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Guideline Evidence-based and interdisciplinary consensus-based German guidelines: systemic medical treatment of melanoma in the adjuvant and palliative setting. 2008
Garbe C, Hauschild A, Volkenandt M, Schadendorf D, Stolz W, Reinhold U, Kortmann RD, Kettelhack C, Frerich B, Keilholz U, Dummer R, Sebastian G, Tilgen W, Schuler G, Mackensen A, Kaufmann R. · University Department of Dermatology, Tübingen, Germany. · Melanoma Res. · Pubmed #18337653 No free full text.
Abstract: Systemic medical treatment of melanoma is administered in the adjuvant and palliative setting. Adjuvant therapy may be considered in patients with primary melanoma with more than 1.5 mm tumor thickness and with regional node metastasis. Presently no indication for systemic adjuvant chemotherapy or for adjuvant therapy with nonspecific immune-stimulatory agents outside controlled studies is seen. Interferon-alpha is the first substance in the adjuvant therapy of melanoma, which has shown to present a significant advantage to the patients in some prospective randomized studies. Good arguments for using adjuvant interferon-alpha therapy in high-risk melanoma patients exist. Both high-dose and low-dose interferon-alpha show promise. The major indications for systemic chemotherapy and chemoimmunotherapy are inoperable recurrent tumors, inoperable regional metastases and distant metastases (stage IV). As treatment in such situations is primarily palliative, the effect of any regimen on the quality of life must be carefully weighed. As a first line treatment, single agent therapy is recommended, as polychemotherapy or biochemotherapy did not show significant advantages for prolongation of survival; hence they are more toxic. An urgent need for development of new treatment modalities is necessary and general principles of experimental immunotherapy are outlined.
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Guideline Evidence and interdisciplinary consensus-based German guidelines: surgical treatment and radiotherapy of melanoma. 2008
Garbe C, Hauschild A, Volkenandt M, Schadendorf D, Stolz W, Reinhold U, Kortmann RD, Kettelhack C, Frerich B, Keilholz U, Dummer R, Sebastian G, Tilgen W, Schuler G, Mackensen A, Kaufmann R. · University Department of Dermatology, Tübingen, Germany. · Melanoma Res. · Pubmed #18227710 No free full text.
Abstract: The primary treatment of a melanoma is surgical excision. An excisional biopsy is preferred, and safety margins of 1 cm for tumor thickness up to 2 mm and 2 cm for higher tumor thickness should be applied either at primary excision or in a two-step procedure. When dealing with facial, acral or anogenital melanomas, micrographic control of the surgical margins may be preferable to allow reduced safety margins and conservation of tissue. The sentinel lymph node biopsy should be performed in patients whose primary melanoma is thicker than 1.0 mm and this operation should be performed in centers where both the operative and nuclear medicine teams are experienced. In clinically identified lymph node metastases, radical lymph node dissection is considered standard therapy. If distant metastases involve just one internal organ and operative removal is feasible, then surgery should be seen as therapy of choice. Radiation therapy for the primary treatment of melanoma is indicated only in those cases in which surgery is impossible or not reasonable. In regional lymph nodes, radiation therapy is usually recommended when excision is not complete (R1 resection) or if the nodes are inoperable. In distant metastases, radiation therapy is particularly indicated in bone metastases, brain metastases and soft tissue metastases.
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Review [Brief guidelines: malignant melanoma of the skin] 2006
Garbe C, Hauschild A, Volkenandt M, Schadendorf D, Stolz W, Kortmann RD, Kettelhack C, Frerich B, Keilholz U, Dummer R, Sebastian G, Tilgen W, Schuler G, Mackensen A, Kaufmann R. · Universitäts-Hautklinik Tübingen. · J Dtsch Dermatol Ges. · Pubmed #16638065 No free full text.
This publication has no abstract.
