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Dive into the research topics where Dennis Görlich is active.

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Featured researches published by Dennis Görlich.


Leukemia | 2015

Arsenic trioxide-based therapy of relapsed acute promyelocytic leukemia: registry results from the European LeukemiaNet

Eva Lengfelder; Francesco Lo-Coco; Lionel Ades; P. Montesinos; David Grimwade; Bhuvan Kishore; Safaa M. Ramadan; Maria Pagoni; Massimo Breccia; A. J G Huerta; A. M. Nloga; J. D. González-Sanmiguel; Anne Schmidt; Jean-Francois Lambert; S. Lehmann; E Di Bona; B. Cassinat; Wolf-Karsten Hofmann; Dennis Görlich; Maria Cristina Sauerland; Pierre Fenaux; Miguel A. Sanz

In 2008, a European registry of relapsed acute promyelocytic leukemia was established by the European LeukemiaNet. Outcome data were available for 155 patients treated with arsenic trioxide in first relapse. In hematological relapse (n=104), 91% of the patients entered complete hematological remission (CR), 7% had induction death and 2% resistance, 27% developed differentiation syndrome and 39% leukocytosis, whereas no death or side effects occurred in patients treated in molecular relapse (n=40). The rate of molecular (m)CR was 74% in hematological and 62% in molecular relapse (P=0.3). All patients with extramedullary relapse (n=11) entered clinical and mCR. After 3.2 years median follow-up, the 3-year overall survival (OS) and cumulative incidence of second relapse were 68% and 41% in hematological relapse, 66% and 48% in molecular relapse and 90 and 11% in extramedullary relapse, respectively. After allogeneic or autologous transplantation in second CR (n=93), the 3-year OS was 80% compared with 59% without transplantation (n=55) (P=0.03). Multivariable analysis demonstrated the favorable prognostic impact of first remission duration ⩾1.5 years, achievement of mCR and allogeneic or autologous transplantation on OS of patients alive after induction (P=0.03, P=0.01, P=0.01) and on leukemia-free survival (P=0.006, P<0.0001, P=0.003), respectively.


PLOS ONE | 2017

Prostate specific membrane antigen (PSMA) expression in non-small cell lung cancer

Lars Henning Schmidt; Birthe Heitkötter; Arik Bernard Schulze; Christoph Schliemann; Konrad Steinestel; Marcel Trautmann; Alessandro Marra; Ludger Hillejan; Michael Mohr; Georg Evers; Eva Wardelmann; Kambiz Rahbar; Dennis Görlich; Georg Lenz; Wolfgang E. Berdel; Wolfgang Hartmann; Rainer Wiewrodt; Sebastian Huss

Objectives PSMA (prostate-specific membrane antigen) is overexpressed in prostate cancer cells and is reported to be a promising target for antibody-based radioligand therapy in patients with metastasized prostate cancer. Since PSMA expression is not restricted to prostate cancer, the underlying study investigates PSMA expression in non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC). Material and methods Immunohistochemistry was used to identify PSMA expression in n = 275 samples of NSCLC tissue specimens. By means of CD34 co-expression, the level of PSMA expression in tumor associated neovasculature was investigated. The impact of PSMA expression on clinicopathologic parameters and prognosis was evaluated. Results PSMA tumor cell expression in NSCLC is as low as 6% and was predominantly found in squamous cell carcinoma (p = 0.002). Neovascular PSMA expression was found in 49% of NSCLC. High neovascular PSMA expression was associated with higher tumor grading (G3/G4) (p < 0.001). Neither for PSMA tumor cell expression, nor for PSMA neovascular cell expression prognostic effects were found for the investigated NSCLC cases. Conclusion Here, we report on the expression of PSMA in NSCLC tissue samples. Against the background of a potential treatment with radiolabeled PSMA ligands, our data might serve for the future identification of patients who could benefit from this therapeutic option.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2018

