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Featured researches published by Konstanze Spieth.


Journal of Clinical Oncology | 2005

Temozolomide in Combination With Interferon-Alfa Versus Temozolomide Alone in Patients With Advanced Metastatic Melanoma: A Randomized, Phase III, Multicenter Study from the Dermatologic Cooperative Oncology Group

Roland Kaufmann; Konstanze Spieth; Ulrike Leiter; Cornelia Mauch; Peter von den Driesch; Thomas Vogt; Ruthild Linse; Wolfgang Tilgen; Dirk Schadendorf; Jürgen C. Becker; Günther Sebastian; Sven Krengel; Lutz Kretschmer; Claus Garbe; Reinhard Dummer

PURPOSE Temozolomide (TMZ) has shown efficacy in metastatic melanoma equal to that of dacarbazine (DTIC), the standard chemotherapeutic agent for melanoma. As the combination with interferon-alfa (IFN-alpha) appears superior to single-agent DTIC regarding response rates, the purpose of this study was to compare TMZ alone and TMZ plus IFN-alpha in terms of objective response (OR), overall survival, and safety in a prospective, randomized, multicenter trial. PATIENTS AND METHODS Two hundred ninety-four patients with untreated stage IV metastatic melanoma (American Joint Committee on Cancer staging system) were randomly assigned to receive either oral TMZ alone (200 mg/m2/day; days 1 through 5 every 28 days) or in combination with subcutaneous IFN-alpha (5 MU/m2; days 1, 3, and 5 every week). RESULTS Two hundred eighty-two patients were eligible for an intent-to-treat analysis, 271 patients were treated per protocol. In the TMZ + IFN-alpha arm, 33 (24.1%) of 137 patients responded to therapy (partial or complete remission) whereas in the monotherapy arm, in 18 (13.4%) of 134 patients, a response was evident. Thus, the response rate was significantly higher in the combination arm (P = .036). Median survival time was 8.4 months for patients treated with TMZ (95% CI, 7.07 to 9.27) and 9.7 months for those treated with the combination (95% CI, 8.26 to 11.18; P = .16). Dose modifications and interval prolongations due to hematologic toxicity were significantly more frequent in the TMZ + IFN-alpha arm (P < .001). CONCLUSION In metastatic melanoma treatment with TMZ + IFN-alpha leads to a significantly superior OR rate compared to treatment with TMZ alone, which did not translate into prolonged survival in our study population.


Clinical Cancer Research | 2006

In vitro Drug Sensitivity Predicts Response and Survival after Individualized Sensitivity-Directed Chemotherapy in Metastatic Melanoma: A Multicenter Phase II Trial of the Dermatologic Cooperative Oncology Group

Selma Ugurel; Dirk Schadendorf; Claudia Pföhler; Karsten Neuber; Adina Thoelke; Jens Ulrich; Axel Hauschild; Konstanze Spieth; Martin Kaatz; Werner Rittgen; Stefan Delorme; Wolfgang Tilgen; Uwe Reinhold

Purpose:In vitro sensitivity assays are promising tools to predict the individual outcome of different chemotherapy regimens. However, a direct association between in vitro and in vivo chemosensitivity has to be shown by clinical studies. This multicenter phase II trial was aimed to investigate the efficacy of a sensitivity-directed, first-line chemotherapy in metastasized melanoma patients, and to prove an association between in vitro sensitivity and therapy outcome. Patients and Methods: The primary study end point was objective response; secondary end points were safety, overall survival, and progression-free survival. Viable tumor cells obtained from metastatic lesions were tested for chemosensitivity to seven single drugs and five drug combinations using an ATP-based luminescence viability assay. Results: Out of 82 recruited patients (intention-to-treat), 57 received assay-directed chemotherapy and 53 were evaluable for all study end points (per protocol). The drug combinations used were gemcitabine + treosulfan, paclitaxel + cisplatin, paclitaxel + doxorubicin, and gemcitabine + cisplatin. The per protocol population could be divided into 22 (42%) chemosensitive and 31 (58%) chemoresistant patients by an arbitrary chemosensitivity index. Objective response was 36.4% in chemosensitive patients compared with 16.1% in chemoresistant patients (P = 0.114); progression arrest (complete response + partial response + stable disease) was 59.1% versus 22.6% (P = 0.01). Chemosensitive patients showed an increased overall survival of 14.6 months compared with 7.4 months in chemoresistant patients (P = 0.041). Conclusion:In vitro chemosensitivity testing may be worthy of further exploration to see if it could be a useful tool to predict the outcome of melanoma patients treated with a sensitivity-directed chemotherapy. Therefore, these preliminary results will be evaluated by a planned phase III trial using a randomized, standard-regimen controlled setting.


