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Dive into the research topics where Bernhard Wörmann is active.

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Featured researches published by Bernhard Wörmann.


Journal of Clinical Oncology | 2005

Immunochemotherapy With Rituximab and Cyclophosphamide, Doxorubicin, Vincristine, and Prednisone Significantly Improves Response and Time to Treatment Failure, But Not Long-Term Outcome in Patients With Previously Untreated Mantle Cell Lymphoma: Results of a Prospective Randomized Trial of the German Low Grade Lymphoma Study Group (GLSG)

Georg Lenz; Martin Dreyling; Eva Hoster; Bernhard Wörmann; Ulrich Dührsen; Bernd Metzner; Hartmut Eimermacher; Andreas Neubauer; Hannes Wandt; Hjalmar Steinhauer; Sonja Martin; Else Heidemann; Ali Aldaoud; Reza Parwaresch; Joerg Hasford; Michael Unterhalt; Wolfgang Hiddemann

PURPOSE Mantle cell lymphoma (MCL) is characterized by a poor prognosis with a low to moderate sensitivity to chemotherapy and a median survival of only 3 to 4 years. In an attempt to improve outcome, the German Low Grade Lymphoma Study Group (GLSG) initiated a randomized trial comparing the combination of cyclophosphamide, doxorubicin, vincristine, and prednisone (CHOP) and rituximab (R-CHOP) with CHOP alone as first-line therapy for advanced-stage MCL. PATIENTS AND METHODS One hundred twenty-two previously untreated patients with advanced-stage MCL were randomly assigned to six cycles of CHOP (n = 60) or R-CHOP (n = 62). Patients up to 65 years of age achieving a partial or complete remission underwent a second randomization to either myeloablative radiochemotherapy followed by autologous stem-cell transplantation or interferon alfa maintenance (IFNalpha). All patients older than 65 years received IFNalpha maintenance. RESULTS R-CHOP was significantly superior to CHOP in terms of overall response rate (94% v 75%; P = .0054), complete remission rate (34% v 7%; P = .00024), and time to treatment failure (TTF; median, 21 v 14 months; P = .0131). No differences were observed for progression-free survival. Toxicity was acceptable, with no major differences between the two therapeutic groups. CONCLUSION The combined immunochemotherapy with R-CHOP resulted in a significantly higher response rate and a prolongation of the TTF as compared with chemotherapy alone. Hence, R-CHOP may serve as a new baseline regimen for advanced stage MCL, but needs to be further improved by novel strategies in remission.


Journal of Clinical Oncology | 2009

Improvement of Overall Survival in Advanced Stage Mantle Cell Lymphoma

Annina Herrmann; Eva Hoster; Thomas Zwingers; Günter Brittinger; Marianne Engelhard; Peter Meusers; Marcel Reiser; Roswitha Forstpointner; Bernd Metzner; Norma Peter; Bernhard Wörmann; Lorenz Trümper; Michael Pfreundschuh; Hermann Einsele; Wolfgang Hiddemann; Michael Unterhalt; Martin Dreyling

PURPOSE Mantle cell lymphomas (MCLs) represent a clinically aggressive lymphoma subtype with a poor prognosis. To explore a potential progress in outcome a historical comparison was performed using data from the Kiel Lymphoma Study Group (KLSG; 1975 to 1986) and the German Low Grade Lymphoma Study Group (GLSG; 1996 to 2004). PATIENTS AND METHODS All patients with the histologically confirmed diagnosis of advanced-stage nonblastoid MCL were eligible. To minimize the potential heterogeneity of different risk profiles frequency matching was pursued. In addition, we adjusted for potential confounding variables by multiple Cox regression. RESULTS A total of 520 patients were assessable, 150 from KLSG and 370 from GLSG studies. The median overall survival was 2.7 years for KLSG patients as compared with 4.8 years for GLSG patients (P < .0001). The 5-year survival rates were 22% in the KLSG group (95% CI, 13% to 31%) as compared with 47% for GLSG treated patients (95% CI, 38% to 55%). The hazard ratio adjusted for performance status, lactate dehydrogenase, and age was 0.44 for GLSG patients (95% CI, 0.32 to 0.59). CONCLUSION Median overall survival of patients with advanced nonblastoid MCL almost doubled during the past 30 years. Potential reasons for this apparent improvement in overall survival include the application of anthracycline-containing regimens and new approaches, such as antilymphoma antibodies or stem cell transplantation. Advances in general supportive care, new diagnostic tools, and general improvement of life span might have also reinforced this effect. However, our results are questioning the validity of historical comparisons which had been frequently applied in previous trials.