Sex bias in MHC I-associated shaping of the adaptive immune system

Tilman Schneider-Hohendorf; Dennis Görlich; Paula Savola; Tiina Kelkka; Satu Mustjoki; Catharina C. Gross; Geoffrey C. Owens; Luisa Klotz; Klaus Dornmair; Heinz Wiendl; Nicholas Schwab

Significance Our analysis shows that sex can be associated with the degree to which HLA molecules propagate selection and expansion of T cells as characterized by their T cell receptor variable beta chain (TCRBV). Furthermore, CD8 T cells, especially in men with autoimmune diseases such as multiple sclerosis or rheumatoid arthritis, are capable of expanding in unison with other CD8 T cells, even without expressing TCRBVs with biochemical similarity in pivotal HLA-binding regions. Our findings add to the understanding of sex bias in diseases with immune system involvement: autoimmunity, infection, and cancer. These results also reveal pathology-associated TCRBVs of interest for future studies and support the argument for sex-separated analysis of HLA disease associations in general. HLA associations, T cell receptor (TCR) repertoire bias, and sex bias have independently been shown for many diseases. While some immunological differences between the sexes have been described, they do not fully explain bias in men toward many infections/cancers, and toward women in autoimmunity. Next-generation TCR variable beta chain (TCRBV) immunosequencing of 824 individuals was evaluated in a multiparametric analysis including HLA-A -B/MHC class I background, TCRBV usage, sex, age, ethnicity, and TCRBV selection/expansion dynamics. We found that HLA-associated shaping of TCRBV usage differed between the sexes. Furthermore, certain TCRBVs were selected and expanded in unison. Correlations between these TCRBV relationships and biochemical similarities in HLA-binding positions were different in CD8 T cells of patients with autoimmune diseases (multiple sclerosis and rheumatoid arthritis) compared with healthy controls. Within patients, men showed higher TCRBV relationship Spearman’s rhos in relation to HLA-binding position similarities compared with women. In line with this, CD8 T cells of men with autoimmune diseases also showed higher degrees of TCRBV perturbation compared with women. Concerted selection and expansion of CD8 T cells in patients with autoimmune diseases, but especially in men, appears to be less dependent on high HLA-binding similarity than in CD4 T cells. These findings are consistent with studies attributing autoimmunity to processes of epitope spreading and expansion of low-avidity T cell clones and may have further implications for the interpretation of pathogenic mechanisms of infectious and autoimmune diseases with known HLA associations. Reanalysis of some HLA association studies, separating the data by sex, could be informative.


International Journal of Antimicrobial Agents | 2017

Direct determination of carbapenem-resistant enterobacteriaceae and pseudomonas aeruginosa from positive blood cultures using laser scattering technology

Evgeny A. Idelevich; Matthias Hoy; Dennis Knaack; Dennis Görlich; Georg Peters; Matthias Borowski; Karsten Becker

Delays in appropriate antimicrobial treatment contribute to increased mortality of septic patients. We aimed to develop a methodology for detection of carbapenem resistance in Gram-negative bacteria directly from positive blood cultures (BCs). Initially, meropenem-resistant Enterobacteriaceae (nu2009=u200913) and Pseudomonas aeruginosa (nu2009=u200932) isolates as well as the same numbers of meropenem-susceptible isolates were used to establish the detection of carbapenem resistance from agar cultures. Growth-based phenotypic detection of meropenem resistance was performed by a laser scattering (LS) method using a BacterioScan™216R instrument. A subset of the strain collection consisting of meropenem-susceptible and -resistant isolates (each comprising seven P. aeruginosa and three Klebsiella pneumoniae) was used for determination of carbapenem resistance directly from positive BCs. Lysis/centrifugation and filtration/dilution methods were investigated for processing of positive BCs. Four different statistical approaches to discriminate between susceptible and resistant bacteria in real-time were applied and were compared regarding their sensitivity and specificity. After 3u2009h and 4u2009h of incubation, respectively, detection of carbapenem resistance in Enterobacteriaceae (sensitivity, 100%; specificity, 100%) and P. aeruginosa (sensitivity, 100%; specificity, ≥90%) agar cultures was attainable. Detection of carbapenem resistance directly from positive BCs was achievable with 100% sensitivity and 100% specificity after 4u2009h and 5u2009h, respectively, applying lysis/centrifugation and filtration/dilution methods. In conclusion, LS technology combined with lysis/centrifugation and appropriate statistical real-time analyses represents a promising option for rapid detection of carbapenem resistance in Gram-negative rods directly from positive BCs.


