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Dive into the research topics where Bengt Sandstedt is active.

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Featured researches published by Bengt Sandstedt.


Immunology | 2002

Expression and regulation of the pattern recognition receptors Toll‐like receptor‐2 and Toll‐like receptor‐4 in the human placenta

Ulrika Holmlund; Gvido Cebers; Agneta R. Dahlfors; Bengt Sandstedt; Katarina Bremme; Eva S. EkstrÖm; Annika Scheynius

The placenta constitutes a physical and immunological barrier against invading infectious agents and has been suggested to be a pregnancy‐specific component of the innate immune system. The aim of this study was to investigate the presence and regulation of Toll‐like receptors‐2 and ‐4 (TLR2 and TLR4) in the human placenta, because these receptors are believed to be important for immune responses against pathogens. Twenty‐eight placentas from normal term pregnancies were analysed with immunohistochemistry, which showed a strong immunoreactivity for TLR2 and TLR4 in the villous and the intermediate trophoblasts. The regulation of TLR2 and TLR4 by microbial stimulus was assessed by incubating explants of term chorionic villi with zymosan or lipopolysaccharide (LPS) and analysed with real‐time reverse transcriptase–polymerase chain reaction. Stimulation with zymosan and LPS readily induced interleukin (IL)‐6 and IL‐8 cytokine production in the placenta cultures, whereas TLR2 and TLR4 mRNA and protein expression remained at the same high level as in unstimulated explants. These data suggests a novel mechanism for the fetoplacental unit to interact with micro‐organisms.


International Journal of Cancer | 2005

Antimicrobial protein hCAP18/LL-37 is highly expressed in breast cancer and is a putative growth factor for epithelial cells

Johan Heilborn; Margareta Frohm Nilsson; Clara I. Chamorro Jimenez; Bengt Sandstedt; Niels Borregaard; Emma Tham; Ole E. Sørensen; Günther Weber; Mona Ståhle

Human cathelicidin antimicrobial protein hCAP18/LL‐37 is an effector molecule of the nonspecific innate immune system. hCAP18/LL‐37 is present in leukocytes and is expressed in skin and other epithelia, where it is upregulated in association with inflammation and injury. In addition, antimicrobial proteins including cathelicidins have been proposed to play a role in the nonspecific defense against tumors. To assess its potential role in tumor host defense, we investigated the expression of hCAP18/LL‐37 in a series of breast carcinomas. Unexpectedly, we found that hCAP18/LL‐37 was strongly expressed in the tumor cells and not in the adjacent stroma. To test the hypothesis that hCAP18/LL‐37 may provide a growth advantage for the tumor cells, we treated human epithelial cell lines with synthetic biologically active LL‐37 peptide and found a significant increase in cell proliferation. In addition, transgenic expression of hCAP18 in 2 different human epithelial cell lines resulted in increased proliferation of both cell types. These findings do not support the hypothesis that LL‐37 has an antitumor effect, but rather suggest that hCAP18/LL‐37 may promote tumor cell growth in breast cancer.


Experimental Dermatology | 2002

Neutrophil gelatinase-associated lipocalin is a marker for dysregulated keratinocyte differentiation in human skin

Lotus Mallbris; Kevin P. O'Brien; Anna Hulthén; Bengt Sandstedt; Jack B. Cowland; Niels Borregaard; Mona Ståhle-Bäckdahl

Abstract: Neutrophil gelatinase‐associated lipocalin (NGAL) is a 25‐kDa protein initially isolated from the specific granules of human neutrophils. It is a member of the highly heterogeneous lipocalin protein family, which shares a common tertiary structure. Its synthesis is induced in gastrointestinal epithelium in association with inflammation and malignancy. To gain insight into its potential role in other epithelia we have investigated the expression of NGAL in human skin embryonic development, in normal adult skin, and in skin associated with inflammation and neoplastic transformation. In the present study we report that the embryonic expression of NGAL appears to be regulated in a spatio‐temporal pattern. It was induced in the interfollicular epidermis at 20–24 weeks of gestational age but thereafter progressively receded towards the hair follicles. In normal adult skin, NGAL was detected solely in association with hair follicles. However, strong induction of NGAL in the epidermis was seen in a variety of skin disorders characterized by dysregulated epithelial differentiation such as psoriasis, pityriasis rubra and squamous cell carcinoma. In these tissues production of NGAL was confined to spatially distinct subpopulations of keratinocytes underlying areas of parakeratosis, whereas skin samples lacking parakeratotic epithelium such as lichen ruber planus, acute contact eczema and basal cell carcinoma were negative for NGAL. Consistent with being a marker for disturbed terminal differentiation, NGAL immunoreactivity showed an inverse pattern when compared with that of the differentiation marker filaggrin. The biologic functions of NGAL in epithelia are not fully known, although an immunomodulatory role in host defense has been proposed. In addition, the transient interfollicular NGAL expression during skin embryogenesis along with the induction of NGAL in adult parakeratotic epidermis suggests it play a role in epithelial differentiation pathways.