Journal of Clinical Oncology | 2010

Efficacy of Low-Dose Interferon α2a 18 Versus 60 Months of Treatment in Patients With Primary Melanoma of ≥ 1.5 mm Tumor Thickness: Results of a Randomized Phase III DeCOG Trial

Axel Hauschild; Michael Weichenthal; Knuth Rass; Ruthild Linse; Carola Berking; Jörg Böttjer; Thomas Vogt; Konstanze Spieth; Thomas K. Eigentler; Norbert H. Brockmeyer; Annette Stein; Helmut Näher; Dirk Schadendorf; Peter Mohr; Martin Kaatz; Michael Tronnier; Rüdiger Hein; Gerold Schuler; Friederike Egberts; Claus Garbe

PURPOSE Low-dose (LD) interferon (IFN) alfa (LDI) has demonstrated a consistent disease-free survival benefit for patients with clinically lymph node-negative melanoma in clinical trials. However, the optimal duration of treatment is still under discussion, and no previous trial has evaluated this question specifically. A prolongation of LDI from 18 months to 60 months might be of clinical benefit for patients with intermediate or high-risk melanoma. PATIENTS AND METHODS Eight hundred fifty patients with resected cutaneous melanoma of at least 1.5 mm tumor thickness were included in this prospective randomized, multicenter trial in Germany and Austria. Patients had to be clinically lymph node-negative, and sentinel node biopsy (SLNB) was performed in a majority of cases. They were randomly assigned to receive 3 MU IFNalpha2a three times a week subcutaneously for either 18 months (arm A) or 60 months (arm B). Results Of 850 randomly assigned patients, 840 were eligible for evaluation after a median follow-up of 4.3 years. Tumor thickness and other relevant prognostic factors were well balanced between both groups. SLNB was performed in 635 patients (75.6%), with a positivity rate of 18.0% in arm A and 17.5% in arm B. Neither relapse-free survival (arm A, 75.6% v arm B, 72.6%; P = .72; hazard ratio, 1.05; 95% CI, 0.80 to 1.39) nor distant-metastasis-free survival (81.9% v 79.7%; P = .56; HR, 1.10; 95% CI, 0.80 to 1.52) or overall survival (85.9% v 84.9%; P = .86; HR, 1.03; 95% CI, 0.71 to 1.50) showed significant differences. CONCLUSION A prolongation of conventional LDI therapy from 18 to 60 months showed no clinical benefit in patients with intermediate and high-risk primary melanoma.


British Journal of Cancer | 2010

MGMT gene promoter methylation correlates with tolerance of temozolomide treatment in melanoma but not with clinical outcome

Jessica C. Hassel; Antje Sucker; Lutz Edler; H Kurzen; Iris Moll; C Stresemann; Konstanze Spieth; Cornelia Mauch; Knuth Rass; Reinhard Dummer; Dirk Schadendorf

Background:Despite limited clinical efficacy, treatment with dacarbazine or temozolomide (TMZ) remains the standard therapy for metastatic melanoma. In glioblastoma, promoter methylation of the counteracting DNA repair enzyme O6-methylguanine-DNA-methyltransferase (MGMT) correlates with survival of patients exposed to TMZ in combination with radiotherapy. For melanoma, data are limited and controversial.Methods:Biopsy samples from 122 patients with metastatic melanoma being treated with TMZ in two multicenter studies of the Dermatologic Cooperative Oncology Group were investigated for MGMT promoter methylation. We used the COBRA (combined bisulphite restriction analysis) technique to determine aberrant methylation of CpG islands in small amounts of genomic DNA isolated from paraffin-embedded tissue sections. To detect aberrant methylation, bisulphite-treated DNA was amplified by PCR, enzyme restricted, and visualised by gel electrophoresis.Results:Correlation with clinical data from 117 evaluable patients in a best-response evaluation indicated no statistically significant association between MGMT promoter methylation status and response. A methylated MGMT promoter was observed in 34.8% of responders and 23.4% of non-responders (P=0.29). In addition, no survival advantage for patients with a methylated MGMT promoter was detectable (P=0.79). Interestingly, we found a significant correlation between MGMT methylation and tolerance of therapy. Patients with a methylated MGMT promoter had more severe adverse events, requiring more TMZ dose reductions or discontinuations (P=0.007; OR 2.7 (95% CI: 1.32–5.7)). Analysis of MGMT promoter methylation comparing primaries and different metastases over the clinical course revealed no statistical difference (P=0.49).Conclusions:In advanced melanoma MGMT promoter, methylation correlates with tolerance of therapy, but not with clinical outcome.