Oncotarget | 2018

Clonal heterogeneity of FLT3 -ITD detected by high-throughput amplicon sequencing correlates with adverse prognosis in acute myeloid leukemia

Katrin Schranz; Max Hubmann; Egor Harin; Sebastian Vosberg; Tobias Herold; Klaus H. Metzeler; Maja Rothenberg-Thurley; Hanna Janke; Kathrin Bräundl; Bianka Ksienzyk; Aarif Mohamed Nazeer Batcha; Sebastian Schaaf; Stephanie Schneider; Stefan K. Bohlander; Dennis Görlich; Wolfgang E. Berdel; Bernhard Wörmann; Jan Braess; Stefan Krebs; Wolfgang Hiddemann; Ulrich Mansmann; Karsten Spiekermann; Philipp A. Greif

In acute myeloid leukemia (AML), internal tandem duplications (ITDs) of FLT3 are frequent mutations associated with unfavorable prognosis. At diagnosis, the FLT3-ITD status is routinely assessed by fragment analysis, providing information about the length but not the position and sequence of the ITD. To overcome this limitation, we performed cDNA-based high-throughput amplicon sequencing (HTAS) in 250 FLT3-ITD positive AML patients, treated on German AML Cooperative Group (AMLCG) trials. FLT3-ITD status determined by routine diagnostics was confirmed by HTAS in 242 out of 250 patients (97%). The total number of ITDs detected by HTAS was higher than in routine diagnostics (n = 312 vs. n = 274). In particular, HTAS detected a higher number of ITDs per patient compared to fragment analysis, indicating higher sensitivity for subclonal ITDs. Patients with more than one ITD according to HTAS had a significantly shorter overall and relapse free survival. There was a close correlation between FLT3-ITD mRNA levels in fragment analysis and variant allele frequency in HTAS. However, the abundance of long ITDs (≥75nt) was underestimated by HTAS, as the size of the ITD affected the mappability of the corresponding sequence reads. In summary, this study demonstrates that HTAS is a feasible approach for FLT3-ITD detection in AML patients, delivering length, position, sequence and mutational burden of this alteration in a single assay with high sensitivity. Our findings provide insights into the clonal architecture of FLT3-ITD positive AML and have clinical implications.


Leukemia | 2018

Sequential high-dose cytarabine and mitoxantrone (S-HAM) versus standard double induction in acute myeloid leukemia—a phase 3 study

Jan Braess; Susanne Amler; Karl-Anton Kreuzer; Karsten Spiekermann; Hans Walter Lindemann; Eva Lengfelder; Ullrich Graeven; Peter Staib; Wolf-Dieter Ludwig; Harald Biersack; Yon-Dschun Ko; Michael Uppenkamp; Maike de Wit; Stefan Korsten; Rudolf Peceny; Tobias Gaska; Xaver Schiel; Dirk Behringer; Michael Kiehl; Bettina Zinngrebe; Gerald Meckenstock; Eva Roemer; Dirk Medgenberg; Ernst Spaeth-Schwalbe; Gero Massenkeil; Heidrun Hindahl; Rainer Schwerdtfeger; Guido Trenn; Cristina Sauerland; Raphael Koch

