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Dive into the research topics where Christian Rosenberg is active.

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Featured researches published by Christian Rosenberg.


American Journal of Roentgenology | 2009

Laser Ablation of Metastatic Lesions of the Lung: Long-Term Outcome

Christian Rosenberg; Ralf Puls; Katrin Hegenscheid; Jens Peter Kuehn; Tom Bollman; Alexandra Westerholt; Christiane Weigel; Norbert Hosten

OBJECTIVE Pulmonary metastatic lesions are present in 20-54% of all patients who die of cancer. Surgical studies have shown that local management of distant tumor metastasis as part of multimodal cancer therapy improves survival. Minimally invasive procedures such as thermal ablation are still to prove their clinical relevance. The aim of this study was to monitor therapeutic outcome and long-term results after percutaneous laser-induced thermal ablation. SUBJECTS AND METHODS Sixty-four patients with metastasis to the lung underwent laser-induced thermal ablation in an ongoing prospective study. A total of 129 percutaneous procedures were performed to manage a total of 108 lung lesions. The median tumor size was 2.0 cm (range, 0.4-8.5 cm). Adequate management of all known individual tumor correlates was critical for definitive patient therapy. The Kaplan-Meier method was used to calculate survival and recurrence rates. RESULTS Definitive management of initial pulmonary disease was achieved in 31 of 64 patients. The 1-, 2-, 3-, 4-, and 5-year survival rates after ablative therapy were 81%, 59%, 44%, 44%, and 27%. The median progression-free interval was 7.4 months. There were no therapy-related deaths. Pneumothorax occurred in 38% of the patients, necessitating periprocedural drainage in 5% of all cases. Parenchymal bleeding (13% of cases) always was self-limited. CONCLUSION Laser ablative therapy for pulmonary metastasis is a promising option in multimodal cancer therapy. The procedure is safe and effective. The initial clinical outcome data strongly suggest that this technique has the potential to improve survival among selected patients.


Journal of Vascular and Interventional Radiology | 2009

Laser Ablation of Liver Metastases from Colorectal Cancer with MR Thermometry: 5-Year Survival

Ralf Puls; Soenke Langner; Christian Rosenberg; Katrin Hegenscheid; Jens Peter Kuehn; Kai Noeckler; Norbert Hosten

PURPOSE To determine technical success, technique effectiveness, complications, and survival after laser ablation of liver metastases from colorectal cancer. MATERIALS AND METHODS Eighty-seven consecutive patients (65 men and 22 women; mean age, 62.8 years) with 180 liver metastases from colorectal carcinoma were included between 1998 and 2005. They underwent laser ablation with magnetic resonance (MR) thermometry in 170 sessions. Indications for laser ablation were locally unresectable tumors (16.1%), metastases in both liver lobes (34.5%), and refusal of surgery and/or general contraindications to surgery (49.4%). Technical success, technique effectiveness, and complication and survival rates were evaluated retrospectively. RESULTS Technical success was achieved in 178 of 180 sessions (99%). Follow-up after 24-48 hours demonstrated an effectiveness rate of 85.6%. Local tumor progression rate was 10% after 6 months. Major complications included large pleural effusion, large subcapsular hematoma, abscess, large pneumothorax, pleuritis with fever, intrahepatic hemorrhage, and biloma. Mean survival from the time of diagnosis of the primary tumor was 50.6 months for all patients treated (95% CI, 44.9-56.3 months). Median survival time was 54 months and survival rates were 95.7% at 1 year, 86.2% at 2 years, 72.4% at 3 years, 50.1% at 4 years, and 33.4% at 5 years. The mean survival time after the first treatment was 31.1 months (95% CI, 26.9-35.3 months). CONCLUSIONS Laser ablation of liver metastases of colorectal cancer with MR thermometry appears safe and efficacious. Although the results are encouraging, direct comparison with other ablative modalities in a prospective clinical trial would be necessary to definitely show one modality is superior.