Journal Der Deutschen Dermatologischen Gesellschaft | 2005

Metronomic low‐dose chemotherapy as antiangiogenic therapeutic strategy for cancer

Jens Gille; Konstanze Spieth; Roland Kaufmann

New blood vessel formation is essential for the growth and metastasis of many cancers. As a result, antitumor activities of various angiogenesis inhibitors have been intensely explored in various tumors. Recent preclinical studies suggest that certain conventional cytotoxic agents can function as antiangiogenic drugs when administered at comparatively low doses on a continuous or very frequent schedule. Such antiangiogenic ‘metronomic’ scheduling of chemotherapy without extended rest periods has been shown to exert significant therapeutic antitumor efficacy with very limited toxicity in different tumor models. Combining metronomic low‐dose chemotherapy regimens with specific angiogenesis inhibitors further increases efficacy. Based on the promising preclinical studies, it is anticipated that metronomic chemotherapy in combination with angiogenesis inhibitors will prove effective in clinical trials in terms of survival prolongation. While considerable progress may derive from larger randomized clinical studies, only joint efforts between basic and clinical research will ultimately advance the new paradigm of long‐term metronomic antiangiogenic chemotherapy, which carries the prospect of turning cancer into a more controllable chronic disease at minimal toxicity.


Dermatology | 2000

Intralesional Methotrexate as Effective Treatment in Solitary Giant Keratoacanthoma of the Lower Lip

Konstanze Spieth; Jens Gille; Roland Kaufmann

When size and location of a keratoacanthoma along with patient-related factors argue against surgical treatment, intralesional methotrexate shows to be an effective, easy and inexpensive alternative. The case report presented validates this treatment modality.


Journal of Immunotherapy | 2010

Depressive Mood Changes and Psychiatric Symptoms During 12-month Low-dose Interferon-α Treatment in Patients With Malignant Melanoma Results From the Multicenter DeCOG Trial

Sarah Heinze; Friederike Egberts; Susanne Rötzer; Matthias Volkenandt; Wolfgang Tilgen; Ruthild Linse; Jörg Boettjer; Thomas Vogt; Konstanze Spieth; Thomas K. Eigentler; Norbert H. Brockmeyer; Axel Hinzpeter; Axel Hauschild; Martin Schaefer

The purpose of the present study was to evaluate the incidence, spectrum and extent of psychiatric symptoms in patients with malignant melanoma (MM) before and during adjuvant treatment with interferon-alpha (IFN-α). 850 patients with cutaneous MM of ≥1.5 mm tumor thickness received standard low-dose IFN-α 2a in this prospective multicenter trial of the Dermatologic Cooperative Oncology Group (DeCOG). Psychiatric symptoms were evaluated at baseline and after 3, 6, and 12 months with the Beck Depression Inventory (BDI) and the Symptom Check List 90-Revised (SCL 90-R). In all, 282 patients completed all questionnaires. Mean BDI depression scores increased significantly during the first 6 months of IFN-α treatment (P ≤0.001), followed by a mild but not significant decrease. Also mean SCL 90-R scores increased significantly during the first 3 months of adjuvant treatment with IFN-α (P≤0.001) and remained elevated until month 12 (P≤0.001). Only 5% developed BDI scores >10, indicating a clinically significant depressive syndrome and only 1.4% reached a BDI score ≥18, indicating a moderate to severe depressive syndrome. Patients, who dropped-out early from psychiatric reasons, had significantly increased BDI and SCL-90R scores at baseline. Women scored higher in both scales before and during treatment if compared with men. In conclusion, adjuvant treatment with IFN-α was associated with a significant increase of BDI- and SCL 90-R scores. A higher pretreatment depression score was found to be a risk factor for an early drop-out during therapy. Pretreatment screening and an interdisciplinary care of the patients is recommended.


Journal of Immunotherapy | 2011

Health-related quality of life before and during adjuvant interferon-α treatment for patients with malignant melanoma (DeCOG-trial).

Susanne Ziefle; Friederike Egberts; Sarah Heinze; Matthias Volkenandt; Monika H. Schmid-Wendtner; Wolfgang Tilgen; Ruthild Linse; Jörg Boettjer; Thomas Vogt; Konstanze Spieth; Thomas K. Eigentler; Norbert H. Brockmeyer; Andreas Heinz; Axel Hauschild; Martin Schaefer

Adjuvant treatment with interferon-&agr; (IFN-&agr;) for patients with malignant melanoma can improve relapse-free and overall survival, but IFN-associated side effects may reduce patients quality of life. The aim of the study was to prospectively evaluate health-related quality of life (HRQoL) in patients with melanoma before and during Low-Dose IFN-&agr; therapy. In a prospective multicenter trial conducted by the Dermatologic Cooperative Oncology Group, 850 patients with cutaneous stage II malignant melanoma received a standard Low-Dose of IFN-&agr;-2a. We evaluated HRQoL using the European Organization for Research and Treatment of Cancer Quality of Life Core 30 questionnaire at baseline and after 3, 6, and 12 months of IFN-&agr; treatment in 282 patients. Nine of 15 subscales showed significant poorer results after 3 months of adjuvant IFN treatment. Symptoms included reduced physical functioning, reduced cognitive functioning, fatigue, nausea, pain, dyspnea, insomnia, diarrhea, and loss of appetite. We did not find a significant change over time for role, emotional, or social functioning. Only cognitive functioning and dyspnea continuously worsened through the twelfth month. At baseline women had significantly lower scores for physical and emotional functioning and for fatigue compared with men. During treatment, women scored significantly poorer on physical functioning, emotional functioning, fatigue, pain, and constipation subscales. Patients who reported having a bad or very bad QoL before treatment were 5.8 times more likely to discontinue treatment early because of psychiatric problems. We conclude that adjuvant low-dose IFN treatment is associated with significant deterioration of HRQoL. Specific psychosocial care should be offered especially for patients who report lower HRQoL and emotional problems before treatment to prevent early discontinuation.


British Journal of Dermatology | 2000

Cream PUVA therapy for scleredema adultorum.

Marcella Grundmann-Kollmann; Falk Ochsendorf; Thomas Matthias Zollner; Konstanze Spieth; Roland Kaufmann; Maurizio Podda

q 2000 British Association of Dermatologists, British Journal of Dermatology, 142, 1047±1070 withdrawn. Rebound phenomena during or following CyA withdrawal are probably under reported and may be seen more frequently with intermittent than continuous CyA therapy. As the use of short-course CyA is becoming very popular in the treatment of psoriasis, dermatologists should be aware that even small dose reductions may precipitate the development of GPP.


Annals of Oncology | 2007

Temozolomide plus pegylated interferon alfa-2b as first-line treatment for stage IV melanoma: a multicenter phase II trial of the Dermatologic Cooperative Oncology Group (DeCOG)

Konstanze Spieth; Roland Kaufmann; Reinhard Dummer; Claus Garbe; Jürgen C. Becker; Axel Hauschild; Wolfgang Tilgen; Selma Ugurel; M. Beyeler; Eva-Bettina Bröcker; Katharina C. Kaehler; Claudia Pföhler; J. Gille; Ulrike Leiter; Dirk Schadendorf

BACKGROUND Combination of temozolomide (TMZ) with nonpegylated interferon alfa is associated with increased efficacy in terms of response rates compared with monotherapy. A multicenter phase II study was carried out to assess the activity and toxicity of TMZ plus pegylated interferon alfa-2b (peg-IFNalpha-2b), hypothesizing improved efficacy due to modified pharmacokinetic properties of the novel interferon (IFN) formulation. PATIENTS AND METHODS In all, 124 patients with stage IV melanoma without prior chemotherapy and no cerebral metastases were treated with 100 mug peg-IFNalpha-2b s.c. per week and oral TMZ 200 mg/m(2) (days 1-5, every 28 days). Primary study end point was objective response, and secondary end points were overall and progression-free survival (PFS) and safety. RESULTS In all, 116 patients were assessable for response: 2 (1.7%) had a complete response and 19 (16.4%) a partial response (overall response rate 18.1%). Of total, 25.0% achieved disease stabilization and 56.9% progressed. Overall survival was 9.4 months; PFS was 2.8 months. Grade 3/4 thrombocytopenia occurred in 20.7% and grade 3/4 leukopenia in 23.3%. CONCLUSIONS The efficacy of TMZ plus peg-IFNalpha-2b in this large phase II study is moderate and comparable to published results of the combination of TMZ with non-peg-IFN. Likewise, the safety profile of peg-IFNalpha-2b seems to be similar to non-peg-IFN when combined with TMZ.

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Roland Kaufmann

Goethe University Frankfurt

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Jens Gille

Goethe University Frankfurt

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Manfred Wolter

Goethe University Frankfurt

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Dirk Schadendorf

University of Duisburg-Essen

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Markus Meissner

Goethe University Frankfurt

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Christian Beier

Goethe University Frankfurt

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