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Featured researches published by Franz Fogt.


The American Journal of Gastroenterology | 2001

An open-label trial of the PPARγ ligand rosiglitazone for active ulcerative colitis

James D. Lewis; Gary R. Lichtenstein; Robert B. Stein; Julius J. Deren; Thomas A. Judge; Franz Fogt; Emma E. Furth; E.J Demissie; Linda B. Hurd; Chinyu G. Su; Sue A. Keilbaugh; Mitchell A. Lazar; Gary D. Wu

OBJECTIVES:Previous research has demonstrated that ligands for the γ subtype of peroxisome proliferator-activated receptors (PPARs) reduce inflammation in two different murine models of colitis. This study was designed to examine the potential efficacy of rosiglitazone, a ligand for the γ subtype of PPARs, as a therapy for active ulcerative colitis.METHODS:Fifteen patients with mild to moderately active ulcerative colitis despite therapy with 5-aminosalicylic acid compounds were enrolled in an open-label study of rosiglitazone (4 mg b.i.d. p.o.) for 12 wk. Thirteen of 15 patients were receiving concomitant therapy with corticosteroids and/or immunomodulator medications. Disease activity was measured with the Disease Activity Index.RESULTS:After 12 wk of therapy, four patients (27%) had achieved clinical remission, of whom three (20%) also had an endoscopic remission. Four additional patients (27%) had a clinical response without achieving remission. Two patients were hospitalized with worsened disease activity, and one patient was withdrawn for nephrotic syndrome.CONCLUSIONS:These data suggest that ligands for the γ subtype of PPARs may represent a novel therapy for ulcerative colitis. A double blind, placebo-controlled, randomized trial is warranted.


The Journal of Pathology | 2002

Telomerase as a prognostic marker in breast cancer: high‐throughput tissue microarray analysis of hTERT and hTR

Christopher Poremba; Bernhard Heine; Raihanatou Diallo; Achim Heinecke; Daniel Wai; Karl-Ludwig Schaefer; Yvonne Braun; Andreas Schuck; Claudia Lanvers; Agnes Bankfalvi; Sören Kneif; Joachim Torhorst; Markus Zuber; Ossi R. Köchli; Frank Mross; Holger Dieterich; Guido Sauter; Harald Stein; Franz Fogt; Werner Boecker

Telomerase activity (TA) has been shown to correlate with poor clinical outcome in various tumour entities, indicating that tumours expressing this enzyme may be more aggressive and that TA may be a useful prognostic marker. For breast cancer, however, TA is a controversial prognostic marker; whereas some studies suggest an association between TA and disease outcome, others do not find this association. This study used tissue microarrays (breast carcinoma prognosis arrays) containing 611 samples (each 0.6 mm in diameter) from the tumour centre of paraffin‐embedded breast carcinomas to analyse the catalytic subunit of telomerase, human telomerase reverse‐transcriptase (hTERT), and the internal RNA component (hTR), which are the core components of the telomerase holoenzyme complex. hTERT protein expression was obtained by immunohistochemistry (human anti‐telomerase antibody Ab‐2, Calbiochem), and hTR RNA was measured by radioactive in situ hybridization. hTERT and hTR expression were determined semi‐quantitatively and graded (scores 1–4). Clinical data, such as histological subtype, pT stage, tumour diameter, pN stage, BRE grade, tumour‐specific survival (in months), patients age and others, were available for statistical analysis. A statistically significant correlation was found between tumour‐specific survival (overall survival) and hTERT expression (p < 0.0001) or hTR expression (p = 0.00110). Tumours with higher scores (scores 3, 4) for hTR and/or hTERT were associated with a worse prognosis. In multivariate analysis, hTERT expression was an independent prognostic factor. Previous studies, focusing on analysis of TA in smaller numbers of fresh‐frozen breast carcinomas by the TRAP assay, gave controversial results with respect to TA as a prognostic marker. Using tissue microarrays from 611 breast carcinomas, this study has demonstrated that increased expression levels of the telomerase core components, hTERT and hTR, are associated with lower overall survival. These findings suggest that TA should be included in future validation studies as a prognostic marker in breast cancer. Copyright


Modern Pathology | 2002

Interobserver Variability in the Diagnosis of Ulcerative Colitis-Associated Dysplasia by Telepathology

