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Dive into the research topics where Caroline Sievers is active.

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Featured researches published by Caroline Sievers.


European Journal of Endocrinology | 2011

High prevalence of AIP gene mutations following focused screening in young patients with sporadic pituitary macroadenomas

Maria A. Tichomirowa; Anne Barlier; Adrian Daly; Marie Lise Jaffrain-Rea; Cristina Ronchi; Maria Yaneva; Jonathan D. Urban; Patrick Petrossians; Atanaska Elenkova; Antoine Tabarin; R. Desailloud; Dominique Maiter; T. H. Schurmeyer; Renato Cozzi; Marily Theodoropoulou; Caroline Sievers; Ignacio Bernabeu; Luciana A. Naves; Olivier Chabre; Carmen Fajardo Montañana; Vaclav Hana; Georges Halaby; B. Delemer; José Ignacio Labarta Aizpún; E. Sonnet; Ángel Ferrández Longás; Marie Thérèse Hagelstein; Philippe Caron; Günter K. Stalla; Vincent Bours

BACKGROUND Aryl hydrocarbon receptor interacting protein (AIP) mutations (AIPmut) cause aggressive pituitary adenomas in young patients, usually in the setting of familial isolated pituitary adenomas. The prevalence of AIPmut among sporadic pituitary adenoma patients appears to be low; studies have not addressed prevalence in the most clinically relevant population. Hence, we undertook an international, multicenter, prospective genetic, and clinical analysis at 21 tertiary referral endocrine departments. METHODS We included 163 sporadic pituitary macroadenoma patients irrespective of clinical phenotype diagnosed at <30 years of age. RESULTS Overall, 19/163 (11.7%) patients had germline AIPmut; a further nine patients had sequence changes of uncertain significance or polymorphisms. AIPmut were identified in 8/39 (20.5%) pediatric patients. Ten AIPmut were identified in 11/83 (13.3%) sporadic somatotropinoma patients, in 7/61 (11.5%) prolactinoma patients, and in 1/16 non-functioning pituitary adenoma patients. Large genetic deletions were not seen using multiplex ligation-dependent probe amplification. Familial screening was possible in the relatives of seven patients with AIPmut and carriers were found in six of the seven families. In total, pituitary adenomas were diagnosed in 2/21 AIPmut-screened carriers; both had asymptomatic microadenomas. CONCLUSION Germline AIPmut occur in 11.7% of patients <30 years with sporadic pituitary macroadenomas and in 20.5% of pediatric patients. AIPmut mutation testing in this population should be considered in order to optimize clinical genetic investigation and management.


Clinical Endocrinology | 2008

High prevalence of biochemical acromegaly in primary care patients with elevated IGF-1 levels

Harald Schneider; Caroline Sievers; B. Saller; Hans-Ulrich Wittchen; G. K. Stalla

Objective  The estimated prevalence of acromegaly is 40–125 per million. The diagnosis of acromegaly is often delayed due to deficits in recognizing the signs of the disease. It is not known how many subjects with increased IGF‐1 levels have acromegaly. We aimed to assess the prevalence of acromegaly in primary care by screening for elevated IGF‐1 levels.


Metabolism-clinical and Experimental | 2011

Type 2 diabetes mellitus and medications for type 2 diabetes mellitus are associated with risk for and mortality from cancer in a German primary care cohort.

Dorothee M. Baur; Jens Klotsche; Ole-Petter R. Hamnvik; Caroline Sievers; Lars Pieper; Hans-Ulrich Wittchen; Günter K. Stalla; Roland M. Schmid; Stefanos N. Kales; Christos S. Mantzoros

