Heinz-Wolfram Bernd
University of Kiel
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Featured researches published by Heinz-Wolfram Bernd.
Blood | 2013
Heike Horn; Marita Ziepert; Claudia Becher; Thomas F. E. Barth; Heinz-Wolfram Bernd; Alfred C. Feller; Wolfram Klapper; Michael Hummel; Harald Stein; Martin Leo Hansmann; Christopher Schmelter; Peter Möller; Sergio Cogliatti; Michael Pfreundschuh; Norbert Schmitz; Lorenz Trümper; Reiner Siebert; Markus Loeffler; Andreas Rosenwald; German Ott
MYC rearrangements occur in 5% to 10% of diffuse large B-cell lymphomas (DLBCL) and confer an increased risk to cyclophosphamide, hydroxydaunorubicin, oncovin, and prednisone (CHOP) and rituximab (R)-CHOP treated patients. We investigated the prognostic relevance of MYC-, BCL2- and BCL6-rearrangements and protein expression in a prospective randomized trial. Paraffin-embedded tumor samples from 442 de novo DLBCL treated within the RICOVER study of the German High-Grade Non-Hodgkin Lymphoma Study Group (DSHNHL) were investigated using immunohistochemistry and fluorescence in situ hybridization (FISH) to detect protein expression and breaks of MYC, BCL2, and BCL6. Rearrangements of MYC, BCL2, and BCL6 were detected in 8.8%, 13.5%, and 28.7%, respectively. Protein overexpression of MYC (>40%) was encountered in 31.8% of tumors; 79.6% and 82.8% of tumors expressed BCL2 and BCL6, respectively. MYC translocations, MYChigh, BCL2high, and BCL6low protein expressions were associated with inferior survival. In multivariate Cox regression modeling, protein expression patterns of MYC, BCL2 and BCL6, and MYC rearrangements were predictive of outcome and provided prognostic information independent of the International Prognostic Index (IPI) for overall survival and event-free survival. A combined immunohistochemical or FISH/immunohistochemical score predicts outcome in DLBCL patients independent of the IPI and identifies a subset of 15% of patients with dismal prognosis in the high-risk IPI group following treatment with R-CHOP. Registered at http://www.cancer.gov/clinicaltrials: RICOVER trial of the DSHNHL is NCT 00052936.
Blood | 2010
German Ott; Marita Ziepert; Wolfram Klapper; Heike Horn; Monika Szczepanowski; Heinz-Wolfram Bernd; Christoph Thorns; Alfred C. Feller; Dido Lenze; Michael Hummel; Harald Stein; Hans-Konrad Müller-Hermelink; Matthias Frank; Martin-Leo Hansmann; Thomas F. E. Barth; Peter Möller; Sergio Cogliatti; Michael Pfreundschuh; Norbert Schmitz; Lorenz Trümper; Markus Loeffler; Andreas Rosenwald
The survival of diffuse large B-cell lymphoma patients varies considerably, reflecting the molecular diversity of tumors. In view of the controversy whether cytologic features, immunohistochemical markers or gene expression signatures may capture this molecular diversity, we investigated which features provide prognostic information in a prospective trial in the R-CHOP treatment era. Within the cohort of DLBCLs patients treated in the RICOVER-60 trial of the German High-Grade Lymphoma Study Group (DSHNHL), we tested the prognostic impact of IB morphology in 949 patients. The expression of immunohistochemical markers CD5, CD10, BCL2, BCL6, human leukocyte antigen (HLA)-DR, interferon regulatory factor-4/multiple myeloma-1 (IRF4/MUM1), and Ki-67 was assessed in 506 patients. Expression of the immunohistochemical markers tested was of modest, if any, prognostic relevance. Moreover, the Hans algorithm using the expression patterns of CD10, BCL6, and interferon regulatory factor-4/multiple myeloma-1 failed to show prognostic significance in the entire cohort as well as in patient subgroups. IB morphology, however, emerged as a robust, significantly adverse prognostic factor in multivariate analysis, and its diagnosis showed a good reproducibility among expert hematopathologists. We conclude, therefore, that IB morphology in DLBCL is likely to capture some of the adverse molecular alterations that are currently not detectable in a routine diagnostic setting, and that its recognition has significant prognostic power.
Blood | 2009
José I. Martín-Subero; Markus Kreuz; Marina Bibikova; Stefan Bentink; Ole Ammerpohl; Eliza Wickham-Garcia; Maciej Rosolowski; Julia Richter; Lidia Lopez-Serra; Esteban Ballestar; Hilmar Berger; Xabier Agirre; Heinz-Wolfram Bernd; Vincenzo Calvanese; Sergio Cogliatti; Hans G. Drexler; Jian-Bing Fan; Mario F. Fraga; Martin Leo Hansmann; Michael Hummel; Wolfram Klapper; Bernhard Korn; Ralf Küppers; Roderick A. F. MacLeod; Peter Möller; German Ott; Christiane Pott; Felipe Prosper; Andreas Rosenwald; Carsten Schwaenen
Lymphomas are assumed to originate at different stages of lymphocyte development through chromosomal aberrations. Thus, different lymphomas resemble lymphocytes at distinct differentiation stages and show characteristic morphologic, genetic, and transcriptional features. Here, we have performed a microarray-based DNA methylation profiling of 83 mature aggressive B-cell non-Hodgkin lymphomas (maB-NHLs) characterized for their morphologic, genetic, and transcriptional features, including molecular Burkitt lymphomas and diffuse large B-cell lymphomas. Hierarchic clustering indicated that methylation patterns in maB-NHLs were not strictly associated with morphologic, genetic, or transcriptional features. By supervised analyses, we identified 56 genes de novo methylated in all lymphoma subtypes studied and 22 methylated in a lymphoma subtype-specific manner. Remarkably, the group of genes de novo methylated in all lymphoma subtypes was significantly enriched for polycomb targets in embryonic stem cells. De novo methylated genes in all maB-NHLs studied were expressed at low levels in lymphomas and normal hematopoietic tissues but not in nonhematopoietic tissues. These findings, especially the enrichment for polycomb targets in stem cells, indicate that maB-NHLs with different morphologic, genetic, and transcriptional background share a similar stem cell-like epigenetic pattern. This suggests that maB-NHLs originate from cells with stem cell features or that stemness was acquired during lymphomagenesis by epigenetic remodeling.
Blood | 2008
Wolfram Klapper; Monika Szczepanowski; Birgit Burkhardt; Hilmar Berger; Maciej Rosolowski; Stefan Bentink; Carsten Schwaenen; Swen Wessendorf; Rainer Spang; Peter Möller; Martin Leo Hansmann; Heinz-Wolfram Bernd; German Ott; Michael Hummel; Harald Stein; Markus Loeffler; Lorenz Trümper; Martin Zimmermann; Alfred Reiter; Reiner Siebert
The spectrum of entities, the therapeutic strategy, and the outcome of mature aggressive B-cell non-Hodgkin lymphomas (maB-NHLs) differs between children and adolescents on the one hand and adult patients on the other. Whereas adult maB-NHLs have been studied in detail, data on molecular profiling of pediatric maB-NHLs are hitherto lacking. We analyzed 65 cases of maB-NHL from patients up to 18 years of age by gene expression profiling, matrix comparative genomic hybridization (CGH), fluorescent in situ hybridization (FISH), and immunohistochemistry. The majority of the analyzed pediatric patients were treated within prospective trials (n = 49). We compared this group to a series of 182 previously published cases of adult maB-NHL. Gene expression profiling reclassified 31% of morphologically defined diffuse large B-cell lymphomas as molecular Burkitt lymphoma (mBL). The subgroups obtained by molecular reclassification did not show any difference in outcome in children treated with the NHL-Berlin-Frankfurt-Muenster (BFM) protocols. No differences were detectable between pediatric and adult mBL with regard to gene expression or chromosomal imbalances. This is the first report on molecular profiling of pediatric B-NHL showing mBL to be much more prominent in children than suggested by morphologic assessment. Based on molecular profiling mBL is a molecularly homogeneous disease across children and adults.
Blood | 2013
Sylvia Hartmann; Dennis A. Eichenauer; Annette Plütschow; Anja Mottok; Roshanak Bob; Karoline Koch; Heinz-Wolfram Bernd; Sergio Cogliatti; Michael Hummel; Alfred C. Feller; German Ott; Peter Møller; Andreas Rosenwald; Harald Stein; Martin-Leo Hansmann; Andreas Engert; Wolfram Klapper
Nodular lymphocyte-predominant Hodgkin lymphoma (NLPHL) accounts for approximately 5% of all Hodgkin lymphoma cases. The aim of this study was to evaluate the prognostic implication of histopathologic NLPHL variants. Biopsies of 423 NLPHL patients treated within 9 prospective clinical trials performed by the German Hodgkin Study Group were classified as tumor cell-rich cases (n = 10), typical NLPHL (n = 308), or histopathologic variants (n = 105). Histopathologic variants were characterized by the presence of lymphoma cells outside the B-cell nodules or B-cell depletion of the microenvironment. Compared with typical NLPHL, histopathologic variants were associated with advanced disease (29.5% vs 14.6%, P = .0012) and a higher relapse rate (18.1% vs 6.5% at 5 years, P = .0009). Variant histology represented an independent prognostic factor (odds ratio = 2.955) in a multivariate model of progression/relapse. A prognostic score, including the risk factors variant histopathologic growth pattern, low serum albumin, and male gender, was derived from this model and allowed the definition of 3 distinct risk groups. NLPHL patients presenting with histopathologic variants have a poorer outcome compared with those showing typical histology. The newly developed prognostic score combining histologic and clinical features allows allocating NLPHL patients to defined risk groups.
Genes, Chromosomes and Cancer | 2007
Christoph Thorns; Boris C. Bastian; Daniel Pinkel; Ritu Roydasgupta; Jane Fridlyand; Hartmut Merz; Manuela Krokowski; Heinz-Wolfram Bernd; Alfred C. Feller
Angioimmunoblastic T‐cell lymphoma (AILT) is a histopathologically well‐defined entity. However, despite a number of cytogenetic studies, the genetic basis of this lymphoma entity is not clear. Moreover, there is an overlap to some cases of peripheral T‐cell lymphoma unspecified (PTCL‐u) in respect to morphological and genetic features. We used array‐based comparative genomic hybridization (CGH) to study genetic imbalances in 39 AILT and 20 PTCL‐u. Array‐based CGH revealed complex genetic imbalances in both AILT and PTCL‐u. Chromosomal imbalances were more frequent in PTCL‐u than in AILT and gains exceeded the losses. The most recurrent changes in AILT were gains of 22q, 19, and 11p11–q14 (11q13) and losses of 13q. The most frequent changes in PTCL‐u were gains of 17 (17q11–q25), 8 (involving the MYC locus at 8q24), and 22q and losses of 13q and 9 (9p21–q33). Interestingly, gains of 4q (4q28–q31 and 4q34–qtel), 8q24, and 17 were significantly more frequent in PTCL‐u than in AILT. The regions 6q (6q16–q22) and 11p11 were predominantly lost in PTCL‐u. Moreover, we could identify a recurrent gain of 11q13 in both AILT and PTCL‐u, which has previously not been described in AILT. Trisomies 3 and 5, which have been described as typical aberrations in AILT, were identified only in a small number of cases. In conclusion, CGH revealed common genetic events in peripheral T‐cell lymphomas as well as peculiar differences between AILT and PTCL‐u.
Cancer Research | 2006
José I. Martín-Subero; Wolfram Klapper; Anna Sotnikova; Evelyne Callet-Bauchu; Lana Harder; Christian Bastard; Roland Schmitz; Susanne Grohmann; Jorge Höppner; Jennifer Riemke; Thomas F. E. Barth; Françoise Berger; Heinz-Wolfram Bernd; Alexander Claviez; Stefan Gesk; Georgiy A. Frank; Irina B. Kaplanskaya; Peter Møller; Reza Parwaresch; Thomas Rüdiger; Harald Stein; Ralf Küppers; Martin Leo Hansmann; Reiner Siebert
Chromosomal breakpoints affecting immunoglobulin (IG) loci are recurrent in many subtypes of B-cell lymphomas. However, despite the predominant B-cell origin of the Hodgkin and Reed-Sternberg (HRS) cells in classical Hodgkin lymphoma (cHL), the presence of chromosomal translocations in IG loci has not yet been systematically explored. Therefore, we have investigated a series of cHL for chromosomal breakpoints in the IGH (n = 230), IGL (n = 139), and IGK (n = 138) loci by interphase cytogenetics. Breakpoints in the IGH, IGL, or IGK locus were observed in the HRS cells of 26 of 149 (17%), 2 of 70, and 1 of 77 evaluable cHLs, respectively. The IG partners could be identified in eight cHLs and involved chromosomal bands 2p16 (REL), 3q27 (BCL6, two cases), 8q24.1 (MYC), 14q24.3, 16p13.1, 17q12, and 19q13.2 (BCL3/RELB). In 65 of 85 (76%) cHLs evaluable for an IGH triple-color probe, the HRS cells showed evidence for a (partial) deletion of the IGH constant region, suggesting the presence of class switch recombination (CSR). Furthermore, analyses with this probe in cases with IGH breakpoints indicated that at least part of them seem to be derived from CSR defects. Our results show that chromosomal breakpoints affecting the IG loci are recurrent in cHL.
Journal of Clinical Oncology | 2016
Eva Hoster; Andreas Rosenwald; Françoise Berger; Heinz-Wolfram Bernd; Sylvia Hartmann; Christoph Loddenkemper; Thomas F. E. Barth; Nicole Brousse; Stefano Pileri; Grzegorz Rymkiewicz; Roman Kodet; Stephan Stilgenbauer; Roswitha Forstpointner; Catherine Thieblemont; Michael Hallek; Bertrand Coiffier; Ursula Vehling-Kaiser; Reda Bouabdallah; Lothar Kanz; Michael Pfreundschuh; Christian Schmidt; Vincent Ribrag; Wolfgang Hiddemann; Michael Unterhalt; Johanna Kluin-Nelemans; Olivier Hermine; Martin Dreyling; Wolfram Klapper
PURPOSE Mantle-cell lymphoma (MCL) is a rather aggressive B-cell malignancy whose considerable variability of individual outcome is associated with clinical characteristics (Mantle Cell Lymphoma International Prognostic Index [MIPI]). The Ki-67 index is a strong independent prognostic factor; however, the biologic MIPI (MIPI-b) distinguishes only two groups, which does not appropriately depict the clinical heterogeneity. By using the cohort from the European MCL Younger and MCL Elderly trials, we aimed to evaluate the additional prognostic impact of cytology and growth pattern and to improve risk stratification with the Ki-67 index and MIPI. PATIENTS AND METHODS Diagnostic tumor biopsies were reviewed by the European Mantle Cell Lymphoma Pathology Panel to determine Ki-67 index by using published guidelines, cytology, and growth pattern. We evaluated prognostic effects for overall survival (OS) by Cox regression. For the cohort used for MIPI-b development (German Low-Grade Lymphoma Study Group [GLSG] 1996 and GLSG2000), we checked whether the equally weighted combination of Ki-67 index (dichotomized at the validated 30% cutoff) and MIPI risk groups was adequate and compared the prognostic power of this modified combination to MIPI and MIPI-b for the MCL Younger/MCL Elderly cohort. RESULTS The Ki-67 index was assessed in 508 of 832 patients (median age, 62 years). Blastoid cytology was associated with inferior OS independently of MIPI but not independently of the Ki-67 index. Growth pattern was not independently prognostic. The modified combination of the Ki-67 index and MIPI separated four groups with 5-year OS: 85%, 72%, 43%, and 17% (P < .001) and was more discriminative than MIPI and MIPI-b. CONCLUSION Using the Ki-67 index is superior to using cytology and growth pattern as prognostic factors in MCL. The modified combination of the Ki-67 index and MIPI showed a refined risk stratification, reflecting their strong complementary prognostic effects while integrating the most relevant prognostic factors available in clinical routine.