Journal of Clinical Oncology | 2009

Age-Related Risk Profile and Chemotherapy Dose Response in Acute Myeloid Leukemia: A Study by the German Acute Myeloid Leukemia Cooperative Group

Thomas Büchner; Wolfgang E. Berdel; Claudia Haferlach; Torsten Haferlach; Susanne Schnittger; Carsten Müller-Tidow; Jan Braess; Karsten Spiekermann; Joachim Kienast; Peter Staib; Andreas Grüneisen; Wolfgang Kern; Albrecht Reichle; Georg Maschmeyer; Carlo Aul; Eva Lengfelder; M. C. Sauerland; Achim Heinecke; Bernhard Wörmann; Wolfgang Hiddemann

PURPOSE The purpose of the study was to assess the contribution of age and disease variables to the outcome of untreated patients with acute myeloid leukemia (AML) receiving varying intensive induction chemotherapy. PATIENTS AND METHODS Patients 16 to 85 years of age with primary AML, known karyotype, and uniform postremission chemotherapy enrolled onto two consecutive trials were eligible and were randomly assigned to induction either with a standard-dose (cytarabine, daunorubicin, and 6-thioguanine) and a high-dose (cytarabine and mitoxantrone) combination, or with two courses of the high-dose combination. Subgroups were defined by karyotype, nucleophosmin and FLT3 mutation, WBC count, serum lactate dehydrogenase, and residual blasts. RESULTS In 1,284 patients, the overall survival at 4 years in those younger and older than 60 years was 37% versus 16% (P < .001) and the ongoing remission duration was 46% versus 22% (P < .001). Similar age-related differences in outcome were found for all defined subgroups. No difference in outcome according to randomly assigned treatment regimen was observed in any age group or prognostic subset. Regarding prognostic subgroups, molecular factors were also considered. CONCLUSION Under harmonized conditions, older and younger patients with AML show modest differences in their risk profiles and equally no dose response to intensified chemotherapy. Their observed fundamental difference in outcome across all subgroups remains unexplained. Further molecular investigation may elucidate the age effect in AML and identify new targets.


Journal of Clinical Oncology | 1999

Management of Acute Myeloid Leukemia in Elderly Patients

Wolfgang Hiddemann; Wolfgang Kern; Claudia Schoch; Christa Fonatsch; Achim Heinecke; Bernhard Wörmann; Thomas Büchner

Acute myeloid leukemia (AML) at older age is associated with several biologic and clinical characteristics. Hence, it may arise from an early level of hematopoietic stem cells and has a high frequency of blast cells with multidrug resistance glycoprotein MDR1 expression and particularly a high incidence of poor prognostic karyotypes. These factors, rather than age per se, underlie the poorer outcome as compared with younger cases. Prospective randomized studies clearly demonstrate, however, that elderly patients benefit from more intensive induction therapy and particularly from full-dose application of anthracyclines and possibly also cytarabine. Hematopoietic growth factors accelerate the recovery from treatment-induced neutropenia and may improve the remission rate, remission duration, and even overall survival. New treatment strategies need to be developed, however, for poor-prognosis AML subtypes in order to further improve the therapeutic perspectives for elderly patients with AML.


Blood | 2008

An 86-probe-set gene-expression signature predicts survival in cytogenetically normal acute myeloid leukemia.