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Review Malignant melanoma--sentinel lymph node biopsy and surgical procedures. 2006
Kaufmann R. · Department of Dermatology, J.W. Goethe University, Frankfurt am Main, Germany. · Front Radiat Ther Oncol. · Pubmed #16394676 No free full text.
This publication has no abstract.
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Review Metronomic low-dose chemotherapy as antiangiogenic therapeutic strategy for cancer. 2005
Gille J, Spieth K, Kaufmann R. · Department of Dermatology, Dermato-Oncology Unit, J. W. Goethe-University, Frankfurt am Main, Germany. · J Dtsch Dermatol Ges. · Pubmed #16353746 No free full text.
Abstract: New blood vessel formation is essential for the growth and metastasis of many cancers. As a result, antitumor activities of various angiogenesis inhibitors have been intensely explored in various tumors. Recent preclinical studies suggest that certain conventional cytotoxic agents can function as antiangiogenic drugs when administered at comparatively low doses on a continuous or very frequent schedule. Such antiangiogenic 'metronomic' scheduling of chemotherapy without extended rest periods has been shown to exert significant therapeutic antitumor efficacy with very limited toxicity in different tumor models. Combining metronomic low-dose chemotherapy regimens with specific angiogenesis inhibitors further increases efficacy. Based on the promising preclinical studies, it is anticipated that metronomic chemotherapy in combination with angiogenesis inhibitors will prove effective in clinical trials in terms of survival prolongation. While considerable progress may derive from larger randomized clinical studies, only joint efforts between basic and clinical research will ultimately advance the new paradigm of long-term metronomic antiangiogenic chemotherapy, which carries the prospect of turning cancer into a more controllable chronic disease at minimal toxicity.
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Review Multiple agminated Spitz nevi arising on a café au lait macule: review of the literature with contribution of another case. 2001
Böer A, Wolter M, Kneisel L, Kaufmann R. · Zentrum der Dermatologie und Venerologie, Klinikum der J.W. Goethe-Universität, Frankfurt, Germany. · Pediatr Dermatol. · Pubmed #11841635 No free full text.
Abstract: The majority of Spitz nevi are acquired solitary lesions. Multiple Spitz nevi are rare and may develop on hyperpigmented skin. We report a 16-year-old girl with multiple Spitz nevi arranged on a café au lait macule. Immunohistochemistry showed positivity for S-100 and HMB-45. Of interest, expression of Polo-like kinase (PLK), a novel proliferation marker that recently proved to be positive in up to 98% of malignant melanoma cells, showed positivity in 40% of the nevus cells. The clinical development of multiple Spitz nevi is not yet clear, as they are preferentially excised. Reviewing 70 cases in the literature we found that multiple agminated Spitz nevi occur more frequently than reported previously. In about one-third of these cases Spitz nevi arose on congenitally hyperpigmented skin.
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Review Surgical management of primary melanoma. 2000
Kaufmann R. · Department of Dermatology, J.W.Goethe-University of Frankfurt, Germany. · Clin Exp Dermatol. · Pubmed #11044182 No free full text.
Abstract: Melanoma precursor lesions and stage I malignant melanomas are preferentially removed by excisional surgery. Several studies have supported the concept of a more conservative excision strategy. Reduced safety margins with a maximum of 2-3 cm enable us to cover most defects by simple skin flap techniques. In critical anatomical sites and in lentigo maligna melanoma micrographic surgery has recently gained importance. The value of adjuvant surgical procedures remains controversial. Possibly, the technique of sentinel-node-biopsy provides a better approach towards a more selective use of lymphadenectomy in patients with clinically occult micrometastases.