Medical and Pediatric Oncology | 2000

Complete necrosis induced by preoperative chemotherapy in Wilms tumor as an indicator of low risk: report of the international society of paediatric oncology (SIOP) nephroblastoma trial and study 9.

Liliane Boccon-Gibod; Annie Rey; Bengt Sandstedt; J. F. M. Delemarre; Dieter Harms; Gordan Vujanic; Jan de Kraker; Angela Weirich; Marie-France Tournade

BACKGROUND The SIOP Nephroblastoma therapeutic protocols include a period of preoperative chemotherapy followed by nephrectomy and a period of postoperative chemotherapy. From the outset, identification of low-risk groups has been an aim of the SIOP Nephroblastoma Trials and Studies. Now that 90% of children with Wilms tumor can be cured, attention is even more focused on the identification of patients who could benefit from less aggressive postoperative therapy, thus minimizing the morbidity and late effects associated with treatment. The prognostic implications of total necrosis in nephroblastoma after chemotherapy have not been investigated hitherto. PROCEDURE Between November 1, 1987 and June 30, 1993, 599 patients referred to the SIOP-9 Nephroblastoma Trial and Study were preoperatively treated and classified as stages I-IV nonanaplastic Wilms tumor. RESULTS Of these 599 patients, pathologic examination of the nephrectomy specimen revealed a completely necrotic Wilms tumor (CNWT) with no viable tumor remaining in 59 (10%): these comprised 37 stages I-III and 22 stage IV. Of these patients, 58 (98%) had no evidence of disease at 5 years vs. 90% for the rest of the cohort (P < 0.05). Stages I-III patients represented 63% of CNWT and had a 97% overall survival rate. The only death was related to veno-occlusive disease and occurred in a stage I patient in the month following nephrectomy. Stage IV patients represented 37% of CNWT (vs. only 10% of all other cases of unilateral nonanaplastic Wilms tumor) and had a 100% rate of survival. Children with CNWT were older (mean 59 months vs. 43 months); their tumor at diagnosis was larger and had regressed more significantly at subsequent ultrasound examination. The data also uphold the hypothesis that Wilms tumors of blastemic pattern are most aggressive, but also are extremely responsive to chemotherapy. CONCLUSIONS Patients with unilateral nonanaplastic WT that showed total necrosis following preoperative chemotherapy had excellent outcome and should benefit from less aggressive postoperative treatment in further trials. Other very responsive tumors, such as Wilms with <10% viable tumor, should also be assessed.


Journal of Clinical Pathology | 2010

The pathology of Wilms' tumour (nephroblastoma): the International Society of Paediatric Oncology approach

Gordan Vujanic; Bengt Sandstedt

In the International Society of Paediatric Oncology renal tumour trials, preoperative chemotherapy has been successfully applied with resulting reduction of tumour rupture and increased favourable stage distribution of nephroblastoma. Postoperative treatment includes chemotherapy and sometimes radiotherapy in a risk-adapted approach based on histological sub-classification and stage of the tumour. However, preoperative chemotherapy alters the tumours histological features and distribution of subtypes, and makes staging more difficult. The paper highlights the most common practical diagnostic difficulties that a pathologist is faced with in dealing with pretreated nephroblastomas. It emphasises the importance of a systematic, step-by-step analysis based on adequately sampled material, in order to accurately sub-classify a nephroblastoma as a low, intermediate or high risk tumour and assign its genuine stage. Finally, it outlines the standard operating procedure for submission of renal tumours for rapid central pathology review which allows the treating oncologists to apply the optimal treatment protocol.


