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Dive into the research topics where Christian Godballe is active.

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Featured researches published by Christian Godballe.


Oral Oncology | 2011

Salivary gland carcinoma in Denmark 1990–2005: A national study of incidence, site and histology. Results of the Danish Head and Neck Cancer Group (DAHANCA)

Kristine Bjørndal; Annelise Krogdahl; Marianne Hamilton Therkildsen; Jens Overgaard; Jørgen Johansen; Claus A. Kristensen; Preben Homøe; Christian Hjort Sørensen; Elo Andersen; Troels Bundgaard; Hanne Primdahl; Karin Lambertsen; Lisbeth Juhler Andersen; Christian Godballe

To describe the incidence, site and histology (WHO 2005) of salivary gland carcinomas in Denmark. Nine hundred and eighty-three patients diagnosed from 1990 to 2005 were identified from three nation-wide registries. The associated clinical data were retrospectively retrieved from patient medical records. Histological revision was performed in 886 cases (90%). Based on histological revision, 31 patients (3%) were excluded from the study leaving 952 for epidemiological analysis. The mean crude incidence in Denmark was 1.1/100,000/year. The male vs. female ratio was 0.97 and the median age was 62 years. The parotid gland was the most common site (52.5%) followed by the minor salivary glands of the oral cavity (26.3%). The most frequent histological subtypes were adenoid cystic carcinoma (25.2%), mucoepidermoid carcinoma (16.9%), adenocarcinoma NOS (12.2%) and acinic cell carcinoma (10.2%). The revision process changed the histological diagnosis in 121 out of 886 cases (14%). The incidence of salivary gland carcinoma in Denmark is higher than previously reported. More than half of salivary gland carcinomas are located in the parotid gland with adenoid cystic carcinoma being the most frequent subtype. Histological classification of salivary gland carcinomas is difficult and evaluation by dedicated pathology specialists might be essential for optimal diagnosis and treatment.


Head and Neck-journal for The Sciences and Specialties of The Head and Neck | 2003

Salvage laryngectomy and pharyngocutaneous fistulae after primary radiotherapy for head and neck cancer: a national survey from DAHANCA

Cai Grau; Lars Vendelbo Johansen; Hanne Sand Hansen; Elo Andersen; Christian Godballe; Lisbeth Juhler Andersen; Jesper Hald; Henrik Møller; Marie Overgaard; Lars Bastholt; Ole Greisen; Grethe Harbo; O. Hansen; Jens Overgaard

In 1998, the Danish Society for Head and Neck Oncology decided to conduct a nationwide survey at the five head and neck oncology centers with the aim of evaluating the surgical outcome of salvage laryngectomy after radiotherapy with special emphasis on identifying factors that could contribute to the development of pharyngocutaneous fistulae.


Acta Oncologica | 2002

Cancer of the Larynx: Treatment Results after Primary Radiotherapy with Salvage Surgery in a Series of 1005 Patients

Karsten Jørgensen; Christian Godballe; O. Hansen; Lars Bastholt

The aim of this study is to present and discuss the results of initial radiotherapy with salvage surgery and to compare them with those from centres where primary surgery is the prevailing principle. The series comprised 1005 consecutive patients treated during the period 1965-1998. Salvage surgery was performed if patients had residual tumour or developed recurrence. Disease-specific survival (DSS) and crude survival (CS) after 5 years, among 643 patients with glottic carcinomas treated with curative radiotherapy was 88.6% (SE =1.3) and 65.3% (SE =2.0), respectively. Among T1 glottic carcinomas the locoregional control was 88%, i.e. 88% of patients were cured after radiotherapy alone, and the DSS was 99%, both evaluated after 5 years, i.e. the salvage surgery added approximately 11% to the survival of T1 glottic patients. Only 4% (12/312) of T1 glottic patients had laryngectomies. Locoregional control among T2 glottic cases was 67% and the DSS 88%, but, 18% (41/233) of patients lost their larynx. The corresponding results among T3 glottic cases were 30% and 59%, i.e. the organ preservation was close to 50%. Among patients with supraglottic carcinomas, the two estimates were 44% and 63%, respectively. Compared with our results, recent results published in the literature after initial laser surgery of T1 glottic carcinomas indicate that there are only minor differences in DSS and organ preservation, but it is generally agreed, but not proven, that voice quality after radiotherapy is better. T2 glottic carcinomas treated by initial supracricoid partial laryngectomy in a selected series have yielded very high DSS rates with better organ preservation than was observed in the present series. As to T3 glottic carcinomas, initial surgery does not produce better survival rates than those produced in the present series but our organ preservation is higher. The treatment of patients with supraglottic carcinoma has benefited from optimization of radiotherapy during recent decades. The role of initial laser surgery is as yet undecided.


