectrometry. Proximity labeling was conducted on 20 distinct MRG-associated human proteins, resulting in the identification of more than 1,700 protein-protein interactions. This expansive dataset enabled me to create a comprehensive network, providing valuable insights into both the (sub)architecture as well as the core structure of MRGs in-depth.
Secondly, I investigated the spatio-temporal dynamics of MRGs under various mitochondrial stress conditions. To monitor the morphological alterations and compositional changes of MRGs, I utilized time-resolved confocal fluorescence microscopy and proteomics, respectively. In this analysis, I applied IMT1, the first specific inhibitor that selectively targets mitochondrial transcription. Using this methodology, I pinpointed precise conditions that triggered MRGs’ disassembly during stress, followed by their reassembly when nascent RNA production was restored. The results of this examination elucidate that MRGs are highly dynamic and stress adaptive structures, capable of rapid dissolution and reassembly, a process closely connected to mitochondrial transcription.
Thirdly, I aimed to explore the impact of RNA turnover on MRGs’ integrity during stress, employing confocal fluorescence microscopy and quantitative real-time PCR. I observed that depletion of MRG proteins associated with RNA degradation counteracts MRGs’ disassembly under stress conditions, a phenomenon attributed to the accumulation of double-stranded RNA (dsRNA). These results emphasize the critical role of pre-RNA turnover in maintaining MRG integrity and reveal that MRGs can be stabilized by dsRNA.
Taken together, the comprehensive investigation reported in this thesis has substantially broadened and deepened our understanding of MRGs’ complexity. By identifying their molecular structure and dynamics, I have gained significant insights into the fundamental characteristics and biological functions of MRGs in cellular processes. This knowledge contributes to the identification of disease-related pathways linked to mitochondrial gene expression and may inspire future studies to develop novel therapeutic approaches.
Background: During ECMO therapy ischemia of the limbs or internal organs are potential lethal complications. This study analyzed incidence and type of ischemic complications during ECMO therapy, divided in limb, mesenteric, cardiac and neurological ischemia.
Methods: In this single-center retrospective observational study data from 348 patients treated with veno-venous, veno-arterial or veno-venous-arterial ECMO at the Asklepios Klinik Langen between April 1st 2011 and March 31st 2020 was screened. 321 patients with diagnosis of acute respiratory distress syndrome, cardiogenic or septic shock were included.
Primary outcome variable was type of ischemic complication. Further variables were serum lactate levels 24h before and immediately after diagnosis of the ischemic complication, duration of ICU and hospital stay, ECMO therapy and duration of invasive ventilation and arterial blood gas analysis on day of admission to the ICU. Age, sex, ECMO mode, diagnosis, SAPS II, SOFA score, hospital mortality, the use of renal replacement therapy and tracheotomy, the occurrence of infections during the ICU stay and the need of CPR before ECMO implantation were recorded as well.
Results: 62/321 patients (19.3%) were diagnosed with an ischemic complication. Most common areas were limbs (n=32) and mesenteric ischemia (n=21). Patients who were diagnosed with a septic shock had the highest rate of ischemic complications (36.2%). In VV mode there was a difference in survival between patients with and without ischemic complication (p=0.025). Using multivariate logistic regression, age ≥50 years (p=0.029; OR=2.793; CI 1.109 – 7.033), use of hemodialysis (p=0.003; OR=3.283; CI=1.513 – 7.124) and initial diagnosis of a septic shock (p=0.049; OR=2.144; CI=1.003 – 4.583) could be identified as predictors for ischemic complications.
Conclusions: Ischemic complications are frequent during ECMO therapy. An age of at least 50 years, the use of hemodialysis and diagnosis of a septic shock were predictors of ischemic complications. No correlation between ECMO mode and ischemic complications was found. An influence of ischemic complications on survival could be found only in patients treated with VV mode.
Gait analysis as a clinical examination method has been increasingly used in recent years. In particular, the external knee adduction moment was often used as a surrogate measure for internal medial knee joint loading, e.g., in elderly individuals with medial knee osteoarthritis. Therefore, the knee adduction moment is also associated with the progression of knee osteoarthritis. Children and adolescents with valgus malalignment have been found to experience a reduced external knee adduction moment, but internal knee joint contact forces, particularly in the lateral compartment, were not previously studied.