Klaus H. Metzeler; Manuela Hummel; Clara D. Bloomfield; Karsten Spiekermann; Jan Braess; M. C. Sauerland; Achim Heinecke; Michael D. Radmacher; Guido Marcucci; Susan P. Whitman; Kati Maharry; Peter Paschka; Richard A. Larson; Wolfgang E. Berdel; Thomas Büchner; Bernhard Wörmann; Ulrich Mansmann; Wolfgang Hiddemann; Stefan K. Bohlander; Christian Buske

Patients with cytogenetically normal acute myeloid leukemia (CN-AML) show heterogeneous treatment outcomes. We used gene-expression profiling to develop a gene signature that predicts overall survival (OS) in CN-AML. Based on data from 163 patients treated in the German AMLCG 1999 trial and analyzed on oligonucleotide microarrays, we used supervised principal component analysis to identify 86 probe sets (representing 66 different genes), which correlated with OS, and defined a prognostic score based on this signature. When applied to an independent cohort of 79 CN-AML patients, this continuous score remained a significant predictor for OS (hazard ratio [HR], 1.85; P = .002), event-free survival (HR = 1.73; P = .001), and relapse-free survival (HR = 1.76; P = .025). It kept its prognostic value in multivariate analyses adjusting for age, FLT3 ITD, and NPM1 status. In a validation cohort of 64 CN-AML patients treated on CALGB study 9621, the score also predicted OS (HR = 4.11; P < .001), event-free survival (HR = 2.90; P < .001), and relapse-free survival (HR = 3.14, P < .001) and retained its significance in a multivariate model for OS. In summary, we present a novel gene-expression signature that offers additional prognostic information for patients with CN-AML.


Journal of Clinical Oncology | 2010

Acute Myeloid Leukemia With Biallelic CEBPA Gene Mutations and Normal Karyotype Represents a Distinct Genetic Entity Associated With a Favorable Clinical Outcome

Annika Dufour; Friederike Schneider; Klaus H. Metzeler; Eva Hoster; Stephanie Schneider; Evelyn Zellmeier; Tobias Benthaus; M. C. Sauerland; Wolfgang E. Berdel; Thomas Büchner; Bernhard Wörmann; Jan Braess; Wolfgang Hiddemann; Stefan K. Bohlander; Karsten Spiekermann

PURPOSE CEBPA mutations are found as either biallelic (biCEBPA) or monoallelic (moCEBPA). We set out to explore whether the kind of CEBPA mutation is of prognostic relevance in cytogenetically normal (CN) acute myeloid leukemia (AML). PATIENTS AND METHODS Four hundred sixty-seven homogeneously treated patients with CN-AML were subdivided into moCEBPA, biCEBPA, and wild-type (wt) CEBPA patients. The subgroups were analyzed for clinical parameters and for additional mutations in the NPM1, FLT3, and MLL genes. Furthermore, we obtained gene expression profiles using oligonucleotide microarrays. RESULTS Only patients with biCEBPA had an improved median overall survival when compared with patients with wtCEBPA (not reached v 20.4 months, respectively; P = .018), whereas patients with moCEBPA (20.9 months) and wtCEBPA had a similar outcome (P = .506). Multivariable analysis confirmed biCEBPA, but not moCEBPA, mutations as an independent favorable prognostic factor. Interestingly, biCEBPA mutations, compared with wtCEBPA, were never associated with mutated NPM1 (0% v 43%, respectively; P < .001) and rarely associated with FLT3 internal tandem duplication (ITD; 5% v 23%, respectively; P = .059), whereas patients with moCEBPA had a similar frequency of mutated NPM1 and a significantly higher association with FLT3-ITD compared with patients with wtCEBPA (44% v 23%, respectively; P = .037). Furthermore, patients with biCEBPA showed a homogeneous gene expression profile that was characterized by downregulation of HOX genes, whereas patients with moCEBPA showed greater heterogeneity in their gene expression profiles. CONCLUSION Biallelic disruption of the N and C terminus of CEBPA is required for the favorable clinical outcome of CEBPA-mutated patients and represents a distinct molecular subtype of CN-AML with a different frequency of associated gene mutations. These findings are of great significance for risk-adapted therapeutic strategies in AML.


