Network


Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where Jolanta Dengler is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by Jolanta Dengler.


Leukemia | 2012

Early molecular and cytogenetic response is predictive for long-term progression-free and overall survival in chronic myeloid leukemia (CML)

Benjamin Hanfstein; Markus Müller; Rüdiger Hehlmann; Philipp Erben; Michael Lauseker; A. Fabarius; S Schnittger; Claudia Haferlach; Gudrun Göhring; Ulrike Proetel; H. J. Kolb; S. W. Krause; Wolf-Karsten Hofmann; Jörg Schubert; H. Einsele; Jolanta Dengler; Matthias Hänel; C. Falge; Lothar Kanz; Andreas Neubauer; Michael Kneba; Frank Stegelmann; Michael Pfreundschuh; Cornelius F. Waller; S Branford; Timothy P. Hughes; Karsten Spiekermann; Markus Pfirrmann; Joerg Hasford; Susanne Saußele

In the face of competing first-line treatment options for CML, early prediction of prognosis on imatinib is desirable to assure favorable survival or otherwise consider the use of a second-generation tyrosine kinase inhibitor (TKI). A total of 1303 newly diagnosed imatinib-treated patients (pts) were investigated to correlate molecular and cytogenetic response at 3 and 6 months with progression-free and overall survival (PFS, OS). The persistence of BCR-ABL transcript levels >10% according to the international scale (BCR-ABLIS) at 3 months separated a high-risk group (28% of pts; 5-year OS: 87%) from a group with >1–10% BCR-ABLIS (41% of pts; 5-year OS: 94%; P=0.012) and from a group with ⩽1% BCR-ABLIS (31% of pts; 5-year OS: 97%; P=0.004). Cytogenetics identified high-risk pts by >35% Philadelphia chromosome-positive metaphases (Ph+, 27% of pts; 5-year OS: 87%) compared with ⩽35% Ph+ (73% of pts; 5-year OS: 95%; P=0.036). At 6 months, >1% BCR-ABLIS (37% of pts; 5-year OS: 89%) was associated with inferior survival compared with ⩽1% (63% of pts; 5-year OS: 97%; P<0.001) and correspondingly >0% Ph+ (34% of pts; 5-year OS: 91%) compared with 0% Ph+ (66% of pts; 5-year OS: 97%; P=0.015). Treatment optimization is recommended for pts missing these landmarks.


Journal of Clinical Oncology | 2014

Deep Molecular Response Is Reached by the Majority of Patients Treated With Imatinib, Predicts Survival, and Is Achieved More Quickly by Optimized High-Dose Imatinib: Results From the Randomized CML-Study IV

Rüdiger Hehlmann; Martin C. Müller; Michael Lauseker; Benjamin Hanfstein; Alice Fabarius; Annette Schreiber; Ulrike Proetel; Nadine Pletsch; Markus Pfirrmann; Claudia Haferlach; Susanne Schnittger; Hermann Einsele; Jolanta Dengler; Christiane Falge; Lothar Kanz; Andreas Neubauer; Michael Kneba; Frank Stegelmann; Michael Pfreundschuh; Cornelius F. Waller; Karsten Spiekermann; Gerhard Ehninger; Dominik Heim; Hermann Heimpel; Christoph Nerl; Stefan W. Krause; Dieter K. Hossfeld; Hans-Jochem Kolb; Joerg Hasford; Susanne Saußele

PURPOSE Deep molecular response (MR(4.5)) defines a subgroup of patients with chronic myeloid leukemia (CML) who may stay in unmaintained remission after treatment discontinuation. It is unclear how many patients achieve MR(4.5) under different treatment modalities and whether MR(4.5) predicts survival. PATIENTS AND METHODS Patients from the randomized CML-Study IV were analyzed for confirmed MR(4.5) which was defined as ≥ 4.5 log reduction of BCR-ABL on the international scale (IS) and determined by reverse transcriptase polymerase chain reaction in two consecutive analyses. Landmark analyses were performed to assess the impact of MR(4.5) on survival. RESULTS Of 1,551 randomly assigned patients, 1,524 were assessable. After a median observation time of 67.5 months, 5-year overall survival (OS) was 90%, 5-year progression-free-survival was 87.5%, and 8-year OS was 86%. The cumulative incidence of MR(4.5) after 9 years was 70% (median, 4.9 years); confirmed MR(4.5) was 54%. MR(4.5) was reached more quickly with optimized high-dose imatinib than with imatinib 400 mg/day (P = .016). Independent of treatment approach, confirmed MR(4.5) at 4 years predicted significantly higher survival probabilities than 0.1% to 1% IS, which corresponds to complete cytogenetic remission (8-year OS, 92% v 83%; P = .047). High-dose imatinib and early major molecular remission predicted MR(4.5). No patient with confirmed MR(4.5) has experienced progression. CONCLUSION MR(4.5) is a new molecular predictor of long-term outcome, is reached by a majority of patients treated with imatinib, and is achieved more quickly with optimized high-dose imatinib, which may provide an improved therapeutic basis for treatment discontinuation in CML.