Robert D. Odze; John R. Goldblum; Amy Noffsinger; Nada Alsaigh; Lyndo A Rybicki; Franz Fogt

Telepathology (TP) is the practice of remote diagnostic consultation of electronically transmitted, static, digitalized images. The diagnostic efficacy of TP-based consultation services has not been widely tested. Dysplasia that arises in association with chronic ulcerative colitis (CUC) is, at present, the most important marker of an increased risk of malignancy in patients with this disease. Unfortunately, dysplasia is difficult to diagnose histologically and, as a result, suffers from a significant degree of intra- and interobserver variability. Furthermore, it is often necessary to obtain expert consultation of potential CUC-associated dysplasia cases before treatment. Therefore, the aim of this study was to evaluate the utility and interobserver variability of diagnosing dysplasia in CUC with the use of TP. Static, electronically transmitted, digitalized images of 38 CUC cases with areas considered negative, indefinite, or positive for dysplasia (low or high grade) were evaluated independently by four gastrointestinal pathologists. All cases were then graded by each of the pathologists by light-microscopic examination of the hematoxylin and eosin–stained glass slides. The degree of interobserver variability was determined by κ statistics. Overall, there was a fair degree of agreement (κ = 0.4) among the four reviewing pathologists after analysis of the digitalized images. The poorest level of agreement was in the indefinite and low-grade dysplasia categories. Grouping together several diagnostic categories (for instance, indefinite and low-grade dysplasia, or low-grade dysplasia and high-grade dysplasia) had no effect on the overall level of agreement. The degree of variability in interpretation of glass slides was slightly better (κ = 0.43) but still remained fair. After reviewing all cases by glass slide analysis, the diagnosis was changed in 38% of the slides; in the majority of these, the grade of dysplasia was increased. Use of TP for consultation in CUC-associated dysplasia has a moderate level of interobserver agreement. Because of a variety of technical reasons, diagnoses rendered by evaluation of digitalized images tended to be of a lower grade than that observed after a review of the glass slides.


Gastroenterology | 1995

Nitric oxide production in experimental alcoholic liver disease in the rat : role in protection from injury

Amin A. Nanji; Stanley S. Greenberg; Steven R. Tahan; Franz Fogt; Joseph Loscalzo; S.M. Hossein Sadrzadeh; Jianming Xie; Jonathan S. Stamler

BACKGROUND & AIMS Regulation of blood flow and oxygen supply are important pathogenetic factors in alcoholic liver disease. Because nitric oxide may have an important role, its effects on alcoholic liver injury were investigated. METHODS Rats were fed ethanol intragastrically with either saturated fat or corn oil. Spontaneous production of NO by liver nonparenchymal cells was compared in the two dietary groups. Two additional groups of rats fed corn oil and ethanol were treated with either an NO inhibitor (L-NAME) or supplemented with L-arginine. Liver pathology and plasma NO production were evaluated. RESULTS In the corn oil and ethanol group, a progressive decrease in liver nonparenchymal cell NO production and increased plasma NO levels were associated with liver injury. Reduced nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide phosphate diaphorase staining showed increased centrilobular staining of hepatocytes in the corn oil and ethanol group and L-NAME-treated group. Moreover, L-NAME increased the severity, whereas L-arginine supplementation completely prevented liver injury. In the saturated fat and ethanol group, in which there was no liver injury, the levels of NO2- in nonparenchymal supernatant were 5-10-fold higher than in the corn oil and ethanol group. CONCLUSIONS Decreased NO production by nonparenchymal cells may contribute to liver injury in ethanol-fed rats, and the compensatory increase in hepatocyte NO production may contribute to centrilobular liver injury.


Human Pathology | 1998

Comparison of genetic alterations in colonic adenoma and ulcerative colitis-associated dysplasia and carcinoma

Franz Fogt; Alexander O. Vortmeyer; Harvey Goldman; Thomas J. Giordano; Maria J. Merino; Zhengping Zhuang

Carcinoma is an important complication of ulcerative colitis (UC) and develops from dysplastic precursor lesions. Genetic changes involved in the malignant transformation have not been fully characterized. We studied 19 cases of UC with high-grade dysplasia (HGD) and eight samples of associated carcinoma (CA). Microdissection of normal epithelium, epithelium at the site of chronic inflammation, HGD, and CA was performed. Polymerase chain reaction (PCR) amplification for loss of heterozygosity (LOH) of the following polymorphic microsatellites of putative tumor suppressor gene loci was done: APC (5q), DCC (18q), p16 (9p), p53 (17p), and 8p12. To compare genetic alterations, 22 typical adenomas of the colon were studied with the markers for APC and pl6 gene loci. The results indicated that LOH of p16 and p53 were present in nondysplastic epithelium, HGD, and CA. However, the LOH in nondysplastic epithelium was detected in some associated HGD, but not all. Whereas LOH of p16 was present in 7 of 14 cases of HGD (50%), it was noted in only 1 of 22 adenomas (5.0%). LOH in the APC and DCC gene loci in UC was noted in HGD with associated CA, but LOH of APC was not present either in cases of nondysplastic epithelium or in HGD alone. Conversely, LOH in APC was present in 4 of 19 colonic adenomas. We conclude that LOH of p53 and p16 in nondysplastic epithelium may be associated with chronic reparative processes. These changes may lead to susceptibility to further genetic damage involving the APC and DCC gene loci in the development of dysplasia and progression of CA in UC. The low frequency of LOH in the p16 gene (9p) in adenomas compared with dysplasia in UC combined with infrequent LOH in APC gene loci in cases of pure dysplasia in UC may support this combination of markers as a clinical test for the differentiation of polypoid dysplasia from adenomas in UC.


Gastroenterology | 1995

Dietary Saturated Fatty Acids: A Novel Treatment for Alcoholic Liver Disease

Amin A. Nanji; S.M. Hossein Sadrzadeh; Eun K. Yang; Franz Fogt; Mohsen Meydani; Andrew J. Dannenberg

BACKGROUND & AIMS Lipid peroxidation may be important in the pathogenesis of alcoholic liver injury. The purpose of this study was to determine whether a saturated fatty acid-based therapy (palm oil) could decrease lipid peroxidation and alcoholic liver injury during ethanol withdrawal. METHODS Three groups of male Wistar rats (5 rats/group) were studied. Rats in group 1 were fed a fish oil-ethanol diet for 6 weeks; rats in groups 2 and 3 were fed a fish oil-ethanol diet for 6 weeks before treatment with fish oil-dextrose (group 2) or palm oil-dextrose (group 3) for 2 weeks. Liver samples were analyzed for histopathology, lipid peroxidation, fatty acid composition, cytochrome P450 2E1 activity, and tocopherol levels. RESULTS By 6 weeks, all rats had developed fatty liver, inflammation, and necrosis. Group 2 showed minimal histological improvement, whereas group 3 showed near normalization of the histology. The improvement in group 3 was associated with decreased lipid peroxidation and P450 2E1 activity. Higher levels of omega-3 fatty acids were detected in group 2 than group 3. Tocopherol levels were similar among the groups. CONCLUSIONS A diet enriched in saturated but not unsaturated fatty acids reversed alcoholic liver injury. This effect may be explained by down-regulation of lipid peroxidation.


Neurology | 2015

Prevalence and distribution of VZV in temporal arteries of patients with giant cell arteritis

Donald H. Gilden; Teresa White; Nelly Khmeleva; Anna Heintzman; Alexander Choe; Philip J. Boyer; Charles Grose; John E. Carpenter; April Rempel; Nathan Bos; Balasubramaniyam Kandasamy; Kelly C. Lear-Kaul; Dawn Holmes; Jeffrey L. Bennett; Randall J. Cohrs; Ravi Mahalingam; Naresh Mandava; Charles G. Eberhart; Brian Bockelman; Robert J. Poppiti; Madhura A. Tamhankar; Franz Fogt; Malena M. Amato; Edward Wood; Steve Rasmussen; Vigdis Petursdottir; Lea Pollak; Sonia Mendlovic; Denis Chatelain; Kathy Keyvani