American Journal of Roentgenology | 2010

Assessing Early Vascular Changes and Treatment Response After Laser-Induced Thermotherapy of Pulmonary Metastases With Perfusion CT: Initial Experience

Katrin Hegenscheid; Nicole Behrendt; Christian Rosenberg; Jens-Peter Kuehn; Ralf Ewert; Norbert Hosten; Ralf Puls

OBJECTIVE The objective of our study was to use perfusion CT to prospectively monitor early vascular changes in tumor perfusion of pulmonary metastases after laser-induced thermotherapy (LITT) and to determine whether any of the perfusion parameters would predict technical success after therapy. SUBJECTS AND METHODS Twelve patients with histologically proven pulmonary metastases undergoing LITT were enrolled prospectively in this study. Perfusion CT was performed before treatment, 1 day after treatment, and 4-6 weeks after therapy, and tumor blood flow, tumor blood volume (TBV), mean transit time (MTT), and permeability of the capillary wall surface (capillary permeability-surface product) in 22 pulmonary metastases were calculated. Perfusion parameters at baseline and after LITT were compared. Measurement of tumor diameter on long-term follow-up CT was the gold standard with which perfusion CT results were compared for local control. RESULTS Median tumor blood flow, TBV, and capillary permeability-surface product had decreased significantly from baseline by 43%, 61%, and 73%, respectively, 1 day after LITT. Perfusion parameters obtained 4-6 weeks after treatment had not changed significantly compared with those obtained 1 day after therapy. There seems to be a good correlation between changes in perfusion CT parameters 1 day after therapy and local outcome, according to the Response Evaluation Criteria in Solid Tumors (RECIST), 1 year after therapy. CONCLUSION Perfusion CT of pulmonary metastases has potential in the assessment of early vascular changes that result from LITT and predicting technical success immediately after treatment. Tumors with perfusion measurements that had not changed after therapy indicated progressive disease.


Journal of Magnetic Resonance Imaging | 2011

Clinical evaluation of MR temperature monitoring of laser-induced thermotherapy in human liver using the proton-resonance-frequency method and predictive models of cell death

Antje Kickhefel; Christian Rosenberg; Clifford Weiss; Hansjörg Rempp; Joerg Roland; Fritz Schick; Norbert Hosten

To assess the feasibility, precision, and accuracy of real‐time temperature mapping (TMap) during laser‐induced thermotherapy (LITT) for clinical practice in patients liver with a gradient echo (GRE) sequence using the proton resonance frequency (PRF) method.


Journal of Magnetic Resonance Imaging | 2007

Three-dimensional gradient-echo imaging for percutaneous MR-guided laser therapy of liver metastasis.

Ralf Puls; Christian Stroszczynski; Christian Rosenberg; Jens-Peter Kuehn; Katrin Hegenscheid; Ulrich Speck; Albrecht Stier; Norbert Hosten

To evaluate the use of three‐dimensional (3D) gradient‐echo (GRE) magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) for percutaneous MR‐guided catheter placement for laser therapy of liver metastases.


International Journal of Hyperthermia | 2012

A pilot study for clinical feasibility of the near-harmonic 2D referenceless PRFS thermometry in liver under free breathing using MR-guided LITT ablation data

Antje Kickhefel; Christian Rosenberg; Jörg Roland; Magalie Viallon; Patrick Gross; Fritz Schick; Norbert Hosten; Rares Salomir

Objectives: The conventional implementations of proton resonance frequency shift (PRFS) magnetic resonance thermometry (MRT) require the subtraction of single or multiple temporal references, a motion sensitive critical feature. A pilot study was conducted here to investigate the clinical feasibility of near-harmonic two-dimensional (2D) referenceless PRFS MRT, using patient data from MR-guided laser ablation of liver malignancies. Methods: PRFS MRT with respiratory-triggered multi-slice gradient-recalled (GRE) acquisition was performed under free breathing in six patients. The precision of the novel referenceless MRT was compared with the reference phase subtraction. Coupling the referenceless MRT with a model-based, real-time compatible regularisation algorithm was also investigated. Results: The precision of MRT was improved by a factor of 3.3 when using the referenceless method as compared to the reference phase subtraction. The approach combining referenceless PRFS MRT and model-based regularisation yielded an estimated precision of 0.7° to 2.1°C, resulting in millimetre-range agreement between the calculated thermal dose and the 24 h post-treatment unperfused regions in liver. Conclusions: The application of the near-harmonic 2D referenceless MRT method was feasible in a clinical scenario of MR-guided laser-induced thermal therapy (LITT) ablation in liver and permitted accurate prediction of the thermal lesion under free breathing in conscious patients, obviating the need for a controlled breathing under general anaesthesia.