Blood | 2014

Improved outcome of adult Burkitt lymphoma/leukemia with rituximab and chemotherapy: report of a large prospective multicenter trial

Dieter Hoelzer; Jan Walewski; Hartmut Döhner; Andreas Viardot; Wolfgang Hiddemann; Karsten Spiekermann; Hubert Serve; Ulrich Dührsen; Andreas Hüttmann; Eckhard Thiel; Jolanta Dengler; Michael Kneba; Markus Schaich; Ingo G.H. Schmidt-Wolf; Joachim Beck; Bernd Hertenstein; Albrecht Reichle; Katarzyna Domanska-Czyz; Rainer Fietkau; Heinz-August Horst; Harald Rieder; Stefan Schwartz; Thomas Burmeister; Nicola Gökbuget

This largest prospective multicenter trial for adult patients with Burkitt lymphoma/leukemia aimed to prove the efficacy and feasibility of short-intensive chemotherapy combined with the anti-CD20 antibody rituximab. From 2002 to 2011, 363 patients 16 to 85 years old were recruited in 98 centers. Treatment consisted of 6 5-day chemotherapy cycles with high-dose methotrexate, high-dose cytosine arabinoside, cyclophosphamide, etoposide, ifosphamide, corticosteroids, and triple intrathecal therapy. Patients >55 years old received a reduced regimen. Rituximab was given before each cycle and twice as maintenance, for a total of 8 doses. The rate of complete remission was 88% (319/363); overall survival (OS) at 5 years, 80%; and progression-free survival, 71%; with significant difference between adolescents, adults, and elderly patients (OS rate of 90%, 84%, and 62%, respectively). Full treatment could be applied in 86% of the patients. The most important prognostic factors were International Prognostic Index (IPI) score (0-2 vs 3-5; P = .0005), age-adjusted IPI score (0-1 vs 2-3; P = .0001), and gender (male vs female; P = .004). The high cure rate in this prospective trial with a substantial number of participating hospitals demonstrates the efficacy and feasibility of chemoimmunotherapy, even in elderly patients. This trial was registered at www.clinicaltrials.gov as #NCT00199082.


Leukemia | 2015

Safety and efficacy of imatinib in CML over a period of 10 years: data from the randomized CML-study IV

Lida Kalmanti; Susanne Saussele; Michael Lauseker; Markus Müller; Christian Dietz; L Heinrich; Benjamin Hanfstein; Ulrike Proetel; A. Fabarius; S. W. Krause; Sebastien Rinaldetti; Jolanta Dengler; C. Falge; E Oppliger-Leibundgut; Andreas Burchert; Andreas Neubauer; Lothar Kanz; Frank Stegelmann; Michael Pfreundschuh; Karsten Spiekermann; Christof Scheid; Markus Pfirrmann; Andreas Hochhaus; Jörg Hasford; Rüdiger Hehlmann

Tyrosine kinase inhibitors (TKI) have changed the natural course of chronic myeloid leukemia (CML). With the advent of second-generation TKI safety and efficacy issues have gained interest. The randomized CML - Study IV was used for a long-term evaluation of imatinib (IM). 1503 patients have received IM, 1379 IM monotherapy. After a median observation of 7.1 years, 965 patients (64%) still received IM. At 10 years, progression-free survival was 82%, overall survival 84%, 59% achieved MR5, 72% MR4.5, 81% MR4, 89% major molecular remission and 92% MR2 (molecular equivalent to complete cytogenetic remission). All response levels were reached faster with IM800 mg except MR5. Eight-year probabilities of adverse drug reactions (ADR) were 76%, of grades 3–4 22%, of non-hematologic 73%, and of hematologic 28%. More ADR were observed with IM800 mg and IM400 mg plus interferon α (IFN). Most patients had their first ADR early with decreasing frequency later on. No new late toxicity was observed. ADR to IM are frequent, but mostly mild and manageable, also with IM 800 mg and IM 400 mg+IFN. The deep molecular response rates indicate that most patients are candidates for IM discontinuation. After 10 years, IM continues to be an excellent initial choice for most patients with CML.