There is growing evidence that patients with type 2 diabetes mellitus have increased cancer risk. We examined the association between diabetes, cancer, and cancer-related mortality and hypothesized that insulin sensitizers lower cancer-related mortality. Participants in the Diabetes Cardiovascular Risk and Evaluation: Targets and Essential Data for Commitment of Treatment study, a nationwide cross-sectional and prospective epidemiological study, were recruited from German primary care practices. In the cross-sectional study, subjects with type 2 diabetes mellitus had a higher prevalence of malignancies (66/1308, 5.1%) compared to nondiabetic subjects (185/6211, 3.0%) (odds ratio, 1.64; 95% confidence interval, 1.12-2.41) before and after adjustment for age, sex, hemoglobin A(1c), smoking status, and body mass index. Patients on metformin had a lower prevalence of malignancies, comparable with that among nondiabetic patients, whereas those on any other oral combination treatment had a 2-fold higher risk for malignancies even after adjusting for possible confounders; inclusion of metformin in these regimens decreased the prevalence of malignancies. In the prospective analyses, diabetic patients in general and diabetic patients treated with insulin (either as monotherapy or in combination with other treatments) had a 2- and 4-fold, respectively, higher mortality rate than nondiabetic patients, even after adjustment for potential confounders (incidence of cancer deaths in patients with type 2 diabetes mellitus [2.6%] vs the incidence of cancer deaths in patients without type 2 diabetes mellitus [1.2%]). Our results suggest that diabetes and medications for diabetes, with the exception of the insulin sensitizer metformin, increase cancer risk and mortality.


Endocrine-related Cancer | 2015

Clinical and genetic characterization of pituitary gigantism: an international collaborative study in 208 patients

Liliya Rostomyan; Adrian Daly; Patrick Petrossians; Emil Nachev; Anurag Lila; Anne Lise Lecoq; Beatriz Lecumberri; Giampaolo Trivellin; Roberto Salvatori; Andreas G. Moraitis; Ian Holdaway; Dianne J. Kranenburg-Van Klaveren; Maria Chiara Zatelli; Nuria Palacios; Cécile Nozières; Margaret Zacharin; Tapani Ebeling; Marja Ojaniemi; Liudmila Rozhinskaya; Elisa Verrua; Marie Lise Jaffrain-Rea; Silvia Filipponi; Daria Gusakova; Vyacheslav Pronin; Jérôme Bertherat; Zhanna Belaya; Irena Ilovayskaya; Mona Sahnoun-Fathallah; Caroline Sievers; Günter K. Stalla

Despite being a classical growth disorder, pituitary gigantism has not been studied previously in a standardized way. We performed a retrospective, multicenter, international study to characterize a large series of pituitary gigantism patients. We included 208 patients (163 males; 78.4%) with growth hormone excess and a current/previous abnormal growth velocity for age or final height >2 s.d. above country normal means. The median onset of rapid growth was 13 years and occurred significantly earlier in females than in males; pituitary adenomas were diagnosed earlier in females than males (15.8 vs 21.5 years respectively). Adenomas were ≥10 mm (i.e., macroadenomas) in 84%, of which extrasellar extension occurred in 77% and invasion in 54%. GH/IGF1 control was achieved in 39% during long-term follow-up. Final height was greater in younger onset patients, with larger tumors and higher GH levels. Later disease control was associated with a greater difference from mid-parental height (r=0.23, P=0.02). AIP mutations occurred in 29%; microduplication at Xq26.3 - X-linked acrogigantism (X-LAG) - occurred in two familial isolated pituitary adenoma kindreds and in ten sporadic patients. Tumor size was not different in X-LAG, AIP mutated and genetically negative patient groups. AIP-mutated and X-LAG patients were significantly younger at onset and diagnosis, but disease control was worse in genetically negative cases. Pituitary gigantism patients are characterized by male predominance and large tumors that are difficult to control. Treatment delay increases final height and symptom burden. AIP mutations and X-LAG explain many cases, but no genetic etiology is seen in >50% of cases.


The Journal of Clinical Endocrinology and Metabolism | 2011

A novel approach to the detection of acromegaly: accuracy of diagnosis by automatic face classification.