Dose-dense induction with the S-HAM regimen was compared to standard double induction therapy in adult patients with newly diagnosed acute myeloid leukemia. Patients were centrally randomized (1:1) between S-HAM (2nd chemotherapy cycle starting on day 8u2009=u2009“dose-dense”) and double induction with TAD-HAM or HAM(-HAM) (2nd cycle starting on day 21u2009=u2009“standard”). 387 evaluable patients were randomly assigned to S-HAM (Nu2009=u2009203) and to standard double induction (Nu2009=u2009184). The primary endpoint overall response rate (ORR) consisting of complete remission (CR) and incomplete remission (CRi) was not significantly different (Pu2009=u20090.202) between S-HAM (77%) and double induction (72%). The median overall survival was 35 months after S-HAM and 25 months after double induction (Pu2009=u20090.323). Duration of critical leukopenia was significantly reduced after S-HAM (median 29 days) versus double induction (median 44 days)—Pu2009<u20090.001. This translated into a significantly shortened duration of hospitalization after S-HAM (median 37 days) as compared to standard induction (median 49 days)—Pu2009<u20090.001. In conclusion, dose-dense induction therapy with the S-HAM regimen shows favorable trends but no significant differences in ORR and OS compared to standard double induction. S-HAM significantly shortens critical leukopenia and the duration of hospitalization by 2 weeks.


International Journal of Medical Microbiology | 2018

Staphylococcus aureus in the airways of cystic fibrosis patients - A retrospective long-term study

Mathias Schwerdt; Claudia Neumann; Bianca Schwartbeck; Stefanie Kampmeier; Susann Herzog; Dennis Görlich; Angelika Dübbers; Jörg Große-Onnebrink; Christina Kessler; Peter Küster; Holger Schültingkemper; Janina Treffon; Georg Peters; Barbara C. Kahl

BACKGROUNDnCystic fibrosis (CF) is an autosomal recessive disease associated with chronic airway infections by Staphylococcus aureus as one of the earliest and most prevalent pathogens. We conducted a retrospective study to determine the S. aureus infection status of CF patients treated since 1994 at two certified CF-centres in Münster, Germany, to get insights into the dynamics of S. aureus airway infection and the clinical impact on lung function on a long-term perspective.nnnMATERIALS AND METHODSnWe used data from our microbiological database collected between 1994 and 2016 for patients treated at two centres in Münster, Germany, respectively, to determine the infection status for S. aureus. Furthermore, the resistance to selected antibiotics was determined for all patients isolates and for 15 patients on a longitudinal basis. In addition, the prevalence of adaptive phenotypes such as small colony variants (SCVs) and mucoid S. aureus was assessed.nnnRESULTSnFor this study, 2867 patient years with respiratory specimens (mean of 9.3u202fyears for every patient, range 1-22u202fyears) were evaluated for 283 CF patients (median age of 7u202fyears at the beginning of the observation period, range 0-57u202fyears, 51% male). 18% of patients were rarely infected by S. aureus (≤24% of observation years), 20% of patients intermittently (25-49%) and 61% persistently (≥50% of observation period). Susceptibility testing for 12969 S. aureus isolates resulted in resistance to methicillin in 9%, trimethoprim/sulfamethoxazole in 10%, levofloxacin in 14%, gentamicin in 20%, erythromycin and/or clindamycin in 30% and penicillin in 80% of all isolates. S. aureus isolates of 15 patients revealed dynamics of resistance with increase, decrease and loss of resistant isolates to the analysed antibiotics during the study period. SCVs were isolated at least once from 42% (nu202f=u202f118) of patients and mucoid isolates from 2% (nu202f=u202f7) of patients. In the last study year, 89 patients were infected by S. aureus only, 44 patients by S. aureus and Pseudomonas aeruginosa and 18 by P. aeruginosa only. Patients infected by S. aureus only were younger and had better lung function compared to the other two groups.nnnCONCLUSIONSnWe determined a high percentage of patients with persistent S. aureus infection. During persistence, mostly fluctuation of resistance against various antibiotics was observed in the isolates indicating acquisition and loss of resistance genes by S. aureus. The prevalence of adaptive phenotypes during long-term persistence was high for SCVs (42% of patients), but low for mucoid isolates (2% of patients), which might be underestimated for mucoid phenotypes due to the retrospective study design and the difficulty to detect mucoid isolates in primary cultures. While patients with S. aureus only had better lung function and were younger, no difference was found between the group of P. aeruginosa and S. aureus co-infection and P. aeruginosa only with previous S. aureus infection.