First, medial and lateral knee joint contact forces were studied using muskulosceletal modeling in young individuals with and without valgus malalignment treated by guided growth. In addition, a systematic literature review was conducted to explore the relationship between external joint moments and internal joint contact forces. Finally, this relationship was investigated in children and adolescents with and without valgus malalignment. Furthermore, we examined whether statistical models could be determined to accurately predict internal knee joint contact forces by commonly used parameters from three-dimensional gait analysis, such as external knee joint moments.
It was found that guided growth normalized knee joint contact forces after treatment. In addition, the static radiographic mechanical axis angle correlated better after the treatment when the patients showed a typical limb alignment compared to the correlation before guided growth with the valgus malalignment due to compensating strategies during gait. Furthermore, the systematic review showed that the peak medial knee joint contact force was best predicted by the knee adduction moment and even better together with the knee flexion moment in the first half of stance. However, for the second half of stance of the medial knee joint contact force and the entire stance of the lateral knee joint contact force, only low correlations with knee adduction and/or flexion moment were found. Finally, statistical models could be determined with high accuracy for both medial and lateral knee joint contact force, for both peaks in the first and second half of stance, and for both study groups of children and adolescents with and without valgus malalignment by including knee adduction and flexion moment as predictors.
These results demonstrate the importance of examining not only the external knee adduction moment but also the knee flexion moment and, even better, the medial and lateral knee joint contact forces when evaluating knee joint loading. With these statistical models, clinicians can predict the medial and lateral knee joint contact forces without the need to perform musculoskeletal simulations and can therefore use standard three-dimensional gait analysis parameters such as knee adduction and flexion moment. This can improve guided growth treatment in children and adolescents with valgus malalignment with regard to implantation or explantation of the growth restricting plates or to rebound. Instrumented gait analysis could be particularly helpful in borderline cases, as kinematic compensation mechanisms during gait may play a role and the static radiograph alone does not provide information about dynamic joint loads.
Langzeitbeobachtung der Therapie von Hämophilie A-Patienten mit einem humanen Faktor VIII-Konzentrat
(2019)
This doctoral thesis entitled “Long-term surveillance of the therapy of haemophilia A patients with a human plasma-derived factor VIII concentrate” was performed to assess the influence of the chronic long-term therapy with a human plasma-derived factor VIII concentrate in daily clinical practice on the health of haemophilia A patients.
Haemophilia A is a chronic disease, caused by a congenital deficiency of coagulation factor VIII, which requires life-long haemostatic treatment. The severity of bleedings, as the main clinical feature of haemophilia A, is generally correlated with the residual activity of coagulation factor VIII.
Until recently, factor VIII preparations, used to replace the deficient factor VIII, were the only treatment option for haemophilia A. Development of inhibitory antibodies against factor VIII is the most serious complication associated with the use of factor VIII products, rendering the administered factor VIII ineffective.
To date, all novel treatments still rely on some factor VIII replacement therapy. At least in the near future and probably for longer, (concomitant) therapy with factor VIII concentrates will continue to be necessary for treatment of haemophilia A, emphasising the continuous need for efficacy and safety data in terms of pharmacovigilance on factor VIII replacement therapy.
Medicines to treat haemophilia A, are authorised for use, when evidence of its efficacy and safety is limited to data of a small number of investigated patients during short-term observation periods of about six months, and thus have not been systematically assessed in all patient groups until marketing authorisation. Long-term efficacy and safety data from post-marketing surveillance are important to prove that a chronic treatment is efficacious and safe in the real-life setting by monitoring “real-life” patients of all age groups, rather than a carefully selected patient population. Medical and scientific analyses of such long-term data are crucial to detect, understand, and potentially prevent the harm resulting from (new) adverse drug reactions, including those, which only rarely occur and therefore are difficult to detect.
