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Dive into the research topics where Frank Boxberger is active.

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Featured researches published by Frank Boxberger.


World Journal of Gastroenterology | 2011

Double-balloon-enteroscopy-based endoscopic retrograde cholangiopancreatography in post-surgical patients.

Martin Raithel; Harald Dormann; Andreas Naegel; Frank Boxberger; Eckhart G. Hahn; Markus F. Neurath; Juergen Maiss

AIM To evaluate double balloon enteroscopy (DBE) in post-surgical patients to perform endoscopic retrograde cholangiopancreatography (ERCP) and interventions. METHODS In 37 post-surgical patients, a stepwise approach was performed to reach normal papilla or enteral anastomoses of the biliary tract/pancreas. When conventional endoscopy failed, DBE-based ERCP was performed and standard parameters for DBE, ERCP and interventions were recorded. RESULTS Push-enteroscopy (overall, 16 procedures) reached enteral anastomoses only in six out of 37 post-surgical patients (16.2%). DBE achieved a high rate of luminal access to the biliary tract in 23 of the remaining 31 patients (74.1%) and to the pancreatic duct (three patients). Among all DBE-based ERCPs (86 procedures), 21/23 patients (91.3%) were successfully treated. Interventions included ostium incision or papillotomy in 6/23 (26%) and 7/23 patients (30.4%), respectively. Biliary endoprosthesis insertion and regular exchange was achieved in 17/23 (73.9%) and 7/23 patients (30.4%), respectively. Furthermore, bile duct stone extraction as well as ostium and papillary dilation were performed in 5/23 (21.7%) and 3/23 patients (13.0%), respectively. Complications during DBE-based procedures were bleeding (1.1%), perforation (2.3%) and pancreatitis (2.3%), and minor complications occurred in up to 19.1%. CONCLUSION The appropriate use of DBE yields a high rate of luminal access to papilla or enteral anastomoses in more than two-thirds of post-surgical patients, allowing important successful endoscopic therapeutic interventions.


Diseases of The Colon & Rectum | 2005

Genetic Testing for Germline Mutations of the APC Gene in Patients With Apparently Sporadic Desmoid Tumors but a Family History of Colorectal Carcinoma

Wolfgang M. Brueckl; Wolfgang G. Ballhausen; Thomas Förtsch; Klaus Günther; Wolfgang Fiedler; Bernhard Gentner; Roland S. Croner; Frank Boxberger; Thomas Kirchner; Eckhart G. Hahn; Werner Hohenberger; Axel Wein

PURPOSEDesmoid tumors, also known as aggressive fibromatosis, occur with an incidence of 10 to 15 percent in patients affected by familial adenomatous polyposis, an autosomal inherited disease caused by germline mutations in the APC gene. However, sporadic forms with no hereditary background exist. The aim of this study was to find out whether there are APC germline mutations in apparently sporadic desmoid tumor patients without clinical or familial signs of familial adenomatous polyposis but with a family history of colorectal carcinoma in at least one family member.METHODSGenomic DNA and mRNA were isolated from peripheral blood leukocytes of index patients of eight nonrelated families. Mutation screening was performed using reverse transcriptase polymerase chain reaction–based protein truncation test for APC exons 1–14. The large APC exon 15 was scrutinized by the protein truncation test of four overlapping genomic fragments. Additionally, genomic DNA from five desmoid tumors was analyzed for loss of heterozygosity at D5S346 close to the APC locus.RESULTSNo translational stop mutations typical for familial adenomatous polyposis could be found in the APC gene in any of the analyzed blood samples from the desmoid tumor patients. Additionally, no loss of heterozygosity at D5S346 was found in four of five desmoids; one tumor was not informative.CONCLUSIONSThese results may suggest that patients with sporadic desmoids and no clinical signs of familial adenomatous polyposis detected on careful examination, esophagogastroduodenoscopy, and complete colonoscopy do not need to be tested routinely for germline mutations of the APC gene. However, as large studies dealing with this problem are absent, it might be more time and cost effective to perform an APC mutational analysis instead.


Gastroenterology | 2015

VEGFR2 Signaling Prevents Colorectal Cancer Cell Senescence to Promote Tumorigenesis in Mice With Colitis

Sebastian Foersch; Tobias Sperka; Christina Lindner; Astrid Taut; Karl Lenhard Rudolph; Georg Breier; Frank Boxberger; Tilman T. Rau; Arndt Hartmann; Michael Stürzl; Nadine Wittkopf; Lisa Haep; Stefan Wirtz; Markus F. Neurath; Maximilian J. Waldner