Biomedical Engineering Online | 2005

Influence of electrical and thermal properties on RF ablation of breast cancer: is the tumour preferentially heated?

Vilhelm Ekstrand; Hans Wiksell; Inkeri Schultz; Bengt Sandstedt; Samuel Rotstein; Anders Eriksson

BackgroundTechniques based on radio frequency (RF) energy have many applications in medicine, in particular tumour ablation. Today, mammography screening detects many breast cancers at an early stage, facilitating treatment by minimally invasive techniques such as radio frequency ablation (RFA). The breast cancer is mostly surrounded by fat, which during RFA-treatment could result in preferential heating of the tumour due to the substantial differences in electrical parameters. The object of this study was to investigate if this preferential heating existed during experimental in vitro protocols and during computer simulations.MethodsExcised breast material from four patients with morphologically diagnosed breast cancers were treated with our newly developed RFA equipment. Subsequently, two finite element method (FEM) models were developed; one with only fat and one with fat and an incorporated breast cancer of varying size. The FEM models were solved using temperature dependent electrical conductivity versus constant conductivity, and transient versus steady-state analyses.ResultsOur experimental study performed on excised breast tissue showed a preferential heating of the tumour, even if associated with long tumour strands. The fat between these tumour strands was surprisingly unaffected. Furthermore, the computer simulations demonstrated that the difference in electrical and thermal parameters between fat and tumour tissue can cause preferential heating of the tumour. The specific absorption rate (SAR) distribution changed significantly when a tumour was present in fatty tissue. The degree of preferential heating depended on tissue properties, tumour shape, and placement relative to the electrode. Temperature dependent electrical conductivity increased the thermal lesion volume, but did not change the preferential heating. Transient solutions decreased the thermal lesion volume but increased the preferential heating of the tumour.ConclusionBoth the computer model and the in vitro study confirmed that preferential heating of the tumour during RFA exists in breast tissue. However, the observed preferential heating in the in vitro studies were more pronounced, indicating that additional effects other than the difference in tissue parameters might be involved. The existing septa layers between the cancer tissue and the fatty tissue could have an additional electrical or thermal insulating effect, explaining the discrepancy between the in vitro study and the computer model.


Pediatric Blood & Cancer | 2011

Malignant rhabdoid tumours of the kidney (MRTKs), registered on recent SIOP protocols from 1993 to 2005: A report of the SIOP renal tumour study group

Marry M. van den Heuvel-Eibrink; Harm van Tinteren; Harriet Rehorst; Aurore Coulombe; Catharine Patte; Beatriz de Camargo; Jan de Kraker; Ivo Leuschner; Rieneke T. Lugtenberg; Kathy Pritchard-Jones; Bengt Sandstedt; Filippo Spreafico; Norbert Graf; Gordan Vujanic

Survival data of malignant rhabdoid tumour of the kidney (MRTK) registered in SIOP trials, advocating preoperative chemotherapy, are not available. Aim To evaluate characteristics, response and survival of MRTK patients registered in recent SIOP protocols.


Breast Cancer Research | 2009

Human antimicrobial protein hCAP18/LL-37 promotes a metastatic phenotype in breast cancer

Günther Weber; Clara Ibel Chamorro; Fredrik Granath; Annelie Liljegren; Sami Zreika; Zuzana Saidak; Bengt Sandstedt; Samuel Rotstein; Romuald Mentaverri; Fabio Sánchez; Andor Pivarcsi; Mona Ståhle