Journal of Clinical Oncology | 2006

Double Induction Containing Either Two Courses or One Course of High-Dose Cytarabine Plus Mitoxantrone and Postremission Therapy by Either Autologous Stem-Cell Transplantation or by Prolonged Maintenance for Acute Myeloid Leukemia

Thomas Büchner; Wolfgang E. Berdel; Claudia Schoch; Torsten Haferlach; Hubert Serve; Joachim Kienast; Susanne Schnittger; Wolfgang Kern; Joelle Tchinda; Albrecht Reichle; Eva Lengfelder; Peter Staib; Wolf-Dieter Ludwig; Carlo Aul; Hartmut Eimermacher; Leopold Balleisen; M. C. Sauerland; Achim Heinecke; Bernhard Wörmann; Wolfgang Hiddemann

PURPOSE Intensification by high-dose cytarabine in postremission or induction therapy and prolonged maintenance are established strategies to improve the outcome in patients with acute myeloid leukemia (AML). Whether additional intensification can add to this effect has not yet been determined. PATIENTS AND METHODS A total of 1,770 patients (age 16 to 85 years) with de novo or secondary AML or high-risk myelodysplastic syndrome (MDS) were randomly assigned upfront for induction therapy containing one course with standard dose and one course with high-dose cytarabine, or two courses with high-dose cytarabine, and in the same step received postremission prolonged maintenance or busulfan/cyclophosphamide chemotherapy with autologous stem-cell transplantation. RESULTS The complete remission rate in patients younger than 60 and > or = 60 years of age was 70% and 53%, respectively. The overall survival at 3 years in the two age groups was 42% and 19%, the relapse-free survival was 40% and 19%, and the ongoing remission duration was 48% and 22%, respectively. There were no significant differences in these results between the two randomized induction arms or between the two postremission therapy arms. There was no significant difference in any prognostic subgroup according to secondary AML/MDS, cytogenetics, WBC, lactate dehydrogenase, and early blast clearance. CONCLUSION The regimen of one course with standard-dose cytarabine and one course with high-dose cytarabine for induction, and prolonged maintenance for postremission chemotherapy in patients with AML is not improved by additional escalation in cytotoxic treatment.


The Lancet | 2010

Complete remission and early death after intensive chemotherapy in patients aged 60 years or older with acute myeloid leukaemia: a web-based application for prediction of outcomes

Utz Krug; Christoph Röllig; Anja Koschmieder; Achim Heinecke; Maria Cristina Sauerland; Markus Schaich; Christian Thiede; Michael S. Kramer; Jan Braess; Karsten Spiekermann; Torsten Haferlach; Claudia Haferlach; Steffen Koschmieder; Christian Rohde; Hubert Serve; Bernhard Wörmann; Wolfgang Hiddemann; Gerhard Ehninger; Wolfgang E. Berdel; Thomas Büchner; Carsten Müller-Tidow

BACKGROUND About 50% of patients (age ≥60 years) who have acute myeloid leukaemia and are otherwise medically healthy (ie, able to undergo intensive chemotherapy) achieve a complete remission (CR) after intensive chemotherapy, but with a substantially increased risk of early death (ED) compared with younger patients. We verified the association of standard clinical and laboratory variables with CR and ED and developed a web-based application for risk assessment of intensive chemotherapy in these patients. METHODS Multivariate regression analysis was used to develop risk scores with or without knowledge of the cytogenetic and molecular risk profiles for a cohort of 1406 patients (aged ≥60 years) with acute myeloid leukaemia, but otherwise medically healthy, who were treated with two courses of intensive induction chemotherapy (tioguanine, standard-dose cytarabine, and daunorubicin followed by high-dose cytarabine and mitoxantrone; or with high-dose cytarabine and mitoxantrone in the first and second induction courses) in the German Acute Myeloid Leukaemia Cooperative Group 1999 study. Risk prediction was validated in an independent cohort of 801 patients (aged >60 years) with acute myeloid leukaemia who were given two courses of cytarabine and daunorubicin in the Acute Myeloid Leukaemia 1996 study. FINDINGS Body temperature, age, de-novo leukaemia versus leukaemia secondary to cytotoxic treatment or an antecedent haematological disease, haemoglobin, platelet count, fibrinogen, and serum concentration of lactate dehydrogenase were significantly associated with CR or ED. The probability of CR with knowledge of cytogenetic and molecular risk (score 1) was from 12% to 91%, and without knowledge (score 2) from 21% to 80%. The predicted risk of ED was from 6% to 69% for score 1 and from 7% to 63% for score 2. The predictive power of the risk scores was confirmed in the independent patient cohort (CR score 1, from 10% to 91%; CR score 2, from 16% to 80%; ED score 1, from 6% to 69%; and ED score 2, from 7% to 61%). INTERPRETATION The scores for acute myeloid leukaemia can be used to predict the probability of CR and the risk of ED in older patients with acute myeloid leukaemia, but otherwise medically healthy, for whom intensive induction chemotherapy is planned. This information can help physicians with difficult decisions for treatment of these patients. FUNDING Deutsche Krebshilfe and Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft.