European Journal of Gastroenterology & Hepatology | 2012

Selective microcoil embolization of arterial gastrointestinal bleeding in the acute situation: outcome, complications, and factors affecting treatment success.

Birger Mensel; Jens-P. Kühn; Matthias Kraft; Christian Rosenberg; Lars Ivo Partecke; Norbert Hosten; Ralf Puls

Objectives To evaluate microcoil embolization in the interventional treatment of acute upper and lower gastrointestinal bleeding. Patients and methods Forty-four patients (29 men, 15 women) with active arterial gastrointestinal bleeding were treated with microcoil embolization. The analysis included technical/clinical success, morbidity, mortality, and intervention-related mortality. Age, sex, underlying malignant disease, number of embolizations, preinterventional and postinterventional hemoglobin levels, blood products administered peri-interventionally, amount of embolization material used, duration of fluoroscopy, and use of contrast medium were evaluated for possible effects on technical and clinical success. Results The primary technical success rate of microcoil embolization for acute gastrointestinal bleeding was 88.6% with a clinical success rate of 56.8%. Minor and major complications occurred in 13.6 and 18.2% of patients, respectively. Intervention-associated mortality, due to intestinal ischemia, accounted for 4.6% of the total 18.2% mortality rate. Patients with technically successful embolization had a statistically significant increase in hemoglobin (P<0.01) after the intervention and a decrease in need for packed red blood cells, (P<0.01), fresh frozen plasma (P<0.01), and coagulation products (P<0.01). A smaller postinterventional fresh frozen plasma requirement was associated with a better clinical outcome (P=0.02). Conclusion Microcoil embolization of arterial gastrointestinal bleeding in the acute situation has a high-technical success rate. The number of transfusions required before and after the intervention has no significant effect on technical success. Postinterventional fresh frozen plasma demand negatively correlates with clinical success.


PLOS ONE | 2012

Technical and Clinical Outcome of Talent versus Endurant Endografts for Endovascular Aortic Aneurysm Repair

Birger Mensel; Jens-Peter Kühn; Tobias Träger; Martin Dührkoop; Wolfram von Bernstorff; Christian Rosenberg; Andreas Hoene; Ralf Puls

Objective The technical evolution of endografts for the interventional management of infrarenal abdominal aortic aneurysms (AAA) has allowed a continuous expansion of indications. This study compares the established Talent endograft with its successor, the Endurant endograft, taking individual aortoiliac anatomy into account. Methods From June 2007 to December 2010, 35 patients with AAA were treated with a Talent endograft (33 men) and 36 patients with an Endurant endograft (34 men). Aortoiliac anatomy was evaluated in detail using preinterventional computed tomography angiography. The 30-day outcome of both groups were compared regarding technical and clinical success as well as complications including endoleaks. Results The Endurant group included more patients with unfavorable anatomy (kinking of pelvic arteries, p = 0.017; shorter proximal neck, p = 0.084). Primary technical success was 91.4% in the Talent group and 100% in the Endurant group (p = 0.115). Type 1 endoleaks occurred in 5.7% of patients in the Talent group and in 2.8% of those in the Endurant group (p = 0.614). Type 3 endoleaks only occurred in the Talent group (2.9% of patients; p = 0.493). Type 2 endoleaks were significantly less common in the Endurant group than in the Talent group (8.3% versus 28.6%; p = 0.035). Rates of major and minor complications were not significantly different between both groups. Primary clinical success was significantly better in the Endurant group (97.2%) than in the Talent group (80.0%) (p = 0.028). Conclusion Endurant endografts appear to have better technical and clinical outcome in patients with difficult aortoiliac anatomy, significantly reducing the occurrence of type 2 endoleaks.