IntroductionHuman cathelicidin antimicrobial protein, hCAP18, and its C-terminal peptide LL-37 is a multifunctional protein. In addition to being important in antimicrobial defense, it induces chemotaxis, stimulates angiogenesis and promotes tissue repair. We previously showed that human breast cancer cells express high amounts of hCAP18, and hypothesised that hCAP18/LL-37 may be involved in tumour progression.MethodshCAP18 mRNA was quantified in 109 primary breast cancers and compared with clinical findings and ERBB2 mRNA expression. Effects of exogenous LL-37 and transgenic overexpression of hCAP18 on ErbB2 signalling were investigated by immunoblotting using extracts from breast cancer cell lines ZR75-1 and derivatives of MCF7. We further analysed the impact of hCAP18/LL-37 on the morphology of breast cancer cells grown in soft agar, on cell migration and on tumour development in severe combined immunodeficiency (SCID) mice.ResultsThe expression of hCAP18 correlated closely with that of ERBB2 and with the presence of lymph node metastases in oestrogen receptor-positive tumours. hCAP18/LL-37 amplified Heregulin-induced mitogen-activated protein kinase (MAPK) signalling through ErbB2, identifying a functional association between hCAP18/LL-37 and ErbB2 in breast cancer. Treatment with LL-37 peptide significantly stimulated the migration of breast cancer cells and their colonies acquired a dispersed morphology indicative of increased metastatic potential. A truncated version of LL-37 competitively inhibited LL-37 induced MAPK phosphorylation and significantly reduced the number of altered cancer cell colonies induced by LL-37 as well as suppressed their migration. Transgenic overexpression of hCAP18 in a low malignant breast cancer cell line promoted the development of metastases in SCID mice, and analysis of hCAP18 transgenic tumours showed enhanced activation of MAPK signalling.ConclusionsOur results provide evidence that hCAP18/LL-37 contributes to breast cancer metastasis.


European Journal of Obstetrics & Gynecology and Reproductive Biology | 1991

Placental morphology in relation to umbilical artery blood velocity waveforms

Margareta Nordenvall; Ulla Ullberg; Jan Laurin; Göran Lingman; Bengt Sandstedt; Ulf Ulmsten

The association between umbilical artery flow velocity waveforms, placental morphology and arterial vascular pattern was investigated in 30 pregnant women at risk for intra-uterine growth retardation. The blood velocity waveform was assessed in the umbilical arteries with pulsed Doppler ultrasound. Placentas from fetuses with an end-diastolic zero flow were small and thick with an extrachorial configuration, marginal cord insertion, magistral or mixed allantochorial vessel pattern and few cotyledons. The incidence and the extension of gross lesions were slightly increased in these placentas compared to placentas from fetuses with a normal S/D ratio (peak systolic velocity/minimum diastolic velocity). Placentas from fetuses with an increased S/D ratio (greater than +2SD) were large and thin with a high maximum diameter/maximum thickness ratio. Heavily smoking mothers were overrepresented in the group, with an increased S/D ratio and corresponding SGA infants. End-diastolic zero flow in the umbilical artery was strongly correlated with placental developmental abnormalities.


The Journal of Urology | 2001

ANGIOGENESIS AND ANGIOGENIC GROWTH FACTORS IN WILMS TUMOR

Erik Sköldenberg; Johan Christiansson; Bengt Sandstedt; Anders Larsson; Göran Läckgren; Rolf Christofferson

PURPOSE Angiogenesis, that is new blood vessel formation, is a prerequisite for growth and metastasis of solid tumors. This study was undertaken to quantify tumor capillaries, investigate immunohistochemical expression and measure serum concentrations of angiogenic growth factors in patients with Wilms tumor. MATERIALS AND METHODS The hospital records of 33 patients were reviewed and new slides were stained for the endothelial cell marker CD31. Capillaries were quantified in the most vascularized part of the tumor (hot spot) and in the whole slide. New slides were stained immunohistochemically for the angiogenic growth factors angiogenin, basic fibroblast growth factor (bFGF), transforming growth factor alpha, transforming growth factor beta1-3, tumor necrosis factor alpha and vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF), and their immunoreactivity was quantified. Pretreatment serum samples from 14 patients and 56 healthy control children were analyzed using enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay kits for angiogenin, basic fibroblast growth factor, epidermal growth factor, hepatocyte growth factor, tumor necrosis factor alpha and VEGF. RESULTS Logistic regression analysis and Kaplan-Meier estimates showed that quantifications based on the tumor hot spot had a significant impact on survival probability (p <0.05). The tumor hot spot counts were highest in the blastemal compartment. Levels of hepatocyte growth factor and VEGF in serum were 3 times higher than those in controls (p <0.01). CONCLUSIONS Although the sample size is small in this study, the results imply that angiogenesis in Wilms tumor is driven by angiogenic growth factors, and that intratumoral capillary quantification and determinations of serum levels of angiogenic growth factors may be of clinical value.

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Jan de Kraker

Boston Children's Hospital

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Jan Godzinski

Wrocław Medical University

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Harm van Tinteren

Netherlands Cancer Institute

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J. de Kraker

University of Amsterdam

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