BACKGROUND & AIMS Senescence prevents cellular transformation. We investigated whether vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF) signaling via its receptor, VEGFR2, regulates senescence and proliferation of tumor cells in mice with colitis-associated cancer (CAC). METHODS CAC was induced in VEGFR2(ΔIEC) mice, which do not express VEGFR2 in the intestinal epithelium, and VEGFR2(fl/fl) mice (controls) by administration of azoxymethane followed by dextran sodium sulfate. Tumor development and inflammation were determined by endoscopy. Colorectal tissues were collected for immunoblot, immunohistochemical, and quantitative polymerase chain reaction analyses. Findings from mouse tissues were confirmed in human HCT116 colorectal cancer cells. We analyzed colorectal tumor samples from patients before and after treatment with bevacizumab. RESULTS After colitis induction, VEGFR2(ΔIEC) mice developed significantly fewer tumors than control mice. A greater number of intestinal tumor cells from VEGFR2(ΔIEC) mice were in senescence than tumor cells from control mice. We found VEGFR2 to activate phosphatidylinositol-4,5-bisphosphate-3-kinase and AKT, resulting in inactivation of p21 in HCT116 cells. Inhibitors of VEGFR2 and AKT induced senescence in HCT116 cells. Tumor cell senescence promoted an anti-tumor immune response by CD8(+) T cells in mice. Patients whose tumor samples showed an increase in the proportion of senescent cells after treatment with bevacizumab had longer progression-free survival than patients in which the proportion of senescent tumor cells did not change before and after treatment. CONCLUSIONS Inhibition of VEGFR2 signaling leads to senescence of human and mouse colorectal cancer cells. VEGFR2 interacts with phosphatidylinositol-4,5-bisphosphate-3-kinase and AKT to inactivate p21. Colorectal tumor senescence and p21 level correlate with patient survival during treatment with bevacizumab.


Case Reports in Oncology | 2011

Complete Long-Term Remission of an Inflammatory Pseudotumor under Corticosteroid Therapy

L Pfeifer; Abbas Agaimy; Rolf Janka; Frank Boxberger; Axel Wein; Markus F. Neurath; Jürgen Siebler

Inflammatory pseudotumors (IPT) form a group of etiologically, histologically, and biologically heterogeneous tumefactive lesions that are histologically characterized by prominent inflammatory infiltrates. IPT has been described in various organs including the lungs, bladder, liver, spleen, heart, and others. It may mimic a malignant tumor clinically and radiologically. We report a case of a 26-year-old woman with an ALK1-negative IPT (7 cm in maximal diameter) mainly located in the 12th right back muscles, surrounding a fractured rib. Histologically, the tumor consisted of an inflammatory infiltrate composed predominantly of diffusely distributed lymphoplasmacytic cells and stromal fibroblasts associated with focal obliterative phlebitis. Conservative steroid treatment resulted in complete remission and the patient remained disease-free for more than 1 year later. To our knowledge this is the first report of IPT involving the skeletal back muscle and complete resolution under corticosteroid treatment.


Anti-Cancer Drugs | 2009

Weekly high-dose 5-fluorouracil as a 24-h infusion and sodium folinic acid (AIO regimen) plus irinotecan in patients with locally advanced nonresectable and metastatic adenocarcinoma or squamous cell carcinoma of the oesophagus: a phase II trial

Kerstin Wolff; Axel Wein; Udo Reulbach; Gudrun Männlein; Valeska Brückl; Cornelia Meier; Nicola Ostermeier; Siegfried A. Schwab; Thomas Horbach; Werner Hohenberger; E. G. Hahn; Frank Boxberger

In the majority of patients with oesophageal carcinoma, curative treatment proves to be impossible when diagnosis was established; therefore, most of the patients are candidates for palliative chemotherapy. The aim of this phase II study was to evaluate the efficacy and safety of 5-fluorouracil/folinic acid (AIO regimen) plus irinotecan in patients with locally advanced or metastatic carcinoma of the oesophagus. The methods used a prospective phase II trial, start: November 2002; patients: n=25; chemotherapy: irinotecan (80 mg/m2) as a 1-h infusion and 5-fluorouracil (2000 mg/m2) with sodium folinic acid (500 mg/m2) as a 24-h infusion on days 1, 8, 15, 22, 29 and 36, repeated on day 57. Last date of evaluation: 28 February 2007; n=24; adenocarcinoma: n=13, squamous cell carcinoma (SCC): n=11; UICC III/IV: 3/21; grading G1/G2/G3/G4: 0/8/12/4; median age: 58 years (range 44–75); men/women: 19/5; Eastern Cooperative Oncology Group index 0/1/2: 3/17/4; applications: 460. Higher-grade toxicity: grade 3 diarrhoea: n=2, grade 4 diarrhoea: n=1, grade 4 vomiting: n=1, grade 4 nausea: n=1, grade 3 fatigue: n=1, grade 3 hyponatraemia: n=2, grade 4 elevation of creatinine: n=1, thrombosis of the vena subclavia: n=1, ischaemic lesion of the brain stem: n=1. Three patients died after two chemotherapeutic applications because of high tumour burden. Evaluable for response: n=19. Partial response: n=8 (33%), stable disease: n=9 (38%), progressive disease: n=2 (8%), not evaluable: n=5 (21%). Time-to-progression: 6.6 months (range 1.6–24.6). Total median survival: 13.6 months (median survival of adenocarcinoma: 20.3 months, median survival of SCC: 10.0 months). Secondary resection (R0): n=3. In oesophageal carcinomas, the AIO regimen plus irinotecan is excellently manageable as an outpatient treatment and shows efficacy in adenocarcinomas and SCCs of the oesophagus.


European Journal of Gastroenterology & Hepatology | 2005

Antiphospholipid syndrome in combination with autoimmune hepatitis.

Axel J. Hueber; Frank Boxberger; Marion Ganslmayer; Eckhart G. Hahn

Autoimmune hepatitis is rarely described in combination with antiphospholipid syndrome. So far, only cases have been presented where the secondary antiphospholipid syndrome occurred as an effect of autoimmune hepatitis. We report on a 56-year-old Caucasian female with a history of thrombosis, thrombocytopenia and the detection of anti-cardiolipin antibodies. Interestingly, a few years later the patient developed liver failure with highly elevated liver enzymes. The immunological antibody pattern verified the diagnosis of type I autoimmune hepatitis, and immunosuppressive therapy led to the recovery of the patient. Thus, we present the first case of autoimmune hepatitis as a consequence of primary antiphospholipid syndrome.


Medical Science Monitor | 2011

Palliative first-line therapy with weekly high-dose 5-fluorouracil and sodium folinic acid as a 24-hour infusion (AIO regimen) combined with weekly irinotecan in patients with metastatic adenocarcinoma of the stomach or esophagogastric junction followed by secondary metastatic resection after downsizing

Kathrin Koucky; Axel Wein; Peter C. Konturek; H Albrecht; Udo Reulbach; Gudrun Männlein; Kerstin Wolff; Nicola Ostermeier; Dagmar Busse; Henriette Golcher; Claus Schildberg; Rolf Janka; Werner Hohenberger; E. G. Hahn; Jürgen Siebler; Markus F. Neurath; Frank Boxberger

Summary Background The aim of this retrospective study was to evaluate the efficacy and safety of weekly high-dose 5-fluorouracil (5-FU)/folinic acid (FA) as 24-h infusion (AIO regimen) plus irinotecan in patients with histologically proven metastatic gastroesophageal adenocarcinoma (UICC stage IV). Material/Methods From 08/1999 to 12/2008, 76 registered, previously untreated patients were evaluable. Treatment regimen: irinotecan (80 mg/m2) as 1-h infusion followed by 5-FU (2000 mg/m2) combined with FA (500 mg/m2) as 24-h infusion (d1, 8, 15, 22, 29, 36, qd 57). Results Median age: 59 years; male/female: 74%/26%; ECOG ≤1: 83%; response: CR: 1%, PR: 16%, SD: 61%, PD: 17%, not evaluable in terms of response: 5%; tumor control: 78%; median OS: 11.2 months; median time-to-progression: 5.3 months; 1-year survival rate: 49%; 2-year survival rate: 17%; no evidence of disease: 6.6%; higher grade toxicities (grade 3/4): anemia: 7%, leucopenia: 1%, ascites: 3%, nausea: 3%, infections: 12%, vomiting: 9%, GI bleeding of the primary tumor: 4%, diarrhea: 17%, thromboembolic events: 4%; secondary metastatic resection after downsizing: 16 patients (21%), R-classification of secondary resections: R0/R1/R2: 81%/6%/13%, median survival of the 16 patients with secondary resection: 23.7 months. Conclusions Combined 5-FU/FA as 24-h infusion plus irinotecan may be considered as an active palliative first-line treatment accompanied by tolerable toxicity; thus offering an alternative to cisplatin-based treatment regimens. Thanks to efficient interdisciplinary teamwork, secondary metastatic resections could be performed in 16 patients. In total, the patients who had undergone secondary resection had a median survival of 23.7 months, whereas the median survival of patients without secondary resection was 10.1 months (p≤0.001).