PLOS ONE | 2013

PRFS-Based MR Thermometry Versus an Alternative T1 Magnitude Method - Comparative Performance Predicting Thermally Induced Necrosis in Hepatic Tumor Ablation

Christian Rosenberg; Antje Kickhefel; Birger Mensel; Tilman Pickartz; Ralf Puls; Joerg Roland; Norbert Hosten

Objective To compare the accuracy of a semi-quantitative proton resonance frequency shift (PRFS) thermal mapping interface and an alternative qualitative T1 thermometry model in predicting tissue necrosis in an established routine setting of MRI-guided laser ablation in the human liver. Materials and Methods 34 cases of PRFS-guided (GRE) laser ablation were retrospectively matched with 34 cases from an earlier patient population of 73 individuals being monitored through T1 magnitude image evaluation (FLASH 2D). The model-specific real-time estimation of necrotizing thermal impact (above 54 °C zone and T1 signal loss, respectively) was correlated in size with the resulting necrosis as shown by lack of enhancement on the first-day contrast exam (T1). Matched groups were compared using the Mann-Whitney test. Results Online PRFS guidance was available in 33 of 34 cases. Positive size correlation between calculated impact zone and contrast defect at first day was evident in both groups (p < 0.0004). The predictive error estimating necrosis was median 21 % (range 1 % - 52 %) in the PRFS group and 61 % (range 22 - 84 %) in the T1 magnitude group. Differences in estimating lethal impact were significant (p = 0.004), whereas the real extent of therapy-induced necrosis showed no significant difference (p > 0.28) between the two groups. Conclusion PRFS thermometry is feasible in a clinical setting of thermal hepatic tumor ablation. As an interference-free MR-tool for online therapy monitoring its accuracy to predict tissue necrosis is superior to a competing model of thermally induced alteration of the T1 magnitude signal.


PLOS ONE | 2014

Gd-EOB-DTPA-enhanced MR guidance in thermal ablation of liver malignancies.

Christian Rosenberg; Andrea Jahn; Tilman Pickartz; Ulrich Wahnschaffe; Maciej Patrzyk; Norbert Hosten

Objective To evaluate the potency of Gd-EOB-DTPA to support hepatic catheter placement in laser ablation procedures by quantifying time-dependent delineation effects for instrumentation and target tumor within liver parenchyma. Monitoring potential influence on online MR thermometry during the ablation procedure is a secondary aim. Materials and Methods 30 cases of MR-guided laser ablation were performed after i.v. bolus injection of gadoxetic acid (0.025 mmol/Kg Gd-EOB-DTPA; Bayer Healthcare, Berlin, Germany). T1-weighted GRE sequences were used for applicator guidance (FLASH 3D) in the catheter placement phase and for therapy monitoring (FLASH 2D) in the therapy phase. SNR and consecutive CNR values were measured for elements of interest plotted over time both for catheter placement and therapy phase and compared with a non-contrast control group of 19 earlier cases. Statistical analysis was realized using the paired Wilcoxon test. Results Sustainable signal elevation of liver parenchyma in the contrast-enhanced group was sufficient to silhouette both target tumor and applicator against the liver. Differences in time dependent CNR alteration were highly significant between contrast-enhanced and non-contrast interventions for parenchyma and target on the one hand (p = 0.020) and parenchyma and instrument on the other hand (p = 0.002). Effects lasted for the whole procedure (monitoring up to 60 min) and were specific for the contrast-enhanced group. Contrasting maxima were seen after median 30 (applicator) and 38 (tumor) minutes, in the potential core time of a multineedle procedure. Contrast influence on T1 thermometry for real-time monitoring of thermal impact was not significant (p = 0.068–0.715). Conclusion Results strongly support anticipated promotive effects of Gd-EOB-DTPA for MR-guided percutaneous liver interventions by proving and quantifying the delineating effects for therapy-relevant elements in the procedure. Time benefit, cost effectiveness and oncologic outcome of the described beneficiary effects will have to be part of further investigations.

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Norbert Hosten

University of Greifswald

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Ralf Puls

University of Greifswald

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Birger Mensel

University of Greifswald

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Fritz Schick

University of Tübingen

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Andrea Thiele

University of Greifswald

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