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Clinical Conference Temozolomide plus pegylated interferon alfa-2b as first-line treatment for stage IV melanoma: a multicenter phase II trial of the Dermatologic Cooperative Oncology Group (DeCOG). free! 2008
Spieth K, Kaufmann R, Dummer R, Garbe C, Becker JC, Hauschild A, Tilgen W, Ugurel S, Beyeler M, Bröcker EB, Kaehler KC, Pföhler C, Gille J, Leiter U, Schadendorf D. · Department of Dermatology, Johann Wolfgang Goethe-University, Frankfurt am Main, Germany. · Ann Oncol. · Pubmed #18178958 links to free full text
Abstract: BACKGROUND: Combination of temozolomide (TMZ) with nonpegylated interferon alfa is associated with increased efficacy in terms of response rates compared with monotherapy. A multicenter phase II study was carried out to assess the activity and toxicity of TMZ plus pegylated interferon alfa-2b (peg-IFNalpha-2b), hypothesizing improved efficacy due to modified pharmacokinetic properties of the novel interferon (IFN) formulation. PATIENTS AND METHODS: In all, 124 patients with stage IV melanoma without prior chemotherapy and no cerebral metastases were treated with 100 mug peg-IFNalpha-2b s.c. per week and oral TMZ 200 mg/m(2) (days 1-5, every 28 days). Primary study end point was objective response, and secondary end points were overall and progression-free survival (PFS) and safety. RESULTS: In all, 116 patients were assessable for response: 2 (1.7%) had a complete response and 19 (16.4%) a partial response (overall response rate 18.1%). Of total, 25.0% achieved disease stabilization and 56.9% progressed. Overall survival was 9.4 months; PFS was 2.8 months. Grade 3/4 thrombocytopenia occurred in 20.7% and grade 3/4 leukopenia in 23.3%. CONCLUSIONS: The efficacy of TMZ plus peg-IFNalpha-2b in this large phase II study is moderate and comparable to published results of the combination of TMZ with non-peg-IFN. Likewise, the safety profile of peg-IFNalpha-2b seems to be similar to non-peg-IFN when combined with TMZ.
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Clinical Conference Temozolomide in combination with interferon-alfa versus temozolomide alone in patients with advanced metastatic melanoma: a randomized, phase III, multicenter study from the Dermatologic Cooperative Oncology Group. 2005
Kaufmann R, Spieth K, Leiter U, Mauch C, von den Driesch P, Vogt T, Linse R, Tilgen W, Schadendorf D, Becker JC, Sebastian G, Krengel S, Kretschmer L, Garbe C, Dummer R, Anonymous00054. · Department of Dermatology, J.W. Goethe-University, Frankfurt am Main, Germany. · J Clin Oncol. · Pubmed #16260697 No free full text.
Abstract: PURPOSE: Temozolomide (TMZ) has shown efficacy in metastatic melanoma equal to that of dacarbazine (DTIC), the standard chemotherapeutic agent for melanoma. As the combination with interferon-alfa (IFN-alpha) appears superior to single-agent DTIC regarding response rates, the purpose of this study was to compare TMZ alone and TMZ plus IFN-alpha in terms of objective response (OR), overall survival, and safety in a prospective, randomized, multicenter trial. PATIENTS AND METHODS: Two hundred ninety-four patients with untreated stage IV metastatic melanoma (American Joint Committee on Cancer staging system) were randomly assigned to receive either oral TMZ alone (200 mg/m2/day; days 1 through 5 every 28 days) or in combination with subcutaneous IFN-alpha (5 MU/m2; days 1, 3, and 5 every week). RESULTS: Two hundred eighty-two patients were eligible for an intent-to-treat analysis, 271 patients were treated per protocol. In the TMZ + IFN-alpha arm, 33 (24.1%) of 137 patients responded to therapy (partial or complete remission) whereas in the monotherapy arm, in 18 (13.4%) of 134 patients, a response was evident. Thus, the response rate was significantly higher in the combination arm (P = .036). Median survival time was 8.4 months for patients treated with TMZ (95% CI, 7.07 to 9.27) and 9.7 months for those treated with the combination (95% CI, 8.26 to 11.18; P = .16). Dose modifications and interval prolongations due to hematologic toxicity were significantly more frequent in the TMZ + IFN-alpha arm (P < .001). CONCLUSION: In metastatic melanoma treatment with TMZ + IFN-alpha leads to a significantly superior OR rate compared to treatment with TMZ alone, which did not translate into prolonged survival in our study population.
