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Dive into the research topics where Dimitrios Karamanolakis is active.

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Featured researches published by Dimitrios Karamanolakis.


Clinical Cancer Research | 2004

Combination of Somatostatin Analog, Dexamethasone, and Standard Androgen Ablation Therapy in Stage D3 Prostate Cancer Patients with Bone Metastases

Michael Koutsilieris; Constantine S. Mitsiades; John Bogdanos; Theodoros Dimopoulos; Dimitrios Karamanolakis; Constantine Milathianakis; Athanassios Tsintavis

Purpose: Androgen ablation-refractory prostate cancer patients (stage D3) develop painful bone metastases and limited responsiveness to conventional therapies, hence the lack of universally accepted “gold standard” treatment for this poor prognosis clinical setting. We tested the safety and efficacy in stage D3 patients of the combination hormonal therapy, which combines administration of somatostatin analog and dexamethasone with standard androgen ablation monotherapy (luteinizing-hormone releasing-hormone analog or orchiectomy). Experimental Design: Thirty eight patients with stage D3 prostate cancer (mean age 71.8 ± 5.9 years) continued receiving androgen ablation therapy in combination with oral dexamethasone (4 mg daily for the 1st month of treatment, tapered down to 1 mg daily by the 4th month, with 1 mg daily maintenance dose thereafter) and somatostatin analog (20 mg octreotide i.m. injections every 28 days). Results: Twenty-three of 38 patients (60.5%) receiving this combination regimen had partial responses [PR, ≥50% prostate-specific antigen (PSA) decline], 9 (21.1%) had stable disease, and 7 (18.4%) had progressive disease. In 47.7% (18 of 38) of patients, their serum PSA levels decreased with treatment but did not return to their respective baselines until the end of follow-up (or death from non-prostate cancer-related causes). The median time-to-return to baseline PSA was 12 months (95% CI, 7–17 months), median progression-free survival was 7 months (95% CI, 4.5–9.5 months), median overall survival was 14 months (95% CI, 10.7–17.4 months), and median prostate cancer-specific overall survival (defined as time from onset of combination therapy until prostate cancer-related death) was 16.0 months (95% CI, 11.9–20.1 months). All patients reported significant and durable improvement of bone pain and performance status (for a median duration of 14 months; 95% CI, 9–19 months), without major treatment-related side effects. We observed a statistically significant (P < 0.01) reduction in serum insulin-like growth factor-1 levels at response to the combination therapy. T levels remained suppressed within castration levels at baseline and throughout therapy, including relapse. Conclusion: The combination therapy of dexamethasone plus somatostatin analog and standard androgen ablation manipulation produces objective clinical responses and symptomatic improvement in androgen ablation-refractory refractory prostate cancer patients.


International Journal of Urology | 2005

Morbidity of prophylactic inguinal lymphadenectomy with saphenous vein preservation for squamous cell penile carcinoma

Constantine Milathianakis; John Bogdanos; Dimitrios Karamanolakis

Abstract


Expert Opinion on Investigational Drugs | 2002

Combination of dexamethasone and a somatostatin analogue in the treatment of advanced prostate cancer

Athanassios Tsintavis; Theocharis Lambou; John Vacalicos; Michael Koutsilieris; Dimitrios Karamanolakis; John Bogdanos; Constantine Milathianakis; Constantine S. Mitsiades; Theodoros Dimopoulos

The local microenvironment at the sites of cancer metastases protects tumour cells from anticancer drug-induced apoptosis via mechanisms, such as soluble growth factors and cytokines. The concept of antisurvival factor (ASF) therapy as a component of anticancer treatments aims at neutralising the protective effect conferred upon cancer cells by the survival factor(s) derived by the local microenvironment, in order to enhance the sensitivity and/or reverse the resistance of tumour cells to other anticancer therapeutic strategies. Herein, we review the translation of this concept from ex vivo studies to clinical applications in the setting of prostate cancer refractory to androgen ablation (stage D3). At this stage, which predominantly involves bone metastases, insulin-like growth factor 1 (IGF-1) production (either growth hormone (GH)-dependent or GH-independent) can protect tumour cells from apoptosis, despite the significant suppression of androgens. The application of the ASF therapeutic concept involves the combination of dexamethasone (which suppresses GH-independent IGF-1) and somatostatin analogue (which suppresses endocrine, GH-dependent IGF-1) with the pro-apoptotic effect of the testicular androgen suppression by sustained use of LHRH analogues. In stage D3, patients who had failed anti-androgen withdrawal, chemotherapy and also had several other adverse prognostic features, the ASF-based combination achieved durable objective responses and major symptomatic improvement, paving the way for future applications of this approach. The ASF-based combination therapy illustrates a novel paradigm in cancer treatment: anti-tumour treatment strategies may not only aim at directly inducing cancer cell apoptosis, but can also target the tumour microenvironment and neutralise the protection it confers on metastatic cancer cells. The favourable toxicity profile of this therapeutic approach calls for its testing in a randomised controlled setting in metastatic prostate cancer and, conceivably, in other IGF-1-responsive malignancies.