Harald Schneider; Robert P. Kosilek; Manuel Günther; J. Roemmler; Günter K. Stalla; Caroline Sievers; Martin Reincke; Jochen Schopohl; Rolf P. Würtz

CONTEXT The delay between onset of first symptoms and diagnosis of the acromegaly is 6-10 yr. Acromegaly causes typical changes of the face that might be recognized by face classification software. OBJECTIVE The objective of the study was to assess classification accuracy of acromegaly by face-classification software. DESIGN This was a diagnostic study. SETTING The study was conducted in specialized care. PARTICIPANTS Participants in the study included 57 patients with acromegaly (29 women, 28 men) and 60 sex- and age-matched controls. INTERVENTIONS We took frontal and side photographs of the faces and grouped patients into subjects with mild, moderate, and severe facial features of acromegaly by overall impression. We then analyzed all pictures using computerized similarity analysis based on Gabor jets and geometry functions. We used the leave-one-out cross-validation method to classify subjects by the software. Additionally, all subjects were classified by visual impression by three acromegaly experts and three general internists. MAIN OUTCOME MEASURE Classification accuracy by software, experts, and internists was measured. FINDINGS The software correctly classified 71.9% of patients and 91.5% of controls. Classification accuracy for patients by visual analysis was 63.2 and 42.1% by experts and general internists, respectively. Classification accuracy for controls was 80.8 and 87.0% by experts and internists, respectively. The highest differences in accuracy between software and experts and internists were present for patients with mild acromegaly. CONCLUSIONS Acromegaly can be detected by computer software using photographs of the face. Classification accuracy by software is higher than by medical experts or general internists, particularly in patients with mild features of acromegaly. This is a promising tool to help detecting acromegaly.


European Journal of Endocrinology | 2010

Low testosterone levels predict all-cause mortality and cardiovascular events in women: a prospective cohort study in German primary care patients

Caroline Sievers; Jens Klotsche; Lars Pieper; Harald Schneider; Winfried März; Hans-Ulrich Wittchen; Günter K. Stalla; Christos S. Mantzoros

OBJECTIVE Although associations between testosterone and cardiovascular (CV) morbidity in women have been proposed, no large prospective study has evaluated potential associations between testosterone and mortality in women. The objective was to determine whether baseline testosterone levels in women are associated with future overall or CV morbidity and mortality. DESIGN Prospective cohort study with a 4.5-year follow-up period. METHODS From a representative sample of German primary care practices, 2914 female patients between 18 and 75 years were analyzed for the main outcome measures: CV risk factors, CV diseases, and all-cause mortality. RESULTS At baseline, the study population was aged 57.96±14.37 years with a mean body mass index of 26.71±5.17 kg/m(2). No predictive value of total testosterone for incident CV risk factors or CV diseases was observed in logistic regressions. Patients with total testosterone levels in the lowest quintile Q1, however, had a higher risk to die of any cause or to develop a CV event within the follow-up period compared to patients in the collapsed quintiles Q2-Q5 in crude and adjusted Cox regression models (all-cause mortality: Q2-Q5 versus Q1: crude hazard ratios (HR) 0.49, 95% confidence interval (CI) 0.33-0.74; adjusted HR 0.62, 95% CI 0.42-0.939; CV events: Q2-Q5 versus Q1: crude HR 0.54, 95% CI 0.38-0.77; adjusted HR 0.68, 95% CI 0.48-0.97). Kaplan-Meier curves revealed similar data. CONCLUSIONS Low baseline testosterone in women is associated with increased all-cause mortality and incident CV events independent of traditional risk factors.


Clinical Endocrinology | 2009

Prevalence of mental disorders in acromegaly: a cross‐sectional study in 81 acromegalic patients

Caroline Sievers; Christina Dimopoulou; Hildegard Pfister; Roselind Lieb; B. Steffin; J. Roemmler; Jochen Schopohl; Marion Mueller; Harald Schneider; Marcus Ising; Hans-Ulrich Wittchen; Guenter Karl Stalla

Objective  Emotional and behavioural alterations have been described in acromegalic patients. However, the nature and psychopathological value of these changes remained unclear.


Journal of Endocrinological Investigation | 2007

Pituitary imaging abnormalities in patients with and without hypopituitarism after traumatic brain injury

H. J. Schneider; Philipp G. Sämann; M. Schneider; Chiara Giulia Croce; G. Corneli; Caroline Sievers; Ezio Ghigo; G. K. Stalla; Gianluca Aimaretti

Recent evidence suggests that patients with traumatic brain injury (TBI) are at substantial risk of hypopituitarism. The pathomechanisms, however, are not completely understood yet. Little is known about the association of morphological changes in the sella region with pituitary function in TBI. In this study, we assessed morphological abnormalities of the sella region in patients with TBI and their relation to endocrine function. We studied magnetic resonance (MR) or computed tomography (CT) scans of 22 patients with TBI [17 men, 5 women, age (mean±SD) 43.5±10.6 yr, time after trauma 17.4 ±15.0 yr]. Of these, 15 patients had some degree of hypopituitarism. We found abnormalities of the sella region in 80% of the patients with hypopituitarism and 29% of those without hypopituitarism (Fisher’s exact test, p=0.032). The most common abnormality was loss of volume or empty sella, followed by native signal inhomogeneities, perfusion deficit, and lack of neurohypophyseal signal. Our results indicate that pituitary imaging abnormalities are more common in TBI patients with hypopituitarism than those without. Both immediate trauma-induced pathology as necrosis and hemorrhage as well as multifactorial mid- to long-term changes may underlie these abnormalities.


Psychoneuroendocrinology | 2015

Leptin: A hormone linking activation of neuroendocrine axes with neuropathology

Mareike R. Stieg; Caroline Sievers; Olivia M. Farr; Günter K. Stalla; Christos S. Mantzoros

Leptin, a peptide hormone secreted by adipocytes, plays a central role in controlling appetite and weight in both rodents and humans. Basic science and clinical research suggest that this hormone not only affects the regulation of the neuroendocrine axes, but also exerts effects on the central nervous system with subsequent alterations in psychological functions. For instance, leptin suppresses cortisol secretion during stress-related activation of the adrenal axis. As psychiatric disorders like depression are associated with hypercortisolism, leptin is proposed to exert anti-depressant-like effects due to its inhibition of chronically overactive hypothalamo-pituitary-adrenal axis function. Moreover, leptin status of depressed patients could serve as a prognostic marker for therapy response. Besides its influence on neuroendocrine pathways leptin seems to have direct central effects on brain development and neuroplasticity. Low leptin levels have been shown to be associated with increased risk of developing dementia, supporting the idea of a pro-cognitive effect of leptin. These areas may have direct clinical implications and deserve to be studied further in the future.


International Journal of Cancer | 2009

Tumor ZAC1 expression is associated with the response to somatostatin analog therapy in patients with acromegaly

Marily Theodoropoulou; Maria A. Tichomirowa; Caroline Sievers; Alexander Yassouridis; Thomas Arzberger; Olivier Hougrand; Manuel Deprez; Adrian Daly; Patrick Petrossians; Uberto Pagotto; Albert Beckers; Günter K. Stalla

Somatostatin analogs (SSA) with their potent antisecretory and antiproliferative effects are the main medical treatment option for patients with neuroendocrine tumors, such as gastroenteropancreatic and acromegaly‐associated growth hormone secreting pituitary tumors. Although a good portion of acromegalic patients gets normalized after SSA treatment, strict hormonal control is not achieved in a sizeable proportion of these patients. The reasons for this incomplete response to SSA treatment are unclear. We have found that the tumor suppressor ZAC1 (LOT1/PLAGL1) is essential for the antiproliferative effect of SSA in pituitary tumor cells. The aim of the present retrospective cohort study was to determine whether ZAC1 immunoreactivity in archival somatotrophinoma tissue derived from 45 patients with acromegaly routinely pretreated with SSA before surgery, was associated with response to SSA (normalization of GH, IGF‐I and presence of tumor shrinkage). All tumors displayed ZAC1 immunoreactivity [weak (+; n = 15), moderate (++; n = 16) and strong (+++; n = 14)]. A significant positive correlation was found between strong ZAC1 immunoreactivity and IGF‐I normalization and presence of tumor shrinkage after SSA treatment, which was not affected by age at diagnosis, gender or duration of SSA treatment. These in vivo data combined with the antiproliferative properties of ZAC1/Zac1 provide evidence of a mechanistic role for this transcription factor on SSA induced tumor shrinkage and hormone normalization.

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Harald Schneider

Helmholtz-Zentrum Dresden-Rossendorf

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Hans-Ulrich Wittchen

Dresden University of Technology

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Lars Pieper

Dresden University of Technology

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