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Clinical Conference Metronomic oral low-dose treosulfan chemotherapy combined with cyclooxygenase-2 inhibitor in pretreated advanced melanoma: a pilot study. 2003
Spieth K, Kaufmann R, Gille J. · Department of Dermatology, Klinikum der J.W. Goethe-Universität, Theodor-Stern-Kai 7, 60590 Frankfurt am Main, Germany. · Cancer Chemother Pharmacol. · Pubmed #12879280 No free full text.
Abstract: PURPOSE: The safety and efficacy of oral metronomic low-dose treosulfan chemotherapy in combination with the cyclooxygenase-2 (COX-2) inhibitor rofecoxib as a compound with antiangiogenic potential, a therapeutic regimen optimally targeting endothelial cells instead of tumor cells, were assessed in pretreated advanced melanoma patients. METHODS: Endothelial cells were analyzed for proliferation, apoptosis and cytotoxicity in response to increasing concentrations of treosulfan, either in the absence or presence of COX-2 inhibitor, to determine whether inhibition of COX-2 enhanced the effect of treosulfan on cell function. In a clinical pilot study, 12 consecutive patients with pretreated advanced melanoma, meeting the eligibility criteria were enrolled. Patients received combined daily treosulfan chemotherapy (500 mg) with rofecoxib (25 mg). Metastatic lesions were assessed every 12 weeks. Patients with responsive or stable disease were eligible for a further 12-week treatment period. Response criteria according to the WHO handbook for reporting results of cancer treatment were applied. Side effects were classified according to the National Cancer Institute's Common Toxicity Criteria v2.0. RESULTS: At noncytotoxic concentrations, treosulfan inhibited endothelial cell proliferation in a dose-dependent fashion. Simultaneous inhibition of COX-2 significantly increased the extent to which treosulfan suppressed cell proliferation, without inducing cytotoxicity. In the pilot study in which 12 patients were treated, toxicity was mild; only hematologic toxicity of grade II was seen. An objective response was noted in one patient, and four patients showed stabilization of their disease for 24 weeks (one) and 36 weeks (three). The patient who had a partial response subsequently showed stable disease for 48 weeks. The median survival time was 13 months. CONCLUSIONS: As increases in response rates following polychemo- or biochemotherapy have not been shown to correlate with prolongation in overall survival, more durable control of metastatic melanoma represents an attractive therapeutic goal. Thus, regimens scheduled to primarily target endothelial cells may potentially provide a palliative alternative that preserves quality of life in the absence of significant treatment-related toxicity.
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Clinical Conference Dacarbazine and interferon alpha with or without interleukin 2 in metastatic melanoma: a randomized phase III multicentre trial of the Dermatologic Cooperative Oncology Group (DeCOG). free! 2001
Hauschild A, Garbe C, Stolz W, Ellwanger U, Seiter S, Dummer R, Ugurel S, Sebastian G, Nashan D, Linse R, Achtelik W, Mohr P, Kaufmann R, Fey M, Ulrich J, Tilgen W. · Department of Dermatology, Christian-Albrechts-University, Kiel. · Br J Cancer. · Pubmed #11308250 links to free full text
Abstract: In several phase II-trials encouraging tumour responses rates in advanced metastatic melanoma (stage IV; AJCC-classification) have been reported for the application of biochemotherapy containing interleukin 2. This study was designed to compare the efficacy of therapy with dacarbazine (DTIC) and interferon alpha (IFN-alpha) only to that of therapy with DTIC and IFN-alpha with the addition of interleukin 2 (IL-2) in terms of the overall survival time and rate of objective remissions and to provide an elaborated toxicity profile for both types of therapy. 