Leukemia | 2014

Velocity of early BCR-ABL transcript elimination as an optimized predictor of outcome in chronic myeloid leukemia (CML) patients in chronic phase on treatment with imatinib

Benjamin Hanfstein; V. Shlyakhto; Michael Lauseker; R. Hehlmann; Susanne Saussele; Christian Dietz; Philipp Erben; A. Fabarius; Ulrike Proetel; S Schnittger; S. W. Krause; Jörg Schubert; H. Einsele; Matthias Hänel; Jolanta Dengler; C. Falge; Lothar Kanz; Andreas Neubauer; Michael Kneba; Frank Stegelmann; Michael Pfreundschuh; Cornelius F. Waller; Karsten Spiekermann; Markus Pfirrmann; Joerg Hasford; Wolf-Karsten Hofmann; Andreas Hochhaus; Markus Müller

Early assessment of response at 3 months of tyrosine kinase inhibitor treatment has become an important tool to predict favorable outcome. We sought to investigate the impact of relative changes of BCR-ABL transcript levels within the initial 3 months of therapy. In order to achieve accurate data for high BCR-ABL levels at diagnosis, beta glucuronidase (GUS) was used as a reference gene. Within the German CML-Study IV, samples of 408 imatinib-treated patients were available in a single laboratory for both times, diagnosis and 3 months on treatment. In total, 301 of these were treatment-naïve at sample collection. Results: (i) with regard to absolute transcript levels at diagnosis, no predictive cutoff could be identified; (ii) at 3 months, an individual reduction of BCR-ABL transcripts to the 0.35-fold of baseline level (0.46-log reduction, that is, roughly half-log) separated best (high risk: 16% of patients, 5-year overall survival (OS) 83% vs 98%, hazard ratio (HR) 6.3, P=0.001); (iii) at 3 months, a 6% BCR-ABLIS cutoff derived from BCR-ABL/GUS yielded a good and sensitive discrimination (high risk: 22% of patients, 5-year OS 85% vs 98%, HR 6.1, P=0.002). Patients at risk of disease progression can be identified precisely by the lack of a half-log reduction of BCR-ABL transcripts at 3 months.


Haematologica | 2014

Distinct characteristics of e13a2 versus e14a2 BCR-ABL1 driven chronic myeloid leukemia under first-line therapy with imatinib

Benjamin Hanfstein; Michael Lauseker; Rüdiger Hehlmann; Susanne Saussele; Philipp Erben; Christian Dietz; Alice Fabarius; Ulrike Proetel; Susanne Schnittger; Claudia Haferlach; S. W. Krause; Jörg Schubert; Hermann Einsele; Mathias Hänel; Jolanta Dengler; Christiane Falge; Lothar Kanz; Andreas Neubauer; Michael Kneba; Frank Stegelmann; Michael Pfreundschuh; Cornelius F. Waller; Karsten Spiekermann; Markus Pfirrmann; Joerg Hasford; Wolf-Karsten Hofmann; Andreas Hochhaus; Martin C. Müller

The vast majority of chronic myeloid leukemia patients express a BCR-ABL1 fusion gene mRNA encoding a 210 kDa tyrosine kinase which promotes leukemic transformation. A possible differential impact of the corresponding BCR-ABL1 transcript variants e13a2 (“b2a2”) and e14a2 (“b3a2”) on disease phenotype and outcome is still a subject of debate. A total of 1105 newly diagnosed imatinib-treated patients were analyzed according to transcript type at diagnosis (e13a2, n=451; e14a2, n=496; e13a2+e14a2, n=158). No differences regarding age, sex, or Euro risk score were observed. A significant difference was found between e13a2 and e14a2 when comparing white blood cells (88 vs. 65 × 109/L, respectively; P<0.001) and platelets (296 vs. 430 × 109/L, respectively; P<0.001) at diagnosis, indicating a distinct disease phenotype. No significant difference was observed regarding other hematologic features, including spleen size and hematologic adverse events, during imatinib-based therapies. Cumulative molecular response was inferior in e13a2 patients (P=0.002 for major molecular response; P<0.001 for MR4). No difference was observed with regard to cytogenetic response and overall survival. In conclusion, e13a2 and e14a2 chronic myeloid leukemia seem to represent distinct biological entities. However, clinical outcome under imatinib treatment was comparable and no risk prediction can be made according to e13a2 versus e14a2 BCR-ABL1 transcript type at diagnosis. (clinicaltrials.gov identifier:00055874)


Leukemia | 2005

Combination of imatinib with rapamycin or RAD001 acts synergistically only in Bcr-Abl-positive cells with moderate resistance to imatinib.