Laryngoscope | 2002

Hypopharyngeal cancer: Results of treatment based on radiation therapy and salvage surgery

Christian Godballe; Karsten Jørgensen; O. Hansen; Lars Bastholt

Objectives The purpose of this study is to present the treatment results and to identify possible prognostic indicators in patients with hypopharyngeal squamous cell carcinoma (HPC).


Journal of Molecular Endocrinology | 2012

Down-regulation of microRNAs controlling tumourigenic factors in follicular thyroid carcinoma

Maria Rossing; Rehannah Borup; Ricardo Henao; Ole Winther; Jonas Vikesaa; Omid Niazi; Christian Godballe; Annelise Krogdahl; Martin Glud; Christian Hjort-Sørensen; Katalin Kiss; Finn Noe Bennedbæk; Finn Cilius Nielsen

The molecular determinants of thyroid follicular nodules are incompletely understood and assessment of malignancy is a diagnostic challenge. Since microRNA (miRNA) analyses could provide new leads to malignant progression, we characterised the global miRNA expression in follicular adenoma (FA) and follicular carcinoma (FC). Comparison of carcinoma and adenoma with normal thyroid revealed 150 and 107 differentially expressed miRNAs respectively. Most miRNAs were down-regulated and especially miR-199b-5p and miR-144 which were essentially lost in the carcinomas. Integration of the changed miRNAs with differentially expressed mRNAs demonstrated an enrichment of seed sites among up-regulated transcripts encoding proteins implicated in thyroid tumourigenesis. This was substantiated by the demonstration that pre-miR-199b reduced proliferation when added to cultured follicular thyroid carcinoma cells. The down-regulated miRNAs in FC exhibited a substantial similarity with down-regulated miRNAs in anaplastic carcinoma (AC) and by gene set enrichment analysis, we observed a significant identity between target mRNAs in FC and transcripts up-regulated in AC. To examine the diagnostic potential of miRNA expression pattern in distinguishing malignant from benign nodules we employed a supervised learning algorithm and leave-one-out-cross-validation. By this procedure, FA and FC were identified with a negative predicted value of 83% (data generated by microarray platform) and of 92% (data generated by qRT-PCR platform). We conclude that follicular neoplasia is associated with major changes in miRNA expression that may promote malignant transformation by increasing the expression of transcripts encoding tumourigenic factors. Moreover, miRNA profiling may facilitate the diagnosis of carcinoma vs adenoma.


Acta Oncologica | 2010

Carcinoma of the nasal cavity and paranasal sinuses in Denmark 1995-2004

Christian Thorup; Lars Sebbesen; Hella Danø; Michael Leetmaa; Mette Andersen; Christian von Buchwald; Claus A. Kristensen; Jens Bentzen; Christian Godballe; Jørgen Johansen; Cai Grau

Abstract Objective. To evaluate the treatment outcome for sino-nasal carcinomas in Denmark from 1995–2004 and compare the results to the previous Danish survey covering 1982–1991. Design. Retrospective follow-up. Materials and methods. In the five Danish head and neck oncology centres, charts of all consecutive patients with sino-nasal carcinomas were reviewed and data extracted to a common database. Altogether 242 patients from the period 1995–2004 were identified. Of these 162 (67%) were male and 80 (33%) female. Histologies included squamous cell carcinoma (55%), adenocarcinoma (28.5%), adenoid-cystic carcinoma (5.0%), undifferentiated carcinoma (4.5%), transitiocellular carcinoma (1.7%), mucoepidermoid carcinoma (0.8%), neuroendocrine carcinoma (2.5%), small cell carcinomas (1.2%) and carcinomas not otherwise specified (0.8%). Treatments included radiotherapy alone 79 (33%), surgery alone 29 (12%), combined surgery and radiotherapy 96 (40%), palliative/no treatment 38 (16%). A total of 204 (86%) patients were treated with curative intent. Results. Of the 204 patients treated with curative intent, 94 (46%) relapsed. Most failures were in T-site (63, 30%). N-site failures were 10 (5%) and M-site failures six (3%). Failure occurring in T+N-site, T+M-site, N+M-site and T+N+M-site were seven (3%), two (1%), one (0.5%) and five (3%) respectively. The 5-year actuarial local, nodal and loco-regional control rates were 55±4%, 86±3%, 49±4%, respectively. The overall 5-year actuarial survival rate for the entire cohort was 47±3%, and the corresponding cancer-specific 5-year actuarial survival rate was 57±3%. Female gender, nasal cavity tumour, adenocarcinoma and low clinical stage were significant positive prognostic factors in univariate analysis. A Cox multivariate analysis showed that only tumour site and clinical stage were independent significant prognostic factors. Conclusion. The current series has confirmed stage and tumour site as independent prognostic factors. Compared to the previous Danish survey covering the period 1982–1991, the overall survival and cancer-specific survival rates have improved significantly.