290 patients were randomized to receive either DTIC (850 mg/m(2)every 28 days) plus IFN-alpha2a/b (3 MIU/m(2), twice on day 1, once daily from days 2 to 5; 5 MIU/m(2)3 times a week from week 2 to 4) with or without IL-2 (4.5 MIU/m(2)for 3 hours i.v. on day 3; 9.0 MIU/m(2) i.v. day 3/4; 4.5 MIU/m(2) s.c. days 4 to 7). The treatment plan required at least 2 treatment cycles (8 weeks of therapy) for every patient. Of 290 randomized patients 281 were eligible for an intention-to-treat analysis. There was no difference in terms of survival time from treatment onset between the two arms (median 11.0 months each). In 273 patients treated according to protocol tumour response was assessable. The response rates did not differ between both arms (P = 0.87) with 18.0% objective responses (9.7% PR; 8.3% CR) for DTIC plus IFN-alpha as compared to 16.1% (8.8% PR; 7.3% CR) for DTIC, IFN-alpha and IL-2. Treatment cessation due to adverse reactions was significantly more common in patients receiving IL-2 (13.9%) than in patients receiving DTIC/IFN-alpha only (5.6%). In conclusion, there was neither a difference in survival time nor in tumour response rates when IL-2, applied according to the combined intravenous and subcutaneous schedule used for this study, was added to DTIC and IFN-alpha. However, toxicity was increased in melanoma patients treated with IL-2. Further phase III trials with continuous infusion and higher dosages must be performed before any final conclusions can be drawn on the potential usefulness of IL-2 in biochemotherapy of advanced melanoma.
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Article Prospective randomized multicenter adjuvant dermatologic cooperative oncology group trial of low-dose interferon alfa-2b with or without a modified high-dose interferon alfa-2b induction phase in patients with lymph node-negative melanoma. 2009
Hauschild A, Weichenthal M, Rass K, Linse R, Ulrich J, Stadler R, Volkenandt M, Grabbe S, Proske U, Schadendorf D, Brockmeyer N, Vogt T, Rompel R, Kaufmann R, Kaatz M, Näher H, Mohr P, Eigentler T, Livingstone E, Garbe C. · Department of Dermatology, University Hospital of Schleswig-Holstein, Campus Kiel, Schittenhelmstr 7, D-24105 Kiel, Germany. · J Clin Oncol. · Pubmed #19433681 No free full text.
Abstract: PURPOSE Interferon alfa (IFN-alpha) has shown clinical efficacy in the adjuvant treatment of patients with high-risk melanoma in several clinical trials, but optimal dosing and duration of treatment are still under discussion. It has been argued that in high-dose IFN-alpha (HDI), the intravenous (IV) induction phase might be critical for the clinical benefit of the regimen. PATIENTS AND METHODS In an attempt to investigate the potential role of a modified high-dose induction phase, lymph node-negative patients with resected primary malignant melanoma of more than 1.5-mm tumor thickness were included in this prospective randomized multicenter Dermatologic Cooperative Oncology Group trial. Six hundred seventy-four patients were randomly assigned to receive 4 weeks of a modified HDI scheme. This schedule consisted of 5 times weekly 10 MU/m(2) IFN-alpha-2b IV for 2 weeks and 5 times weekly 10 MU/m(2) IFN-alpha-2b administered subcutaneously (SC) for another 2 weeks followed by 23 months of low-dose IFN-alpha-2b (LDI) 3 MU SC three times a week (arm A). LDI 3 MU three times a week was given for 24 months in arm B. Results Of 650 assessable patients, there were 92 relapses among the 321 patients receiving high-dose induction as compared with 95 relapses among the 329 patients receiving LDI only. Five-year relapse-free survival rates were 68.0% (arm A) and 67.1% (arm B), respectively. Likewise, melanoma-related fatalities were similar between both groups, resulting in 5-year overall survival rates of 80.2% (arm A) and 82.9% (arm B). CONCLUSION The addition of a 4-week modified HDI induction phase to a 2-year low-dose adjuvant IFN-alpha-2b treatment schedule did not improve the clinical outcome.