Therefore, data from two prospective surveillance studies investigating real-life therapies with the same human plasma derived factor VIII concentrate were combined and analysed retrospectively. It was hypothesised that the chronic long term therapy with a human plasma-derived factor VIII concentrate in daily clinical practice is effective, safe, and well tolerated with no unexpected adverse effect on the health of haemophilia A patients. It was the aim of this analysis to investigate the influence of the chronic long-term treatment with the factor VIII concentrate on the health of patients with severe as well as nonsevere haemophilia A including all age groups in a real-life setting. In addition, the influence of prophylactic factor VIII treatment or the switch to this regimen on the annual bleeding rate of all haemophilia A patients, and the long-term effects of this regimen on the patients’ annual bleeding rates were investigated.
Starting in 1998 until 2015, data of 1418 patient-years from 198 haemophilia A patients representing all age groups and haemophilia A severities were analysed. This study covered 18 years of documentation time with a mean observation period of more than seven years per patient. It is the longest study of a single factor VIII concentrate conducted so far, investigating the therapy of haemophilia A. The only observed side effects involved low incident factor VIII inhibitor formation in patients at risk (13 % of previously untreated patients, compared with usually about 30 %). Factor VIII inhibitor development was mainly transient, with low titers, and without clinical relevance. Any, even low frequent prophylaxis was found to be significantly better than on demand and had the greatest effect on the annual bleeding rate of patients, irrespective of their age or haemophilia A severity. Patients suffered during continuous prophylaxis from a very low bleeding rate (median 1.3 compared with 31.4 under on demand), down to no bleeding per year. Patients whose regimen changed to continuous prophylaxis benefitted most (median annual bleeding rate 1.1), irrespective of age or haemophilia A severity.
This analysis demonstrates that the chronic long-term therapy with the plasma-derived factor VIII concentrate in daily clinical practice is effective, safe, and well tolerated. Thus, data on efficacy and safety obtained during chronic long-term therapy with the human plasma-derived factor VIII concentrate reaffirm that there is no unexpected adverse effect on the health of haemophilia A patients.
These results support the therapeutic concept of a life-long prophylaxis of haemophilia A patients with a human plasma-derived factor VIII concentrate.
Purpose: The aim of this work was to retrospectively identify prognostic factors for patients with neuroendocrine liver metastases (NELM) undergoing conventional transarterial chemoembolization (c-TACE), microwave ablation (MWA) or laser interstitial thermal therapy (LITT) and to determine the most effective therapy in terms of volume reduction and survival.
Method: Between 1996 and 2020, 130 patients (82 men, 48 women) were treated with c-TACE, 41 patients were additionally treated with thermoablative procedures.
Survival was retrospectively analyzed by using Kaplan-Meier-method. Prognostic factors were derived by using cox-regression. To find predictive factors for volume reduction due to c-TACE, a mixed-effects model was used.
Results: With c-TACE, an overall median volume reduction of 23.5 % was achieved. An average decrease of tumor volume was shown until the 6th c-TACE treatment, then the effect stopped. So, the median volume reduction off all lesions takes on a negative value from the 7th c-TACE intervention onwards. The mixed-effects model demonstrated that c-TACE interventions were most effective at the beginning of c-TACE therapy, and that treatment breaks longer than 90 days negatively influenced the outcome. For all patients evaluable for survival, Kaplan-Meier analysis showed a 1-year survival rate of 75 % and a 5-year survival rate of 36 %. Significant prognostic factors for survival were number of liver lesions (p = 0.0001) and therapeutical intention (p < 0.0001). Considering the clinical indication, 90.9 % of curative patients and 43.6 % of palliative patients responded to c-TACE therapy and thus could be submitted to a thermoablative procedure. Minor and one major complication occurred in 20.3 % of LITT and only in 8.6 % of MWA interventions. Complete ablation was observed in 95.7 % (LITT) and 93.1 % (MWA) of interventions
Conclusions: C-TACE is an effective treatment for volume reduction of NELM, however efficacy decreases after the 6th intervention and treatment breaks longer than 90 days should be avoided. With thermal ablation, a high rate of complete ablation was achieved and survival improved. Significant factors for survival were found and may be used as prognostic factors in the future.