Jolanta Dengler; N von Bubnoff; Thomas Decker; Christian Peschel; Justus Duyster

Combination of imatinib with rapamycin or RAD001 acts synergistically only in Bcr-Abl-positive cells with moderate resistance to imatinib


Leukemia | 2017

Assessment of imatinib as first-line treatment of chronic myeloid leukemia: 10-year survival results of the randomized CML study IV and impact of non-CML determinants

Rüdiger Hehlmann; Michael Lauseker; Susanne Saußele; Markus Pfirrmann; S. W. Krause; H. J. Kolb; Andreas Neubauer; D. K. Hossfeld; Christoph Nerl; Alois Gratwohl; Dominik Heim; Tim H. Brümmendorf; A. Fabarius; Claudia Haferlach; Brigitte Schlegelberger; Markus Müller; S. Jeromin; Ulrike Proetel; K. Kohlbrenner; A. Voskanyan; Sebastien Rinaldetti; Wolfgang Seifarth; B. Spieß; Leopold Balleisen; Maria-Elisabeth Goebeler; Matthias Hänel; Anthony D. Ho; Jolanta Dengler; C. Falge; Lothar Kanz

Chronic myeloid leukemia (CML)-study IV was designed to explore whether treatment with imatinib (IM) at 400 mg/day (n=400) could be optimized by doubling the dose (n=420), adding interferon (IFN) (n=430) or cytarabine (n=158) or using IM after IFN-failure (n=128). From July 2002 to March 2012, 1551 newly diagnosed patients in chronic phase were randomized into a 5-arm study. The study was powered to detect a survival difference of 5% at 5 years. After a median observation time of 9.5 years, 10-year overall survival was 82%, 10-year progression-free survival was 80% and 10-year relative survival was 92%. Survival between IM400 mg and any experimental arm was not different. In a multivariate analysis, risk group, major-route chromosomal aberrations, comorbidities, smoking and treatment center (academic vs other) influenced survival significantly, but not any form of treatment optimization. Patients reaching the molecular response milestones at 3, 6 and 12 months had a significant survival advantage. For responders, monotherapy with IM400 mg provides a close to normal life expectancy independent of the time to response. Survival is more determined by patients’ and disease factors than by initial treatment selection. Although improvements are also needed for refractory disease, more life-time can currently be gained by carefully addressing non-CML determinants of survival.


Leukemia | 2017

Expression of the CTLA-4 ligand CD86 on plasmacytoid dendritic cells (pDC) predicts risk of disease recurrence after treatment discontinuation in CML

C. Schütz; Sabrina. Inselmann; Susanne Saussele; Christian Dietz; Markus Müller; Ekkehard Eigendorff; Cornelia Brendel; S. K. Metzelder; Tim H. Brümmendorf; Cornelius F. Waller; Jolanta Dengler; Mariele Goebeler; Regina Herbst; G. Freunek; S. Hanzel; Thomas Illmer; Yanfeng Wang; Thoralf Lange; F. Finkernagel; Rüdiger Hehlmann; Magdalena Huber; Andreas Neubauer; Andreas Hochhaus; Joelle Guilhot; François-Xavier Mahon; Markus Pfirrmann; Andreas Burchert

It is unknown, why only a minority of chronic myeloid leukemia (CML) patients sustains treatment free remission (TFR) after discontinuation of tyrosine kinase inhibitor (TKI) therapy in deep molecular remission (MR). Here we studied, whether expression of the T-cell inhibitory receptor (CTLA-4)-ligand CD86 (B7.2) on plasmacytoid dendritic cells (pDC) affects relapse risk after TKI cessation. CML patients in MR displayed significantly higher CD86+pDC frequencies than normal donors (P<0.0024), whereas TFR patients had consistently low CD86+pDC (n=12). This suggested that low CD86+pDC might be predictive of TFR. Indeed, in a prospective analysis of 122 patients discontinuing their TKI within the EURO-SKI trial, the one-year relapse-free survival (RFS) was 30.1% (95% CI 15.6–47.9) for patients with >95 CD86+pDC per 105 lymphocytes, but 70.0% (95% CI 59.3–78.3) for patients with <95 CD86+pDC (hazard ratio (HR) 3.4, 95%-CI: 1.9–6.0; P<0.0001). Moreover, only patients with <95 CD86+pDC derived a significant benefit from longer (>8 years) TKI exposure before discontinuation (HR 0.3, 95% CI 0.1–0.8; P=0.0263). High CD86+pDC counts significantly correlated with leukemia-specific CD8+ T-cell exhaustion (Spearman correlation: 0.74, 95%-CI: 0.21–0.92; P=0.0098). Our data demonstrate that CML patients with high CD86+pDC counts have a higher risk of relapse after TKI discontinuation.