Journal of Clinical Oncology | 2007
Wolfram Klapper; Eva Hoster; Lars Rölver; Carsten Schrader; Dirk Janssen; Markus Tiemann; Heinz-Wolfram Bernd; Olaf Determann; Martin-Leo Hansmann; Peter Møller; Alfred C. Feller; Harald Stein; Hans-Heinrich Wacker; Martin Dreyling; Michael Unterhalt; Wolfgang Hiddemann; German Ott
PURPOSE Follicular lymphoma is an indolent lymphoma with a long median overall survival. However, a considerable number of patients die within the first 2 years after the onset of the disease. Because the treatment options vary with respect to antitumor effect and potential toxic adverse effects, the identification of high-risk patients would be helpful in directing therapeutic decisions in individual patients. Several histopathologic biomarkers for risk stratification have been suggested, but most markers have not been validated in patients treated in prospective trials. PATIENTS AND METHODS We report a comprehensive approach to evaluate histopathologic biomarkers, including WHO grade, histology, and proliferation and quantitation of immune bystander cells, in 158 patients with nodal advanced-stage follicular lymphoma treated first line within a randomized trial. RESULTS Tumor sclerosis was a significant prognostic marker of poor overall survival that was independent of the Follicular Lymphoma International Prognostic Index (FLIPI). WHO grade, proliferation, and total T-cell or macrophage content were not associated with overall survival. CONCLUSION The presence of sclerosis within the lymphoma is a marker of poor overall survival that is independent of the FLIPI. The quantification of macrophage or absolute T-cell content, grading, and proliferation are of no help in predicting the outcome of FL. Future studies need to identify surrogate markers for the prognostic immune signatures identified by gene expression profiling. Most importantly, new prognostic markers need to be confirmed in patients treated within prospective trials.
Haematologica | 2009
Heinz-Wolfram Bernd; Marita Ziepert; Christoph Thorns; Wolfram Klapper; Hans-Heinrich Wacker; Michael Hummel; Harald Stein; Martin-Leo Hansmann; German Ott; Andreas Rosenwald; Hans-Konrad Müller-Hermelink; Thomas F. E. Barth; Peter Møller; Sergio Cogliatti; Michael Pfreundschuh; Norbert Schmitz; Lorenz Trümper; Silvia Höller; Markus Löffler; Alfred C. Feller
The evaluation of biomarkers as prognostic factors in lymphomas requires studies in the context of well designed clinical trials. In this study, the authors show the predictive value of immunoblastic morphology and loss of HLA-DR but not the cell of origin immunohistochemical classification in diffuse large B-cell lymphoma treated in large clinical trials. Background Research on prognostically relevant immunohistochemical markers in diffuse large B-cell lymphomas has mostly been performed on retrospectively collected clinical data. This is also true for immunohistochemical classifiers that are thought to reflect the cell-of-origin subclassification of gene expression studies. In order to obtain deeper insight into the heterogeneous prognosis of diffuse large B-cell lymphomas and to validate a previously published immunohistochemical classifier, we analyzed data from a large set of cases from prospective clinical trials with long-term follow-up. Design and Methods We performed morphological and extensive immunohistochemical analyses in 414 cases of diffuse large B-cell lymphoma from two prospective randomized clinical trials (NHL-B1/B2, Germany). Classification into germinal center and non-germinal center subtypes of B-cell lymphoma was based on the expression pattern of CD10, BCL6, and IRF4. Multivariate analyses were performed adjusting for the factors in the International Prognostic Index. Results Analyzing 20 different epitopes on tissue microarrays, expression of HLA-DR, presence of CD23+ follicular dendritic cell meshworks, and monotypic light chain expression emerged as International Prognostic Index-independent markers of superior overall survival. Immunoblastic morphology was found to be related to poor event-free survival. The non-germinal center subtype, according to the three-epitope classifier (CD10, BCL6, and IRF4) did not have prognostic relevance when adjusted for International Prognostic Index factors (relative risk=1.2, p=0.328 for overall survival; and relative risk=1.1, p=0.644 for event-free survival). Conclusions The previously reported International Prognostic Index-independent prognostic value of stratification into germinal center/non-germinal center B-cell lymphoma using the expression pattern of CD10, BCL6, and IRF4 was not reproducible in our series. However, other markers and the morphological subtype appear to be of prognostic value.