Laryngoscope | 2003

Parotid Carcinoma: Impact of Clinical Factors on Prognosis in a Histologically Revised Series

Christian Godballe; Joyce H. Schultz; Annelise Krogdahl; Ågot Møller‐Grøntved; Jørgen Johansen

Objective To analyze clinical data and possible prognostic factors of patients with primary carcinoma of the parotid gland.


Laryngoscope | 1998

Prognostic factors in papillary and follicular thyroid carcinomas : p53 expression is a significant indicator of prognosis

Christian Godballe; Pia Asschenfeldt; Karsten Jørgensen; Lars Bastholt; Per P. Clausen; Tine Plato Hansen; O. Hansen; Søren M. Bentzen

To identify clinical and histologic prognostic factors and to investigate whether immunohistochemical detection of p53 expression might contain prognostic information, a retrospective study of patient and tumor characteristics was performed in 225 cases of papillary and follicular thyroid carcinomas. The analyses were based on cause‐specific and crude survival. In univariate analysis, age at diagnosis, tumor size, presence of distant metastases, histology (papillary contra follicular type), extrathyroidal invasion, necrosis in primary tumor, and p53 expression were significant prognostic indicators. For 211 patients (96%) all information was available and Coxs proportional hazard model was applied. The authors found that age, distant metastases, necrosis in primary tumor, extrathyroidal invasion, and p53 expression were significant prognostic factors. Analyses of cause‐specific and crude survival gave similar results. The authors conclude that age at diagnosis, presence of distant metastases, necrosis in primary tumor, and extrathyroidal invasion are important prognostic factors, and that immunohistochemical detection of p53 protein in the primary tumor is a significant and independent prognostic indicator, which might be of value in the treatment planning in patients with papillary or follicular thyroid carcinomas.


European Journal of Cancer | 2013

Waiting times for diagnosis and treatment of head and neck cancer in Denmark in 2010 compared to 1992 and 2002

Nina Munk Lyhne; A. Christensen; Mikkel Christian Alanin; Mie Topholm Bruun; Tove Holme Jung; Mikkel A. Bruhn; Janus Bo Bechmann Jespersen; Claus A. Kristensen; Elo Andersen; Christian Godballe; Christian von Buchwald; Troels Bundgaard; Jørgen Johansen; Karin Lambertsen; Hanne Primdahl; Kasper Toustrup; Jens Ahm Sørensen; Jens Overgaard; Cai Grau

BACKGROUND AND AIM Significant tumour progression was observed during waiting time for treatment of head and neck cancer. To reduce waiting times, a Danish national policy of fast track accelerated clinical pathways was introduced in 2007. This study describes changes in waiting time and the potential influence of fast track by comparing waiting times in 2010 to 2002 and 1992. METHODS Charts of all new patients diagnosed with squamous cell carcinoma of the oral cavity, pharynx and larynx at the five Danish head and neck oncology centres from January to April 2010 (n=253) were reviewed and compared to similar data from 2002 (n=211) and 1992 (n=168). RESULTS The median time to diagnosis was 13 days (2010) versus 17 days (2002; p<0.001) and 20 days (1992; p<0.001). Median days from diagnosis to treatment start were 25 (2010) versus 47 (2002; p<0.001) and 31 (1992; p<0.001). Total pre-treatment time was median 41 days in 2010 versus 69 days (2002) (p<0.001) and 50 days (1992; p<0.001). Significantly more diagnostic imaging was done in 2010 compared to 2002 and 1992. When compared to current fast track standards the adherence to diagnosis improved slightly from 47% (1992) to 51% (2002) and 64% (2010); waiting time for radiotherapy was within standards for 7%, 1% and 22% of cases, respectively; waiting time for surgery was within standards for 17%, 22% and 48%, respectively. CONCLUSION The study showed a significant reduction in delay of diagnosis and treatment of head and neck cancer in 2010, but still less than half of all patients start treatment within the current standards.


Head and Neck-journal for The Sciences and Specialties of The Head and Neck | 2009

Value of fine-needle aspiration biopsy of salivary gland lesions

Rikke Kølby Christensen; Kristine Bjørndal; Christian Godballe; Annelise Krogdahl

The aim of this study was to assess the utility of fine‐needle aspiration biopsy (FNAB) in the diagnosis and treatment planning of the lesions of the salivary gland.

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Annelise Krogdahl

Odense University Hospital

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Jørgen Johansen

Aarhus University Hospital

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Lars Bastholt

Odense University Hospital

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Helle Døssing

Odense University Hospital

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Laszlo Hegedüs

Odense University Hospital

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