Lancet Oncology | 2018

Discontinuation of tyrosine kinase inhibitor therapy in chronic myeloid leukaemia (EURO-SKI): a prespecified interim analysis of a prospective, multicentre, non-randomised, trial

Susanne Saussele; Johan Richter; Joelle Guilhot; Franz X. Gruber; Henrik Hjorth-Hansen; Antonio Almeida; Jeroen J.W.M. Janssen; Jiri Mayer; Perttu Koskenvesa; Panayiotis Panayiotidis; Ulla Olsson-Strömberg; Joaquin Martinez-Lopez; Philippe Rousselot; Hanne Vestergaard; Hans Ehrencrona; Veli Kairisto; Katerina Machova Polakova; Martin C. Müller; Satu Mustjoki; Marc G. Berger; Alice Fabarius; Wolf-Karsten Hofmann; Andreas Hochhaus; Markus Pfirrmann; François-Xavier Mahon; Gert J. Ossenkoppele; Maria Pagoni; Stina Söderlund; Martine Escoffre-Barbe; Gabriel Etienne

BACKGROUND Tyrosine kinase inhibitors (TKIs) have improved the survival of patients with chronic myeloid leukaemia. Many patients have deep molecular responses, a prerequisite for TKI therapy discontinuation. We aimed to define precise conditions for stopping treatment. METHODS In this prospective, non-randomised trial, we enrolled patients with chronic myeloid leukaemia at 61 European centres in 11 countries. Eligible patients had chronic-phase chronic myeloid leukaemia, had received any TKI for at least 3 years (without treatment failure according to European LeukemiaNet [ELN] recommendations), and had a confirmed deep molecular response for at least 1 year. The primary endpoint was molecular relapse-free survival, defined by loss of major molecular response (MMR; >0·1% BCR-ABL1 on the International Scale) and assessed in all patients with at least one molecular result. Secondary endpoints were a prognostic analysis of factors affecting maintenance of MMR at 6 months in learning and validation samples and the cost impact of stopping TKI therapy. We considered loss of haematological response, progress to accelerated-phase chronic myeloid leukaemia, or blast crisis as serious adverse events. This study presents the results of the prespecified interim analysis, which was done after the 6-month molecular relapse-free survival status was known for 200 patients. The study is ongoing and is registered with ClinicalTrials.gov, number NCT01596114. FINDINGS Between May 30, 2012, and Dec 3, 2014, we assessed 868 patients with chronic myeloid leukaemia for eligibility, of whom 758 were enrolled. Median follow-up of the 755 patients evaluable for molecular response was 27 months (IQR 21-34). Molecular relapse-free survival for these patients was 61% (95% CI 57-64) at 6 months and 50% (46-54) at 24 months. Of these 755 patients, 371 (49%) lost MMR after TKI discontinuation, four (1%) died while in MMR for reasons unrelated to chronic myeloid leukaemia (myocardial infarction, lung cancer, renal cancer, and heart failure), and 13 (2%) restarted TKI therapy while in MMR. A further six (1%) patients died in chronic-phase chronic myeloid leukaemia after loss of MMR and re-initiation of TKI therapy for reasons unrelated to chronic myeloid leukaemia, and two (<1%) patients lost MMR despite restarting TKI therapy. In the prognostic analysis in 405 patients who received imatinib as first-line treatment (learning sample), longer treatment duration (odds ratio [OR] per year 1·14 [95% CI 1·05-1·23]; p=0·0010) and longer deep molecular response durations (1·13 [1·04-1·23]; p=0·0032) were associated with increasing probability of MMR maintenance at 6 months. The OR for deep molecular response duration was replicated in the validation sample consisting of 171 patients treated with any TKI as first-line treatment, although the association was not significant (1·13 [0·98-1·29]; p=0·08). TKI discontinuation was associated with substantial cost savings (an estimated €22 million). No serious adverse events were reported. INTERPRETATION Patients with chronic myeloid leukaemia who have achieved deep molecular responses have good molecular relapse-free survival. Such patients should be considered for TKI discontinuation, particularly those who have been in deep molecular response for a long time. Stopping treatment could spare patients from treatment-induced side-effects and reduce health expenditure. FUNDING ELN Foundation and France National Cancer Institute.

Collaboration


Dive into the Jolanta Dengler's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Lothar Kanz

University of Tübingen

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge