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Dive into the research topics where Georgios Stamatis is active.

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Featured researches published by Georgios Stamatis.


Journal of Clinical Oncology | 1998

Preoperative chemotherapy followed by concurrent chemoradiation therapy based on hyperfractionated accelerated radiotherapy and definitive surgery in locally advanced non-small-cell lung cancer: mature results of a phase II trial.

Wilfried Eberhardt; Hansjochen Wilke; Georgios Stamatis; Martin Stuschke; A Harstrick; H. Menker; B Krause; M R Müeller; Michael Stahl; M Flasshove; V Budach; D Greschuchna; N Konietzko; H. Sack; Siegfried Seeber

PURPOSE To evaluate the feasibility and efficacy of an intensive multimodality approach with combination chemotherapy, hyperfractionated accelerated chemoradiotherapy, and definitive surgery in prognostically unfavorable subgroups of locally advanced non-small-cell lung cancer stages IIIA and IIIB (LAD-NSCLC). PATIENTS AND METHODS Following staging, including mediastinoscopy, 94 patients with inoperable LAD-NSCLC were treated preoperatively with chemotherapy (three courses of split-dose cisplatin and etoposide [PE]) followed by concurrent chemoradiotherapy (one course of PE combined with 45 Gy hyperfractionated accelerated radiotherapy). After repeat mediastinoscopy, patients underwent surgery 4 weeks postradiation. RESULTS Of 94 consecutive patients (52 stage IIIA [> or = two lymph node levels involved] and 42 stage IIIB [no pleural effusion, no supraclavicular nodes]), 62 (66%) completed induction and underwent surgery. Complete resection (R0) was achieved in 50 (53% of all patients) and pathologic complete response (PCR) in 24 (26%). After a median follow-up of 43 months, the median survival time was 20 months for IIIA, 18 months for IIIB, and 42 months for R0 patients. Calculated survival rates at 4 years were 31%, 26%, and 46%. Two patients died of sepsis preoperatively and four died postoperatively of pleural empyema (n = 1), stump insufficiency (n = 2), and cardiac failure (n = 1). Other toxicities were acceptable-mainly hematologic during chemotherapy or chemoradiotherapy and esophagitis during chemoradiotherapy. CONCLUSION This intensive multimodality treatment is feasible and demonstrates high efficacy in prognostically unfavorable LAD-NSCLC subgroups with high R0 rates and improved long-term survival compared with historical controls


Clinical Cancer Research | 2006

Value of 18F-Fluoro-2-Deoxy-d-Glucose-Positron Emission Tomography/Computed Tomography in Non–Small-Cell Lung Cancer for Prediction of Pathologic Response and Times to Relapse after Neoadjuvant Chemoradiotherapy

Christoph Pöttgen; Sabine Levegrün; Dirk Theegarten; Simone Marnitz; Sara Grehl; Roman Pink; Wilfried Eberhardt; Georgios Stamatis; Thomas Gauler; Gerald Antoch; Andreas Bockisch; Martin Stuschke

Purpose: To determine the value of combined positron emission tomography/computed tomography (PET/CT) during induction chemotherapy (CTx) followed by chemoradiotherapy (CTx/RTx) for non–small-cell lung cancer to predict histopathologic response in primary tumor and mediastinum and prognosis of the patient. Experimental Design: Fifty consecutive patients with locally advanced non–small-cell lung cancer received induction therapy and, if considered resectable, proceeded to surgery (37 of 50 patients). Patients had at least two repeated 18F-2-fluoro-2-deoxy-d-glucose (FDG)-PET/CT scans either before treatment (t0) or after induction CTx (t1) or CTx/RTx (t2). Variables from the PET/CT studies [e.g., lesion volume and corrected maximum standardized glucose uptake values (SUVmax,corr)] were correlated with histopathologic response (graded as 3, 2b, or 2a: 0%, >0-10%, or >10% residual tumor cells) and times to failure. Results: Primary tumors showed a percentage decrease in SUVmax,corr during induction significantly larger in grade 2b/3 than in grade 2a responding tumors (67% versus 34% at t1, 73% versus 49% at t2; both P < 0.005). SUVmax,corr at t2 was significantly correlated with histopathologic response in tumors smaller than the median volume (7.5 cm3; r = −0.54, P = 0.02). In the mediastinal lymph nodes, SUVmax,corr values at t2 predicted an ypN0 status with a sensitivity and specificity of 73% and 89%, respectively (SUVmax,corr threshold of 4.1, r = −0.54, P = 0.0005). Freedom from extracerebral relapse was significantly better in grade 2b/3 patients (86% at 16 months versus 20% in 2a responders; P = 0.003) and in patients with a greater percentage decrease in SUVmax,corr in the primary tumor at t2 in relation to t0 than in patients with lesser response (83% at 16 months versus 43%; P = 0.03 for cutoff points between 0.45 and 0.55). Conclusions: SUVmax,corr values from two serial PET/CT scans, before and after three chemotherapy cycles or later, allow prediction of histopathologic response in the primary tumor and mediastinal lymph nodes and have prognostic value.


Journal of Clinical Oncology | 1999

Prophylactic Cranial Irradiation in Locally Advanced Non–Small-Cell Lung Cancer After Multimodality Treatment: Long-Term Follow-Up and Investigations of Late Neuropsychologic Effects

Martin Stuschke; Wilfried Eberhardt; Christoph Pöttgen; Georgios Stamatis; Hansjochen Wilke; Georg Stüben; F. Stöblen; H. H. Wilhelm; H. Menker; Helmut Teschler; R.-D. Müller; Volker Budach; Siegfried Seeber; H. Sack

PURPOSE Relapse pattern and late toxicities in long-term survivors were analyzed after the introduction of prophylactic cranial irradiation (PCI) into a phase II trial on trimodality treatment of locally advanced (LAD) non-small-cell lung cancer (NSCLC). PATIENTS AND METHODS Seventy-five patients with stage IIIA(N2)/IIIB NSCLC were treated with induction chemotherapy, preoperative radiochemotherapy, and surgery. PCI was routinely offered during the second period of study accrual. Patients were given a total radiation dose of 30 Gy (2 Gy per daily fraction) over a 3-week period starting 1 day after the last chemotherapy cycle. RESULTS Introduction of PCI reduced the rate of brain metastases as first site of relapse from 30% to 8% at 4 years (P =.005) and that of overall brain relapse from 54% to 13% (P <.0001). The effect of PCI was also observed in the good-prognosis subgroup of 47 patients who had a partial response or complete response to induction chemotherapy, with a reduction of brain relapse as first failure from 23% to 0% at 4 years (P =.01). Neuropsychologic testing revealed impairments in attention and visual memory in long-term survivors who received PCI as well as in those who did not receive PCI. T2-weighted magnetic resonance imaging revealed white matter abnormalities of higher grades in patients who received PCI than in those who did not. CONCLUSION PCI at a moderate dose reduced brain metastases in LAD-NSCLC to a clinically significant extent, comparable to that in limited-disease small-cell lung cancer. Late toxicity to normal brain was acceptable. This study supports the use of PCI within intense protocols for LAD-NSCLC, particularly in patients with favorable prognostic factors.


European Journal of Cardio-Thoracic Surgery | 2002

Postoperative morbidity and mortality after induction chemoradiotherapy for locally advanced lung cancer: an analysis of 350 operated patients

Georgios Stamatis; Dejan Djuric; Wilfried Eberhardt; Christoph PottkenPöttken; George Zaboura; Silvia Fechner; Toshio Fujimoto

OBJECTIVE The purpose of this study was to evaluate the frequency and risk of postoperative cardiopulmonary and bronchial complications in patients with locally advanced lung cancer after induction chemoradiotherapy and definitive surgery. METHODS We reviewed the charts of 350 patients who underwent thoracotomy in the course of two phase II and one phase III studies with preoperative chemotherapy (three cycles of split- dose cisplatin/etoposide in 261 patients and cisplatin/paclitaxel in 89 patients) followed in all 350 patients by concurrent chemoradiotherapy (one cycle cisplatin/etoposide combined with 45 Gy hyperfractionated accelerated radiotherapy) and operation from March 1991 to December 2000. Univariate and multivariate analysis was used to identify predictors of complications. RESULTS Of 350 consecutive patients 278 (79%) had a non-small cell lung cancer (154 stage IIIA and 124 IIIB) and 72 (21%) a small cell lung cancer (12 stage IIA/B, 35 stage IIIA and 25 stage IIIB). Resections included 125 pneumonectomies (35%), 15 bilobectomies (4.3%), 37 sleeve lobectomies (11%), 157 lobectomies (45%), and two segmentectomies (0.6%); 14 patients (4%) had an exploration only. Additionally to pulmonary resection 32 patients underwent a partial chest wall resection. One hundred and fifty-four patients (44%) developed early or late complications; the hospital mortality rate was 4.9% (17 patients). The causes of death were sepsis (n=5), pneumonia and respiratory failure (n=4), adult respiratory distress syndrome (n=3), cardiac failure (n=3) and lung embolism (n=2). Multivariate analysis extracted increased age, lower Karnofsky status, abnormal echocardiographic findings and no bronchial stump covering technique to be risk factors for perioperative morbidity. Lower Karnofsky status and increased age were significant risk factors for postoperative mortality. CONCLUSION This retrospective analysis demonstrates that in patients with locally advanced lung cancer and induction chemoradiotherapy, surgery can be feasible with acceptable mortality but increased morbidity. Accurate cardiopulmonary evaluation before surgery and standard operative techniques with protection of bronchial stump or anastomosis can contribute to a reduced complication rate with this intensive approach.


Journal of Clinical Oncology | 2007

Prophylactic Cranial Irradiation in Operable Stage IIIA Non–Small-Cell Lung Cancer Treated With Neoadjuvant Chemoradiotherapy: Results From a German Multicenter Randomized Trial

Christoph Pöttgen; Wilfried Eberhardt; Andreas Grannass; Soenke Korfee; Georg Stüben; Helmut Teschler; Georgios Stamatis; Horst Wagner; Bernward Passlick; Volker Petersen; Volker Budach; Hans Wilhelm; Isabel Wanke; Herbert Hirche; Hansjochen Wilke; Martin Stuschke

PURPOSE To investigate the role of prophylactic cranial irradiation (PCI) within a trimodality protocol (chemotherapy, chemoradiotherapy, surgery) for patients with operable stage IIIA non-small-cell lung cancer (NSCLC). PATIENTS AND METHODS After mediastinoscopic staging, patients with operable stage IIIA NSCLC were enrolled to a German multicenter trial and randomly assigned to receive either primary resection followed by adjuvant thoracic radiation therapy (50 to 60 Gy; arm A) or preoperative chemotherapy (cisplatin/etoposide [PE]; three cycles) followed by concurrent chemoradiotherapy (PE plus 45 Gy; 1.5 Gy twice per day) and definitive surgery (arm B), respectively. Patients in arm B were scheduled to receive PCI (30 Gy; 2 Gy daily fractions). RESULTS One hundred twelve patients were randomly assigned between November 1994 and July 2001. One hundred six patients were eligible (arm A: 51, arm B: 55), 90 males and 16 females, 50 with squamous cell, 16 with large cell, five with adenosquamous, and 35 with adenocarcenoma (median age, 57 years; range, 37 to 71 years). Forty-three patients received PCI as scheduled in arm B. Eleven long-term survivors (arm A: four; arm B: seven) underwent a comprehensive neuropsychological examination. PCI significantly reduced the probability of brain metastases as first site of failure (7.8% at 5 years v 34.7%; P = .02), the overall brain relapse rate was reduced comparably (9.1% at 5 years v 27.2%; P = .04). A slightly reduced neurocognitive performance in comparison with the age-matched normal population was found for patients in both treatment groups. No significant difference between patients who were treated with or without PCI could be noted. CONCLUSION PCI is effective in preventing brain metastases following this aggressive trimodality approach. Neurocognitive late effects are not significantly different between patients treated with or without PCI.


European Journal of Cardio-Thoracic Surgery | 1990

Limited and radical resection for tracheal and bronchopulmonary carcinoid tumour (report of 227 cases)

Georgios Stamatis; L. Freitag; Greschuchna D

Bronchopulmonary carcinoid tumours occur at all levels from the trachea to the lung periphery. Over a 20-year period. 227 patients with carcinoid tumour underwent thoracotomy. The age at operation ranged from 14 to 79 years. Haemoptysis, chronic cough, recurrent infection and wheeze were the most common symptoms; 24% of patients were asymptomatic. The primary tumour was within the trachea or the main, lobar or segmental bronchi in 190 patients (83.7%). A variety of surgical procedures were employed: pneumonectomy in 32 patients; lobectomy and bilobectomy including bronchial sleeve resection in 144; segmentectomy in 18; wedge excision in 19; bronchial sleeve only in 5; carinal resection in 2; tracheal resection in 4 and bronchotomy in 3 cases. There was only 1 hospital death in the 227 patients (mortality: 0.44%). Survival at 5 and 10 years in patients with benign carcinoid was 97.5% and 95%, respectively. In patients with the atypical form it was 41.2%. The peripheral carcinoid was usually totally removed by an ample wedge excision or segmental resection and the central bronchial carcinoid by sleeve resection with lobectomy rather than pneumonectomy. The atypical variant, because of the frequency of lymphatic involvement, should be treated as a bronchial carcinoma by radical resection.


The Annals of Thoracic Surgery | 1999

Preoperative Chemoradiotherapy and Surgery for Selected Non-Small Cell Lung Cancer IIIB Subgroups: Long-Term Results

Georgios Stamatis; Wilfried Eberhardt; Georg Stüben; Stephan Bildat; Oliver Dahler; Ludger Hillejan

BACKGROUND Preoperative chemoradiotherapy is feasible for selected patients with non-small cell lung cancer stage IIIb. The aim of this investigation was to analyze long-term results after this multimodality approach and to identify subgroups with improved long-term prognosis. METHODS From March 1991 to June 1996, 56 patients were entered. Three cycles of cisplatin (P) (60 mg/m2, days 1 + 7) and etoposide (E) (150 mg/m2, days 3 to 5 qd 22) were followed by one cycle of radiotherapy/chemotherapy (RTx/CTx) (45 Gy, 1.5 Gy bid/3 weeks with P 50 mg/m2 days 2 + 9/E 100 mg/m2 days 4 to 6) followed by repeat mediastinoscopy and surgery. RESULTS There were 46 men and 10 women (age 34 to 69 years, median 55 years; World Health Organization status 0 to 2, median 1). Twenty-eight had T4, and 32 had proven N3, in detail: T4N0/1, 10; T4N2, 14; T3N3, 9; T4N3, 4; and T1/2N3, 19. Thirty-four (61%) were operated on; 27 (48%) were completely (R0) resected. Survival at 5 years is 26% for all, and 43% for R0 patients. Toxicity included two deaths (one septicemia, one anastomosis insufficiency). CONCLUSIONS This intensive program proved to be highly effective in unfavorable IIIB subgroups with promising long-term survival for T4 tumors as well as N3 disease.


European Respiratory Journal | 1998

Two-year results after lung volume reduction surgery in alpha1-antitrypsin deficiency versus smoker's emphysema

Pc Cassina; Helmut Teschler; N Konietzko; Dirk Theegarten; Georgios Stamatis

Lung volume reduction surgery (LVRS) improves exercise capacity and relieves dyspnoea in patients with smokers emphysema (SE). It is unclear, however, whether LVRS similarly improves lung function in alpha1-antitrypsin-deficiency emphysema (alpha1 E). To address this question, this study prospectively compared the intermediate-term functional outcome in 12 consecutive patients with advanced alpha1E and 18 patients with SE who underwent bilateral LVRS. Before surgery there were no statistically significant differences between the two groups in the six-minute walking distance, dyspnoea score, respiratory mechanics or lung function data, except for the forced expiratory volume in one second, which was lower in the deficient group (24 versus 31% of the predicted value; p<0.05). In both groups, bilateral LRVS produced significant improvements in dyspnoea, the six-minute walking distance, lung function and respiratory mechanics. In the alpha1E group, the functional data, with the exception of the six-minute walking distance, returned to baseline at 6-12 months postoperation and showed further deterioration at 24 months. The functional status of the SE group remained significantly improved over this period. In conclusion, the functional improvements resulting from bilateral lung volume reduction surgery are sustained for at least 2 yrs in most patients with smokers emphysema, but this type of surgery offers only short-term benefits for most patients with alpha1E.


The Annals of Thoracic Surgery | 2000

Buttressing the staple line in lung volume reduction surgery: a randomized three-center study

Uz Stammberger; Walter Klepetko; Georgios Stamatis; Jürg Hamacher; Ralph A. Schmid; Wilfried Wisser; Ludger Hillerjan; Walter Weder

BACKGROUND The intention of buttressing the staple line in lung volume reduction surgery is to reduce air leaks and to shorten the hospital stay. A randomized three-center study was carried out to test this hypothesis. METHODS Sixty-five patients with a mean age of 59.2 +/- 1.2 years underwent bilateral lung volume reduction surgery by video-assisted thoracoscopy using endoscopic staplers (ET 45B; Ethicon Endo-Surgery, Cincinnati, OH) either without or with bovine pericardium for buttressing (Peri-Strips Dry; Bio-Vascular, Inc, Saint Paul, MN). There were no differences between the control and treatment groups in lung function, degree of dyspnea, and arterial blood gases before and 3 months after LVRS. RESULTS Seven patients (3 in the treatment group) needed a reoperation because of persistent air leak. The median duration of air leaks was shorter in the treatment group (0.0 day [range, 0 to 28 days versus 4 days [range, 0 to 27 days); p < 0.001), confirmed by a shorter median drainage time in this group (5 days [range, 1 to 35 days] versus 7.5 days [range, 2 to 29 days); p = 0.045). Hospital stay was comparable between the two groups (9.5 days [range, 6 to 44 days] versus 12.0 days [range, 5 to 46 days]; p = 0.14). CONCLUSIONS Buttressing the staple line significantly shortens the duration of air leaks and the drainage time. As hospital stay did not differ significantly between the two groups, cost-effectiveness may depend on the local situation.


British Journal of Cancer | 1999

Prognostically orientated multimodality treatment including surgery for selected patients of small-cell lung cancer patients stages IB to IIIB: Long-term results of a phase II trial

Wilfried Eberhardt; Georgios Stamatis; M Stuschke; H Wilke; M R Müller; S Kolks; M Flasshove; J Schütte; Michael Stahl; L Schlenger; V Budach; D Greschuchna; G Stüben; H Teschler; H Sack; S Seeber

SummaryFollowing mediastinoscopy, a prognostically orientated multimodality approach was chosen in selected small-cell lung cancer (SCLC) patients with hyperfractionated accelerated chemoradiotherapy (Hf-RTx) and definitive surgery (S). Stage IB/IIA patients had four cycles of cisplatin/etoposide (PE) and surgery. Stage IIB/IIIA patients had three cycles PE followed by one cycle concurrent chemoradiation including Hf-RTx and surgery. Most stage IIIB patients were not planned for surgery and had CTx followed by sequential RTx or one cycle concurrent CTx/RTx. Of 46 consecutive patients (stage IB six, IIA two, IIB/IIIA 22, IIIB 16) 43 (94%) showed an objective response. Twenty-three of patients (72%) planned for inclusion of S were completely resected (R0) (IB 6/6, IIA 2/2, IIB/IIIA 13/22, IIIB 2/2). Overall toxicity was acceptable – one patient died of septicaemia, no perioperative deaths occurred. Median follow-up of patients alive (n = 21) is 52 months (30+ – 75+). Median survival and 5-year survival rate of all patients are 36 months and 46%, in R0 patients 68 months and 63% (R0-IIB/IIIA/IIIB: not yet reached and 67%). This multimodality treatment including surgery proved highly effective with 100% local control and remarkable long-term survival after complete resection, even in locally advanced SCLC stages IIB/IIIA patients.

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Wilfried Eberhardt

University of Duisburg-Essen

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Martin Stuschke

University of Duisburg-Essen

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Stefan Welter

University of Duisburg-Essen

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Thomas Gauler

University of Duisburg-Essen

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Christoph Pöttgen

University of Duisburg-Essen

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Danjouma Cheufou

University of Duisburg-Essen

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Gerhard Weinreich

University of Duisburg-Essen

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