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Article Short German guidelines: malignant melanoma. 2008
Garbe C, Schadendorf D, Stolz W, Volkenandt M, Reinhold U, Kortmann RD, Kettelhack C, Frerich B, Keilholz U, Dummer R, Sebastian G, Tilgen W, Schuler G, Mackensen A, Kaufmann R, Hauschild A. · Sektion Dermatologische Onkologie, Universitäts-Hautklinik, Liebermeister Strasse 25, D-72076 Tübingen, Germany. · J Dtsch Dermatol Ges. · Pubmed #18801142 No free full text.
This publication has no abstract.
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Article Evidence and interdisciplinary consense-based German guidelines: diagnosis and surveillance of melanoma. 2007
Garbe C, Hauschild A, Volkenandt M, Schadendorf D, Stolz W, Reinhold U, Kortmann RD, Kettelhack C, Frerich B, Keilholz U, Dummer R, Sebastian G, Tilgen W, Schuler G, Mackensen A, Kaufmann R. · University Department of Dermatology, Tübingen, Germany. · Melanoma Res. · Pubmed #17992123 No free full text.
Abstract: Melanoma is a malignant tumor that arises from melanocytic cells and primarily involves the skin. The most important exogenous etiological factor is exposure to ultraviolet irradiation. Diagnosis of melanoma is based primarily on its clinical features, and the A-B-C-D rule is useful in identifying pigmented lesions, which are suspicious for melanoma (Asymmetry, Border irregular, Color inhomogeneous and Diameter more than 5 mm). Dermoscopy is very helpful in clarifying the differential diagnosis of pigmented lesions. About 90% of melanomas are diagnosed as primary tumors without any evidence for metastasis. The tumor-specific 10-year survival for all such tumors is about 75-85%. The most important prognostic factors for primary melanoma without metastases are vertical tumor thickness (Breslow depth) as measured on the histological specimen, presence of histopathologically recognized ulceration, invasion level (Clark level) and identification of micrometastases in the regional lymph nodes via sentinel lymph node biopsy. The current tumor node metastasis classification for the staging of primary melanoma is based on these factors. Melanomas can metastasize either by the lymphatic or by the hematogenous route. About two-thirds of metastases are originally confined to the drainage area of regional lymph nodes. A regional metastasis can appear as satellite metastases up to 2 cm from the primary tumor, as intransit metastases in the skin between the site of the primary tumor and the first lymph node and as regional lymph node metastases. In the stage of regional metastasis, the differentiation between micrometastasis and macrometastasis and the number of lymph nodes involved are crucial. As soon as distant metastasis develops, prognosis depends on the site of the metastasis and on the lactate dehydrogenase levels in the blood. The frequency and extent of follow-up examinations is based on the initial tumor parameters. In thin primary melanomas up to 1-mm tumor thickness, clinical examinations at 6-month intervals are sufficient and in thicker primary melanomas, at 3-month intervals. Lymph node sonography as well as determination of the tumor marker protein S100beta are recommended. Additionally, in the stage of regional metastasis, whole body imaging should be performed every 6 months; in the stage of distant metastasis, surveillance has to be scheduled individually.
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Article Topical imiquimod: effectiveness in intraepithelial melanoma of oral mucosa. 2006
Spieth K, Kovács A, Wolter M, Bug R, Kaufmann R, Gille J. · Department of Dermatology, J W Goethe-University, Frankfurt am Main, Germany. · Lancet Oncol. · Pubmed #17138226 No free full text.
This publication has no abstract.
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Article Restoration of E-cadherin sensitizes human melanoma cells for apoptosis. 2006
Kippenberger S, Loitsch S, Thaçi D, Müller J, Guschel M, Kaufmann R, Bernd A. · Department of Dermatology, Division of Pneumology, University of Frankfurt Medical School, Frankfurt/Main, Germany. · Melanoma Res. · Pubmed #17013088 No free full text.
Abstract: Cell-cell adhesion is considered to be important in the development and maintenance of organ tissue. The spatial association between melanocytes and keratinocytes within human epidermis is achieved by homophilic interaction of E-cadherin molecules located on adjacent cells. In contrast, downregulation of E-cadherin expression in melanoma cells is considered as a key event in metastasis. Besides the adhesive properties, E-cadherin serves as a signal receptor linking to the cadherin-catenin signaling complex. As cadherins act as negative regulators of beta-catenin, a contribution to tumor formation seems likely. In the present study, it was tested whether ectopic expression of E-cadherin triggers apoptosis in human melanoma cell lines (G-361, JPC-298, SK-Mel-13). It was found that restoration of E-cadherin caused sensitization against drug-induced apoptosis. Particularly, the release of mitochondrial cytochrome c was increased in response to staurosporine. Moreover, activation of caspase-3 and caspase-8 was elevated. Similarly, DNA fragmentation, serving as a marker for advanced apoptosis, was amplified in cells transduced with E-cadherin. Interestingly, transduction with an E-cadherin construct lacking the extracellular domain showed no modified apoptosis. In conclusion, our findings suggest therapeutic strategies that enable expression of E-cadherin in order to sensitize human melanoma cells towards apoptosis.
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Article The ability of different forms of heparins to suppress P-selectin function in vitro correlates to their inhibitory capacity on bloodborne metastasis in vivo. 2006
Ludwig RJ, Alban S, Bistrian R, Boehncke WH, Kaufmann R, Henschler R, Gille J. · Department of Dermatology, Johann Wolfgang Goethe-University, Frankfurt am Main, Germany. · Thromb Haemost. · Pubmed #16525583 No free full text.
Abstract: Ample evidence suggests that many of the in vivo anti-metastatic effects by heparins reflect their actions on P-selectin-mediated binding. We hypothesized that the ability of widely used heparins and derivatives to interfere with P-selectin-dependent tumour cell interactions under flow in vitro could be used to identify anticoagulants with advanced inhibitory functions on experimental blood-borne metastasis in vivo. To test this assumption, the impact of unfractionated heparin, the low-molecular-weight heparins (LMWH) nadroparin and enoxaparin, and the synthetic pentasaccharide fondaparinux on P-selectin-dependent tumour interactions in vitro and metastasis formation in vivo were evaluated. Our data revealed that these commonly used anticoagulants widely differ in their potential to interfere with P-selectinmediated cell binding. Importantly, the superior inhibitory capacity on P-selectin function of unfractionated heparin and LMWH nadroparin as opposed to LMWH enoxaparin and synthetic heparin pentasaccharide fondaparinux strongly correlated to the inhibitory potency of each in inhibiting experimental lung metastasis in vivo. Hence, P-selectin inhibition may constitute a valuable feature to identify anticoagulants that are suitable for anticancer therapy.
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Article [Pseudomelanoma following laser treatment or laser-treated melanoma?] 2003
Böer A, Wolter M, Kaufmann R. · Zentrum der Dermatologie und Venerologie, Klinikum der J. W. Goethe-Universität, Frankfurt am Main. · J Dtsch Dermatol Ges. · Pubmed #16285292 No free full text.
Abstract: BACKGROUND: The increasing use of lasers for the removal of pigmented skin lesions has led to a growing risk of erroneously treated malignant melanocytic tumours. PATIENTS AND METHODS: In two patients, both of whom developed a melanoma, the lesions were initially misdiagnosed clinically as a benign naevus and treated with laser vaporisation. RESULTS: On recurrence of the tumours, the diagnosis of melanoma was finally established by histological examination of the excised tumours in which differentiation from pseudomelanoma remained difficult. CONCLUSIONS: In such cases of initially misdiagnosed melanomas, laser removal not only complicates and delays the correct diagnosis but might also worsen the prognosis after recurrence of an incompletely removed tumour.
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Article Endothelial P-selectin as a target of heparin action in experimental melanoma lung metastasis. free! 2004
Ludwig RJ, Boehme B, Podda M, Henschler R, Jager E, Tandi C, Boehncke WH, Zollner TM, Kaufmann R, Gille J. · Department of Dermatology, Klinikum der J. W. Goethe-Universität, Frankfurt am Main, Germany. · Cancer Res. · Pubmed #15087389 links to free full text
Abstract: Spontaneous and experimental metastasis can be effectively inhibited by the widely used anticoagulant heparin in different tumor models. At the cellular level, many of the antimetastatic effects of heparin in vivo are due to its action on P-selectin-mediated binding. Whereas previous attention has focused on P-selectin-dependent tumor-cell-platelet interactions in blood-borne metastasis, we sought to address the potential contribution of endothelial P-selectin expression to adhesive events between the microvasculature and melanoma cells in vivo. Transplantation of bone marrow from P-selectin-deficient into wild-type mice conveyed inhibition of ex-perimental melanoma metastasis. However, the extent to which bone marrow-conferred lack of platelet P-selectin expression attenuated melanoma lung metastasis was significantly less than that seen in P-selectin-deficient mice, suggesting that endothelial P-selectin expression may additionally contribute to formation of hematogenous metastases. This assumption was supported by our intravital microscopy studies, in which a significant proportion of melanoma cells were capable of directly interacting with postcapillary venules of the murine ear in a P-selectin-dependent manner. Heparin not only inhibits P-selectin-mediated melanoma cell rolling but also attenuates melanoma metastasis formation in vivo, further supporting the concept that endothelial P-selectin expression may represent an additional target of heparin action in experimental melanoma lung metastasis.
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Article Challenging cases and diagnostic dilemmas: case 3. Positron emission tomography scan mimicking lymph node metastases in a high-risk melanoma patient. 2002
Spieth K, Risse J, Kaufmann R, Gille J. · Zentrum der Dermatologie, Zentrum der Radiologie, Klinikum der J. W. Goethe-Universität, Frankfurt am Main, Germany. · J Clin Oncol. · Pubmed #12149310 No free full text.
This publication has no abstract.
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Article Expression of polo-like kinase (PLK1) in thin melanomas: a novel marker of metastatic disease. 2002
Kneisel L, Strebhardt K, Bernd A, Wolter M, Binder A, Kaufmann R. · Department of Dermatology, Johann Wolfgang Goethe-University, School of Medicine, Theodor-Stern-Kai 7, 60590 Frankfurt, Germany. · J Cutan Pathol. · Pubmed #12135466 No free full text.
Abstract: BACKGROUND: The maximum thickness of a primary malignant melanoma as measured by Breslow's method is currently the most important prognostic factor. However, some thin melanomas (< or= 0.75 mm), which should have an excellent prognosis according to Breslow, can be lethal due to their ability to metastasize. METHODS: In our study, thin malignant melanomas (< or= 0.75 mm) from 36 patients were analyzed with immunohistochemical techniques using monoclonal antibodies directed against PLK1 and Ki-67. The immunoreactivity of 22 melanomas which developed metastases within 5 years of follow-up was compared with a group of 14 non-metastasized melanomas. Two independent investigators evaluated stained sections. Differences of PLK1 and Ki-67 indices between melanomas with and without metastases were tested statistically using the Mann-Whitney U-test. RESULTS: Malignant melanomas with metastases expressed PLK1 at markedly elevated levels compared to melanomas without metastases (median, 60.00% vs. 37.98%; p = 0.000053). The difference of the Ki-67 index between both groups was not significant (median, 6.35% vs. 4.53%; p = 0.150473). CONCLUSIONS: Our results suggest that PLK1 expression in thin melanomas is a reliable marker to identify patients at high risk for metastases.
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Minor Prognostic value of pololike kinase expression in melanomas. 2000
Strebhardt K, Kneisel L, Linhart C, Bernd A, Kaufmann R. · No affiliation provided · JAMA. · Pubmed #10659871 No free full text.
This publication has no abstract.
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