Case reports in oncological medicine | 2013

Granulomatous Lung Disease Requiring Mechanical Ventilation Induced by a Single Application of Oxaliplatin-Based Chemotherapy for Colorectal Cancer: A Case Report

D Wildner; Frank Boxberger; Axel Wein; Kerstin Wolff; H Albrecht; Gudrun Männlein; Rolf Janka; Kerstin Amann; Jürgen Siebler; Werner Hohenberger; Markus F. Neurath; Richard Strauß

Combined chemotherapeutic regimens in conjunction with oxaliplatin are considered safe and effective treatment options in the clinical management of metastatic colorectal cancer. A 62-year-old male patient with a metastatic rectal carcinoma developed a pulmonary reaction after the first application of the combined standard chemotherapy regimen (5-fluorouracil and sodium folinic acid as a 24 h infusion and oxaliplatin). Following the first dose of chemotherapy, the patient developed acute dyspnoea and fever. A computerised scan of the chest revealed bilateral pulmonary patchy consolidation. Despite high-dose empiric antibiotic and antimycotic treatment, no clinical improvement was seen. The patients condition deteriorated, and he required invasive mechanical ventilation. Diagnostic thoracoscopic wedge resections were performed for further diagnosis. The histological workup revealed distinct granulomatous inflammation, but no microbial pathogens were to be found. Thereupon, a drug-induced reaction to chemotherapy was suspected and high-dose steroid treatment initiated. Subsequently, the patients respiratory condition improved and he was extubated. The present case exemplifies the rare course of a bilateral pneumonia-like, drug-induced granulomatous reaction following a single application of oxaliplatin. In addition to the known side effects of oxaliplatin-containing combination chemotherapy, unexpected serious adverse events in the form of pulmonary toxicities should also be taken into account.


Der Internist | 2007

80-jähriger Patient mit Pankreasraumforderung

Sebastian Stintzing; Christoph Herold; E. G. Hahn; Frank Boxberger

CA 19-9 is still used in the differential diagnosis of pancreatic lesions. As it has been shown to be elevated in many other non-pancreatic diseases--sometimes even extraordinarily--this marker should not be used to set the diagnosis of a pancreas carcinoma anymore. Especially if there is a concomitant cholestasis there is no diagnostic value to perform the measurement of CA 19-9. As the histological confirmation is the only way to get the exact diagnosis endoscopic ultrasound guided fine-needle aspiration biopsy should be considered in lesions of the pancreatic head.


Case Reports in Oncology | 2011

Long-Term Relapse-Free Survival by Interdisciplinary Collaboration in a Patient with Metastatic Pancreatic Cancer (UICC IV).

Sandra Roehrig; Axel Wein; H Albrecht; G. Maennlein; Kerstin Wolff; Dane Muskoski; Kerstin Amann; Rolf Janka; Werner Hohenberger; E. G. Hahn; Jürgen Siebler; Markus F. Neurath; Frank Boxberger

Introduction: The prognostic outlook for patients suffering from pancreatic cancer is generally poor. Particularly in cases of advanced and metastatic disease, long-term relapse-free survival may be achieved only in a few cases. Case Report: A 45-year-old patient presented with metastatic pancreatic cancer. Liver metastases had been intra-operatively confirmed by histology. Prior to initiating treatment, a portacath was surgically implanted. Subsequently, the patient received a weekly dose of 1,000 mg/m2 gemcitabine combined with 2,000 mg/m2 high-dose 5-fluorouracil as a 24-hour infusion for palliative treatment. As the patient was suffering from a stenosis of the ductus hepaticus communis, an endoprosthesis was primarily implanted. After 18 applications of chemotherapy during which only low toxic side effects such as nausea, vomiting and alopecia (NCI-CTC grade 1) presented, a partial remission of the primary tumor was observed. In the course of chemotherapy treatment, the carbohydrate antigen 19-9 tumor marker value normalized. Thus, the interdisciplinary tumor board of the University of Erlangen decided to perform a laparoscopy to evaluate the status of liver metastases after palliative chemotherapy treatment. Subsequently, the primary tumor could be completely resected (pT2, pN0, pM0, L0, V0, G2, R0); liver metastases were not observed. Eight years after the initial diagnosis, the patient is relapse-free, professionally fully integrated and presents with an excellent performance status. Conclusion: Patients suffering from metastatic pancreatic cancer may benefit from treatment combinations with palliative intent. In singular cases, patients may even have a curative treatment option, provided a close interdisciplinary collaboration exists.

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Dive into the Frank Boxberger's collaboration.

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Axel Wein

University of Erlangen-Nuremberg

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Werner Hohenberger

University of Erlangen-Nuremberg

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G. Maennlein

University of Erlangen-Nuremberg

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E. G. Hahn

University of Erlangen-Nuremberg

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Kerstin Wolff

University of Erlangen-Nuremberg

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Markus F. Neurath

University of Erlangen-Nuremberg

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Wolfgang M. Brueckl

University of Erlangen-Nuremberg

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Eckhart G. Hahn

Thomas Jefferson University

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Rolf Janka

University of Erlangen-Nuremberg

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H Albrecht

University of Erlangen-Nuremberg

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