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Featured researches published by C Fotopoulou.


American Journal of Reproductive Immunology | 2005

Pre‐eclampsia is not Associated with Changes in the Levels of Regulatory T Cells in Peripheral Blood

Steffen Paeschke; Frank Chih-Kang Chen; Nadja Horn; C Fotopoulou; Annarosa Zambon-Bertoja; André Sollwedel; Maria Laura Zenclussen; Pablo A. Casalis; Joachim W. Dudenhausen; Hans-Dieter Volk; Ana Claudia Zenclussen

The acceptance of the semi‐allogeneic fetus within the maternal environment requires tolerance mechanisms not fully characterized yet. Normal pregnancy is known to be associated with a Th2 profile. Furthermore, regulatory T cells (Tregs) were proposed to regulate the Th2/Th1 balance at early stages of pregnancy. Treg may avoid the shift to a Th1 profile, thus preventing miscarriage. Accordingly, spontaneous abortion is characterized by a Th1 dominance and diminished levels of Treg. The major aim of the present work was to investigate if pre‐eclampsia, a late immunological complication of pregnancy, is characterized by similar hallmarks.


British Journal of Cancer | 2011

Role of histological type on surgical outcome and survival following radical primary tumour debulking of epithelial ovarian, fallopian tube and peritoneal cancers

E.I. Braicu; Jalid Sehouli; Richter R; Pietzner K; Carsten Denkert; C Fotopoulou

Background:To assess the clinical impact of the two histological types as designated in the proposed model for ovarian tumourigenesis in primary epithelial ovarian, fallopian tube or peritoneal cancer (EOC) patients.Methods:All consecutive EOC patients (n=632) after primary tumour debulking in our institution (09/2000–08/2010) were classified into one of two groups: type I tumours (n=100; 15.8%) composed of low-grade serous, low-grade endometrioid, clear cell, mucinous and transitional carcinomas; and Type II tumours (n=532; 84.1%) composed of high-grade serous, high-grade endometrioid, undifferentiated and malignant mixed-mesodermal tumours. Kaplan–Meier and logistic/Cox-regression analyses were performed to assess the impact of histological type on surgical outcome and survival.Results:Type II patients had a significantly higher incidence of advanced disease (FIGO III/IV) than Type I patients (79.8% vs 38%, respectively; P<0.001). Median CA125 values (438 vs 93 U ml−1; P=0.001); operative time (258 vs 237 min; P=0.001); and incidence of incomplete tumour resection (34.4% vs 15%; P<0.001) were significantly higher in patients with Type II. During a mean follow-up time of 23 months (range: 1–106), 17% of patients with type I vs 34.8% of patients with type II tumours relapsed and/or died (P<0.001). Overall survival (P=0.021) and progression-free survival (P=0.003) were also significantly higher in patients with type I tumours. Multivariate analysis, while identifying postoperative tumour residuals, positive lymph nodes and extrapelvic dissemination as independent predictors of survival, failed to demonstrate any prognostic significance of histological type.Conclusion:Type I EOC patients appear to present at earlier stages have significantly higher survival and more optimal surgical outcome compared with type II patients. However, in advanced stages, histology loses significance as an independent prognosticator.


British Journal of Cancer | 2015

Surgical staging and prognosis in serous borderline ovarian tumours (BOT): A subanalysis of the AGO ROBOT study

Fabian Trillsch; Sven Mahner; Eik Vettorazzi; Linn Woelber; Alexander Reuss; Klaus H. Baumann; M-D Keyver-Paik; Ulrich Canzler; Kerstin Wollschlaeger; Dirk Forner; J. Pfisterer; W. Schroeder; K. Muenstedt; B. Richter; C Fotopoulou; Barbara Schmalfeldt; Alexander Burges; N Ewald-Riegler; N de Gregorio; Felix Hilpert; T Fehm; Werner Meier; Peter Hillemanns; Lars Hanker; Annette Hasenburg; H-G Strauss; Martin Hellriegel; Pauline Wimberger; Stefan Kommoss; Friedrich Kommoss