Objective: Varicella-zoster virus (VZV) infection may trigger the inflammatory cascade that characterizes giant cell arteritis (GCA). Methods: Formalin-fixed, paraffin-embedded GCA-positive temporal artery (TA) biopsies (50 sections/TA) including adjacent skeletal muscle and normal TAs obtained postmortem from subjects >50 years of age were examined by immunohistochemistry for presence and distribution of VZV antigen and by ultrastructural examination for virions. Adjacent regions were examined by hematoxylin & eosin staining. VZV antigen–positive slides were analyzed by PCR for VZV DNA. Results: VZV antigen was found in 61/82 (74%) GCA-positive TAs compared with 1/13 (8%) normal TAs (p < 0.0001, relative risk 9.67, 95% confidence interval 1.46, 63.69). Most GCA-positive TAs contained viral antigen in skip areas. VZV antigen was present mostly in adventitia, followed by media and intima. VZV antigen was found in 12/32 (38%) skeletal muscles adjacent to VZV antigen–positive TAs. Despite formalin fixation, VZV DNA was detected in 18/45 (40%) GCA-positive VZV antigen–positive TAs, in 6/10 (60%) VZV antigen–positive skeletal muscles, and in one VZV antigen–positive normal TA. Varicella-zoster virions were found in a GCA-positive TA. In sections adjacent to those containing VZV, GCA pathology was seen in 89% of GCA-positive TAs but in none of 18 adjacent sections from normal TAs. Conclusions: Most GCA-positive TAs contained VZV in skip areas that correlated with adjacent GCA pathology, supporting the hypothesis that VZV triggers GCA immunopathology. Antiviral treatment may confer additional benefit to patients with GCA treated with corticosteroids, although the optimal antiviral regimen remains to be determined.


The American Journal of Surgical Pathology | 2000

Genetic alterations in chronic ulcerative colitis-associated adenoma-like DALMs are similar to non-colitic sporadic adenomas.

Robert D. Odze; Charlotte A. Brown; Christopher J. Hartmann; Amy Noffsinger; Franz Fogt

Recent molecular studies have shown that there are differences in the prevalence and timing of certain molecular events between chronic ulcerative colitis (CUC)-associated dysplastic lesions and non-CUC-related sporadic adenomas. However, little is known regarding the molecular features of a specific subtype of CUC-related dysplasia-associated lesion or mass (DALM) that clinically, endoscopically, and pathologically resemble sporadic adenomas, and whether these lesions can be separated from non-CUC-related sporadic adenomas on the basis of their molecular genotype. Therefore, the purpose of this study was to evaluate loss of heterozygosity (LOH) of 3p, APC, and p16 in a specific group of CUC-associated “adenoma-like” DALMs and to compare the results of this tumor with those in a well-defined group of CUC-associated non-adenoma-like DALMs and non-CUC-associated sporadic adenomas. Polypectomy or resection specimens from 21 CUC patients with an adenoma-like DALM, 8 CUC patients with at least one non-adenoma-like DALM (12 lesions in total), and 23 non-CUC patients with a sporadic adenoma were evaluated for LOH of 3p, APC, and p16 by PCR analysis. The results were compared among the three different study groups and correlated with the clinical features of the patients and the pathology of their tumors. Chronic ulcerative colitis-associated adenoma-like DALMs showed LOH of 3p in five of 18 (28%) cases. This value was not significantly different from the 5% of non-CUC sporadic adenomas (p = 0.14) that were positive. However, 50% of CUC-associated non-adenoma-like DALMs were positive for LOH of 3p, and this value was significantly higher (p = 0.01) than the other groups. The frequency of LOH of APC did not differ significantly between the three patient groups (33%, 33%, and 43% in the three groups, respectively). Similar to the 3p results, CUC-associated adenoma-like DALMs and non-CUC-associated sporadic adenomas showed a similar low frequency of positivity for LOH of p16 (5% and 4%, respectively) in comparison to 56% of CUC-associated non-adenoma-like DALMs (p = 0.003). For all markers, no significant differences were detected in the CUC-associated adenoma-like DALM group between lesions that occurred within colitis compared with those that occurred in areas not involved by colitis. Chronic ulcerative colitis-associated non-adenoma-like DALMs have a different molecular genotype than CUC-related adenoma-like DALMs and non-CUC sporadic adenomas. Our data also suggests that the latter two groups of neoplasms may in fact represent a similar, if not identical, pathogenetic entity.