European Journal of Haematology | 2018

Frontline therapy of acute promyelocytic leukemia: Randomized comparison of ATRA and intensified chemotherapy versus ATRA and anthracyclines

Eva Lengfelder; Dennis Görlich; Daniel Nowak; Karsten Spiekermann; Claudia Haferlach; Utz Krug; Karl-Anton Kreuzer; Jan Braess; Christoph Schliemann; Hans-Walter Lindemann; Heinz A. Horst; Xaver Schiel; Michael Flasshove; Anna Hecht; Susanne Schnittger; Stephanie Schneider; Bernhard Wörmann; Wolf-Karsten Hofmann; Wolfgang E. Berdel; Eike Bormann; Cristina Sauerland; Thomas Büchner; Wolfgang Hiddemann

Randomized comparison of two treatment strategies in frontline therapy of acute promyelocytic leukemia (APL): all‐trans retinoic acid (ATRA) and double induction intensified by high‐dose cytosine arabinoside (HD ara‐C) (German AMLCG) and therapy with ATRA and anthracyclines (Spanish PETHEMA, LPA99).


European Journal of Haematology | 2018

90Y-ibritumomab-tiuxetan as a therapeutic alternative for follicular lymphoma (FL): A single-center experience

Eva U. Spukti; Lars Henning Schmidt; Arik Bernard Schulze; Christoph Schliemann; Dennis Görlich; Eva Wardelmann; Wolfgang Hartmann; Georg Lenz; Wolfgang E. Berdel; Andrea Kerkhoff

Follicular lymphoma (FL) is the most frequent indolent lymphoma subtype in adults. Maintenance therapy with rituximab is frequently applied to FL patients with complete or partial response following initial chemoimmunotherapy. However, radioimmunotherapy with 90Y‐ibritumomab‐tiuxetan represents a therapeutic alternative.


Clinical Cancer Research | 2018

Evolution of Cytogenetically Normal Acute Myeloid Leukemia During Therapy and Relapse: An Exome Sequencing Study of 50 Patients

Philipp A. Greif; Luise Hartmann; Sebastian Vosberg; Sophie M. Stief; Raphael Mattes; Ines Hellmann; Klaus H. Metzeler; Tobias Herold; Stefanos A. Bamopoulos; Paul Kerbs; Vindi Jurinovic; Daniela Schumacher; Friederike Pastore; Kathrin Bräundl; Evelyn Zellmeier; Bianka Ksienzyk; Nikola P. Konstandin; Stephanie Schneider; Alexander Graf; Stefan Krebs; Helmut Blum; Martin Neumann; Claudia D. Baldus; Stefan K. Bohlander; Stephan Wolf; Dennis Görlich; Wolfgang E. Berdel; Bernhard Wörmann; Wolfgang Hiddemann; Karsten Spiekermann

Purpose: To study mechanisms of therapy resistance and disease progression, we analyzed the evolution of cytogenetically normal acute myeloid leukemia (CN-AML) based on somatic alterations. Experimental Design: We performed exome sequencing of matched diagnosis, remission, and relapse samples from 50 CN-AML patients treated with intensive chemotherapy. Mutation patterns were correlated with clinical parameters. Results: Evolutionary patterns correlated with clinical outcome. Gain of mutations was associated with late relapse. Alterations of epigenetic regulators were frequently gained at relapse with recurring alterations of KDM6A constituting a mechanism of cytarabine resistance. Low KDM6A expression correlated with adverse clinical outcome, particularly in male patients. At complete remission, persistent mutations representing preleukemic lesions were observed in 48% of patients. The persistence of DNMT3A mutations correlated with shorter time to relapse. Conclusions: Chemotherapy resistance might be acquired through gain of mutations. Insights into the evolution during therapy and disease progression lay the foundation for tailored approaches to treat or prevent relapse of CN-AML. Clin Cancer Res; 24(7); 1716–26. ©2018 AACR.

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Utz Krug

University of Münster

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