Background:Incomplete surgical staging is a negative prognostic factor for patients with borderline ovarian tumours (BOT). However, little is known about the prognostic impact of each individual staging procedure.Methods:Clinical parameters of 950 patients with BOT (confirmed by central reference pathology) treated between 1998 and 2008 at 24 German AGO centres were analysed. In 559 patients with serous BOT and adequate ovarian surgery, further recommended staging procedures (omentectomy, peritoneal biopsies, cytology) were evaluated applying Cox regression models with respect to progression-free survival (PFS).Results:For patients with one missing staging procedure, the hazard ratio (HR) for recurrence was 1.25 (95%-CI 0.66–2.39; P=0.497). This risk increased with each additional procedure skipped reaching statistical significance in case of two (HR 1.95; 95%-CI 1.06–3.58; P=0.031) and three missing steps (HR 2.37; 95%-CI 1.22–4.64; P=0.011). The most crucial procedure was omentectomy which retained a statistically significant impact on PFS in multiple analysis (HR 1.91; 95%-CI 1.15–3.19; P=0.013) adjusting for previously established prognostic factors as FIGO stage, tumour residuals, and fertility preservation.Conclusion:Individual surgical staging procedures contribute to the prognosis for patients with serous BOT. In this analysis, recurrence risk increased with each skipped surgical step. This should be considered when re-staging procedures following incomplete primary surgery are discussed.


Anticancer Research | 2012

Quality of Life and Sexuality of Patients after Treatment for Gynaecological Malignancies: Results of a Prospective Study in 55 Patients

Adak Pilger; Rolf Richter; C Fotopoulou; Carmen Rosa Beteta; Christine Klapp; Jalid Sehouli


Journal of Psychosomatic Obstetrics & Gynecology | 2010

What are the individual perceptions of patients with borderline tumours of the ovary in regard to pathogenesis and prognosis? A structured survey on 60 women

C Fotopoulou; Marios Bugariu; Elena Ioana Braicu; W. Lichtenegger; Jalid Sehouli


Annals of Oncology | 2018

HIPEC: HOPE or HYPE in the fight against advanced ovarian cancer?

C Fotopoulou; Jalid Sehouli; Sven Mahner; P. Harter; E. Van Nieuwenhuysen; Antonio González-Martín; Ignace Vergote; Luis Chiva; A du Bois


ASCO Meeting Abstracts | 2012

Outcome of patients with borderline ovarian tumors: Results of the multicenter AGO ROBOT study.

Nikolaus de Gregorio; Klaus H. Baumann; Mignon-Denise Keyver-Paik; Alexander Reuss; Ulrich Canzler; Kerstin Wollschlaeger; Friedrich Kommoss; Dirk Forner; Martin Peters; W. Schroeder; Karsten Münstedt; Barbara Richter; N Ewald-Riegler; Sven Mahner; C Fotopoulou; Barbara Schmalfeldt; Felix Hilpert; Stefan Kommoss; Steffen Hauptmann; Andreas du Bois


Journal of Clinical Oncology | 2011

A Risk Model for Secondary Cytoreductive Surgery in Recurrent Ovarian Cancer: An Evidence-Based Proposal for Patient Selection

Wenjuan Tian; Dennis S. Chi; Jalid Sehouli; Claes G. Tropé; Rong Jiang; Ali Ayhan; Gennaro Cormio; Yan Xing; Georg-Peter Breitbach; Elena Ioana Braicu; Catherine Rabbitt; Halldis Oksefjell; C Fotopoulou; H. G. Meerpohl; Andreas du Bois; Jonathan S. Berek; Rongyu Zang; Philipp Harter


Journal of Clinical Oncology | 2011

Does overexpression of VEGFR and TIMP2 predict survival in primary cervical cancer (CC) patients? Results of a companion protocol of the randomized, phase III adjuvant trial of simultaneous cisplatin radiochemotherapy versus sequential carboplatin and paclitaxel followed by radiotherapy.

C Fotopoulou; Elena Ioana Braicu; Radoslav Chekerov; Rolf Richter; M. Mentze; Klaus Pietzner; C. Pop; Oumar Camara; Gülten Oskay-Özcelik; S. Kuemmel; Jens-Uwe Blohmer; W. Lichtenegger; Jalid Sehouli


Geburtshilfe Und Frauenheilkunde | 2014

Lebensqualität und Sexualität bei Patientinnen mit einem Borderlinetumor des Ovars (eine Substudie der ROBOT-Studie der AGO-Ovar)

Juliane Farthmann; Annette Hasenburg; M Weil; C Fotopoulou; N Ewald-Riegler; O. du Bois; Fabian Trillsch; Sven Mahner; Hans-Georg Strauss; Pauline Wimberger; Alexander Reuss; A du Bois

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A du Bois

University of Duisburg-Essen

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Pauline Wimberger

Dresden University of Technology

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