Oncologist | 2012

A Second-Generation MicroRNA-Based Assay for Diagnosing Tumor Tissue Origin

Eti Meiri; Wolf Mueller; Shai Rosenwald; Merav Zepeniuk; Elizabeth Klinke; Tina Bocker Edmonston; Margot Werner; Ulrike Lass; Iris Barshack; Meora Feinmesser; Monica Huszar; Franz Fogt; Karin Ashkenazi; Mats Sanden; Eran Goren; Nir Dromi; Orit Zion; Ilanit Burnstein; Ayelet Chajut; Yael Spector; Ranit Aharonov

BACKGROUND Cancers of unknown primary origin (CUP) constitute 3%-5% (50,000 to 70,000 cases) of all newly diagnosed cancers per year in the United States. Including cancers of uncertain primary origin, the total number increases to 12%-15% (180,000 to 220,000 cases) of all newly diagnosed cancers per year in the United States. Cancers of unknown/uncertain primary origins present major diagnostic and clinical challenges because the tumor tissue of origin is crucial for selecting optimal treatment. MicroRNAs are a family of noncoding, regulatory RNA genes involved in carcinogenesis. MicroRNAs that are highly stable in clinical samples and tissue specific serve as ideal biomarkers for cancer diagnosis. Our first-generation assay identified the tumor of origin based on 48 microRNAs measured on a quantitative real-time polymerase chain reaction platform and differentiated 25 tumor types. METHODS We present here the development and validation of a second-generation assay that identifies 42 tumor types using a custom microarray. A combination of a binary decision-tree and a k-nearest-neighbor classifier was developed to identify the tumor of origin based on the expression of 64 microRNAs. RESULTS Overall assay sensitivity (positive agreement), measured blindly on a validation set of 509 independent samples, was 85%. The sensitivity reached 90% for cases in which the assay reported a single answer (>80% of cases). A clinical validation study on 52 true CUP patients showed 88% concordance with the clinicopathological evaluation of the patients. CONCLUSION The abilities of the assay to identify 42 tumor types with high accuracy and to maintain the same performance in samples from patients clinically diagnosed with CUP promise improved utility in the diagnosis of cancers of unknown/uncertain primary origins.


Human Pathology | 2000

Distinction between dysplasia-associated lesion or mass (DALM) and adenoma in patients with ulcerative colitis

Franz Fogt; Stefan J. Urbanski; Melinda E. Sanders; Emma E. Furth; Robert L. Zimmerman; Julius J. Deren; Amy Noffsinger; Alexander O. Vortmeyer; Christopher J. Hartmann; Robert L. Odze; Charlotte A. Brown

Polyps with epithelial dysplasia in ulcerative colitis (UC) represent either dysplasia-associated lesions or masses (DALMs) or sporadic adenomas. DALMs are frequently associated with associated carcinoma and are an indication for colectomy. Removal of the polyp is treatment of choice for sporadic adenomas. Differentiating between these 2 lesions is not always easy. The goal of this study was to distinguish DALMs from adenomas in patients with UC on a genetic basis. We evaluated genetic alterations in DALMs and compared them with a previously published set of dysplastic polyps in patients with UC that were considered adenomas for the following reasons: (1) polyps were located outside of current active disease; (2) polyps had histological features of sporadic adenomas; and (3) patients displayed a uneventful follow-up after polypectomy (UC-adenomas). In addition, adenomas not associated with UC were studied. Genetic alterations on chromosome 3p were assessed for the markers D3S1766, D3S2409, and D3S2387. LOH with or without microsatellite instability was found in 70%, 37%, and 57% of cases of DALM, respectively. In contrast, UC-adenomas lesions exhibited genetic alterations in 8.3%, 11.7%, and 15.3% for the respective markers. Spontaneous adenomas exhibited genetic alterations in 10.5%, 7.1%, and 0% of cases, which were not significantly different from the UC-adenoma results. These results indicate that UC-adenomas are genetically and biologically similar to sporadic adenomas and that UC-adenomas may biologically represent sporadic adenomas, supporting on a genetic basis the criteria chosen to diagnose adenomas in UC. Genetic markers on chromosome 3p may be useful in the differential diagnosis between DALM and UC-adenomas.

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Zhengping Zhuang

National Institutes of Health

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Mechthild Prinz

John Jay College of Criminal Justice

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