Expert Opinion on Investigational Drugs | 2006

Combination therapy using LHRH and somatostatin analogues plus dexamethasone in androgen ablation refractory prostate cancer patients with bone involvement: a bench to bedside approach

Michael Koutsilieris; John Bogdanos; Constantine Milathianakis; Peter Dimopoulos; Theodoros Dimopoulos; Dimitrios Karamanolakis; Antonis Halapas; Roxane Tenta; Haralampos Katopodis; Effie Papageorgiou; Nea Pitulis; Nikos Pissimissis; Peter Lembessis; Antigone Sourla

The development of resistance to anticancer therapies is a major hurdle in preventing long-lasting clinical responses to conventional therapies in hormone-refractory prostate cancer. Herein, the molecular evidence documenting that bone metastasis microenvironment survival factors (mainly the paracrine growth hormone-independent, urokinase-type plasminogen activator-mediated increase of IGF-1 and the endocrine production of growth hormone-dependent IGF-1, mainly liver-derived IGF-1 production) produce an epigenetic form of prostate cancer cells that are resistant to proapoptotic therapies is reviewed. Consequently, the authors present the conceptual framework of a novel antibone microenvironment survival factor, mainly an anti-IGF-1 hormonal manipulation for androgen ablation refractory prostate cancer (a combination of conventional androgen ablation therapy [luteinising hormone-releasing hormone agonist-A or orchiectomy]) with dexamethasone plus somatostatin analogue, which yielded durable objective responses and major improvement of bone pain and performance status in stage D3 prostate cancer patients.


BJUI | 2007

Combination of somatostatin analogues and dexamethasone (antisurvival-factor concept) with luteinizing hormone-releasing hormone in androgen ablation-refractory prostate cancer with bone metastasis

Michael Koutsilieris; Theodore Dimopoulos; Constantine Milathianakis; John Bogdanos; Dimitrios Karamanolakis; Nicholas Pissimissis; Antonis Halapas; Peter Lembessis; Andreas Papaioannou; Antigone Sourla

Michael Koutsilieris, Theodore Dimopoulos*, Constantine Milathianakis†, John Bogdanos, Dimitrios Karamanolakis, Nicholas Pissimissis, Antonis Halapas, Peter Lembessis, Andreas Papaioannou‡ and Antigone Sourla¶ Department of Experimental Physiology, Medical School, National & Kapodistrian University of Athens, Goudi-Athens, *Urology Clinic, Panagia General Hospital, Thessaloniki, †Urology Clinic, ‘Metaxa’ Anticancer Hospital, Piraeus, ‡Urology Clinic, Argos General Hospital, Argos, and ¶Endo/OncoResearch Laboratories, Diagnostic Medical Center, Athens, Greece


Anticancer Research | 2006

Randomized Controlled Clinical Trial of a Combination of Somatostatin Analog and Dexamethasone Plus Zoledronate vs. Zoledronate in Patients with Androgen Ablation-refractory Prostate Cancer

Constantine S. Mitsiades; John Bogdanos; Dimitrios Karamanolakis; Constantine Milathianakis; Theodoros Dimopoulos; Michael Koutsilieris


Anticancer Research | 2003

Combined androgen blockade-induced anemia in prostate cancer patients without bone involvement

John Bogdanos; Dimitrios Karamanolakis; Constantine Milathianakis; Panayiotis Repousis; Athanassios Tsintavis; Michael Koutsilieris


Anticancer Research | 2006

Serum Testosterone: A Potentially Adjunct Screening Test for the Assessment of the Risk of Prostate Cancer Among Men with Modestly Elevated PSA Values (≥3.0 and <10.0 ng/ml)

Dimitrios Karamanolakis; Theocharis Lambou; John Bogdanos; Constantine Milathianakis; Antigone Sourla; Peter Lembessis; Antonis Halapas; Nicholas Pissimissis; Nick Dessypris; Eleni Petridou; Michael Koutsilieris


Anticancer Research | 2004

Epoetin beta (NeoRecormon®) corrects anaemia in patients with hormone-refractory prostate cancer and bone metastases

John Bogdanos; Dimitrios Karamanolakis; K. Milathianakis; P. Repousis; A. Chloraki-Bobota; H. Majed; E. Pagalou-Thoua; Athanassios Tsintavis; Michael Koutsilieris


Molecular Medicine | 2002

Molecular evidence-based use of bone resorption-targeted therapy in prostate cancer patients at high risk for bone involvement.

Dimitrios Karamanolakis; John Bogdanos; Antigone Sourla; Constantine Milathianakis; Athanassios Tsintavis; Peter Lembessis; Roxane Tenta; Despina Tiblalexi; Michael Koutsilieris

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Constantine Milathianakis

National and Kapodistrian University of Athens

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John Bogdanos

National and Kapodistrian University of Athens

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Michael Koutsilieris

National and Kapodistrian University of Athens

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Antigone Sourla

National and Kapodistrian University of Athens

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Peter Lembessis

National and Kapodistrian University of Athens

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Antonis Halapas

National and Kapodistrian University of Athens

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Theodoros Dimopoulos

National and Kapodistrian University of Athens

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Nicholas Pissimissis

National and Kapodistrian University of Athens

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