Genes, Chromosomes and Cancer | 2005

A BCR-JAK2 fusion gene as the result of a t(9;22)(p24;q11.2) translocation in a patient with a clinically typical chronic myeloid leukemia.

Frank Griesinger; Heike Hennig; Frauke Hillmer; Martina Podleschny; Rainer Steffens; Andreas Pies; Bernhard Wörmann; Detlef Haase; Stefan K. Bohlander

Chronic myeloid leukemia (CML) is characterized by the presence of a t(9;22)(q34;q11.2), which leads to the well‐known BCR–ABL1 fusion protein. We describe a patient who was diagnosed clinically with a typical CML but on cytogenetic analysis was found to have a t(9;22)(p24;q11.2). Chromosomal fluorescence in situ hybridization showed that the BCR gene locus spanned the breakpoint at band 22q11.2 but that the ABL1 gene was not rearranged. By means of a candidate gene approach, the JAK2 gene, at 9p24, was identified as the fusion partner of BCR in this case. The BCR–JAK2 fusion protein contains the coiled‐coil dimerization domain of BCR and the protein tyrosine kinase domain (JH1) of JAK2. The patients disease did not respond to Imatinib, and this unresponsiveness was most likely a result of the BCR–JAK2 fusion protein.


Pathology Research and Practice | 1985

Differential pattern of DNA-Aneuploidy in human malignancies

T. Büchner; W. Hiddemann; Bernhard Wörmann; B Kleinemeier; J. Schumann; W. Göhde; J. Ritter; K.-M. Müller; D.B. von Bassewitz; Albert Roessner; E. Grundmann

The differential pattern of DNA-aneuploidy, detected by flow cytometry (FCM) regarding its frequency, grade and multiclonality, was investigated and correlated to tumor type, malignancy grade, tumor stage and prognosis in a multi-institutional study at the University of Münster. High resolution measurements using admixed normal blood reference cells were undertaken in 2413 cases of 13 different malignant diseases and in 776 benign lesions or samples. The incidence of DNA-aneuploidy was highest in melanomas, carcinomas, testicular tumors, sarcomas (75%-95%) and myelomas (65%). Acute leukemias showed an intermediate DNA-aneuploidy rate of 40% with special subgroups represented by common ALL (44%), p less than 0.05) and myelomonocytic/monocytic AML (47%, p less than 0.01). The lowest DNA-aneuploidy-rate was found in basal cell skin carcinomas (19%) and congenital melanocytic nevi (9%). No case of DNA-aneuploidy was observed in the 776 benign lesions or samples.--DNA-indices giving the grade of DNA-aneuploidy with 1.0 for normal diploid G1/0 cells were found distributed predominantly between 1.0 and 2.0 in the solid tumors, except testicular tumors, clustering around a triploid maximum at 1.5. DNA-indices of myelomas and acute leukemias generally ranged below 1.25 with lower DNA-aneuploidy grades in AML than in ALL (p less than 0.01).--In melanomas the aneuploidy rate was higher (86%) in metastases than in the primary tumors (54%, p = 0.001).(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)

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T. Büchner

University of Münster

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Wolf-Dieter Ludwig

Humboldt University of Berlin

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Peter Staib

University of Münster

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