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Featured researches published by Levent Dizdar.


BMC Cancer | 2013

Snail1 expression in colorectal cancer and its correlation with clinical and pathological parameters

Feride Kroepil; Georg Fluegen; Daniel Vallböhmer; Stephan Baldus; Levent Dizdar; Andreas Raffel; Dieter Hafner; Nikolas H. Stoecklein; Wolfram T. Knoefel

BackgroundSnail1 is a transcription regulator of E-cadherin. The loss of E-cadherin seems to be a crucial step in the process of Epithelial-mesenchymal transition (EMT). EMT initiates invasion and proliferation in many tumours. Overexpression of Snail1 is known to be associated with poor outcome in several solid tumours. The aim of this study was to analyse its expression profile and prognostic significance in colorectal cancer.MethodsTissue microarrays (TMA) containing paraffin-embedded primary colorectal cancer (CRC) tissue samples from 251 patients were used in this study. The expression of Snail1 and E-cadherin was assessed by immunohistochemistry in different tumour compartments, corresponding lymph node metastases and normal colonic mucosa. Intensity of staining was classified according to the Remmele score (standardized scoring system) as well as the semiquantitative score established by Blechschmidt et al.ResultsSnail1 expression was observed in 76% of the CRC. Loss of E-cadherin was noted in 87% of the CRC. Snail1 positive tumours were significantly correlated with Snail1 positive lymph node metastases (p=0.03). There was no significant correlation between loss of E-cadherin and Snail1 expression, or between N-stage or grading and Snail1 expression. Kaplan-Meier survival analysis identified no prognostic impact of Snail1 expression on overall survival.ConclusionSnail1 expression was detectable in most of the CRC but showed no significant association with E-cadherin loss, clinical pathological characteristics or overall survival. The observed loss of E-cadherin could be explained by effects of other important EMT pathways, such as the Wnt-signalling cascade.


Digestive Surgery | 2010

Long-Term Vacuum-Assisted Closure in Open Abdomen due to Secondary Peritonitis: A Retrospective Evaluation of a Selected Group of Patients

Moritz Schmelzle; Ingo Alldinger; Hanno Matthaei; Feride Aydin; Ingo Wallert; Claus F. Eisenberger; Jan Schulte am Esch; Levent Dizdar; Stefan A. Topp; Qin Yang; Wolfram T. Knoefel

Background/Aims: Vacuum-assisted closure (VAC) leads to a high fascial closure rate in open abdomen within the first week of treatment. However, little data exist on the role of long-term VAC treatment in patients with peritonitis, where fascial closure cannot be accomplished within the first days. Methods: We reviewed the medical records of 49 patients with open abdomen for more than 7 days due to secondary peritonitis, who underwent a VAC-treatment. Nonparametric analysis was performed using χ2 test or Fisher’s exact test. Results: Fascial closure could be accomplished in only 11 patients (22%), whereas complications occurred in 43 patients (88%). Re-explorations after starting VAC were associated with the occurrence of enterocutaneous fistula (p < 0.001) and were also of prognostic value regarding the rate of fascial closure (p = 0.033). Conclusions: If fascial closure cannot be accomplished within the first days, patients show a dramatically lower fascial closure and an increased complication rate with VAC. Further studies are needed to evaluate whether this subgroup really benefits from VAC.


Prostaglandins & Other Lipid Mediators | 2011

Esophageal cancer proliferation is mediated by cytochrome P450 2C9 (CYP2C9).

Moritz Schmelzle; Levent Dizdar; Hanno Matthaei; Stephan Baldus; Judith Wolters; Nina Lindenlauf; Ingmar Bruns; Ron-Patrick Cadeddu; Feride Kröpil; Stefan A. Topp; Jan Schulte am Esch; Claus F. Eisenberger; Wolfram T. Knoefel; Nikolas H. Stoecklein

Cytochrome P450 epoxygenases (CYP450) have been recently shown to promote malignant progression. Here we investigated the mRNA and protein expression and potential clinical relevance of CYP2C9 in esophageal cancer. Highest expression was detected in esophageal adenocarcinoma (EAC; n=78) and adjacent esophageal mucosa (NEM; n=79). Levels of CYP2C9 in EAC and NEM were significantly higher compared to esophageal squamous cell carcinoma (ESCC; n=105). Early tumor stages and well-differentiated tumors showed a significantly higher CYP2C9 expression compared to progressed tumors. Moreover, CYP2C9 expression was correlated to high Ki-67 labeling indices in EAC and Ki-67 positive tumor cells in EAC and ESCC. Selective inhibition of CYP2C9 decreased tumor cell proliferation (KYSE30, PT1590 and OE19) in vitro, which was abolished by 11,12-epoxyeicosatrienoic acid (11,12-EET). Cell-cycle analysis using FACS revealed that inhibition of CYP2C9 leads to a G0/G1 phase cell-cycle arrest. CYP2C9 seems to be relevant for early esophageal cancer development by promoting tumor cell proliferation. Pharmacological inhibition of CYP2C9 might contribute to a more efficient therapy in CYP2C9 highly expressing esophageal cancers.


British Journal of Cancer | 2016

Survivin and XIAP: two valuable biomarkers in medullary thyroid carcinoma

Thomas A. Werner; Yasemin Tamkan-Ölcek; Levent Dizdar; Jasmin C. Riemer; Achim Wolf; Kenko Cupisti; Pablo E. Verde; Wolfram T. Knoefel; Andreas Krieg

Background:Medullary thyroid carcinoma (MTC) accounts for ∼5% of all thyroid malignancies. To date, surgery is the first-line therapy with curative intention. However, for advanced MTC, conventional chemotherapeutic agents do not provide convincing results. Therefore, the identification of biomarkers that can be antagonised by small-molecule therapeutics may lead to novel encouraging treatment options.Methods:Seventy-nine patients with surgically resected and histologically confirmed MTC were included in this study. Tissue microarrays were constructed to assess the relationship between inhibitor of apoptosis proteins (IAPs) survivin or XIAP expression levels and clinicopathological variables as well as overall survival.Results:High survivin or XIAP expression was associated with an advanced T-stage and metastatic disease. Whereas tissue expression levels of survivin correlated with serum calcitonin levels, XIAP was overexpressed in the subgroup of patients with sporadic MTC. Both IAPs were negatively associated with patient survival in the multivariate Cox regressions analysis (survivin: hazard ratio (HR) 1.62; 95% confidence interval (CI): 1.21–2.16; P=0.001; XIAP: HR 1.78; 95% CI: 1.16–2.72; P=0.008).Conclusions:Survivin and XIAP demonstrate distinct expression patterns in MTCs, which are associated with advanced disease and poor prognosis. We thus provide first evidence that both IAPs might serve as viable targets in patients with MTC.


PLOS ONE | 2014

New Model for Gastroenteropancreatic Large-Cell Neuroendocrine Carcinoma: Establishment of Two Clinically Relevant Cell Lines

Andreas Krieg; Sabrina Mersch; Inga Boeck; Levent Dizdar; Eberhard Weihe; Zena Hilal; Markus Krausch; Birte Möhlendick; Stefan A. Topp; Roland P. Piekorz; Wolfgang Huckenbeck; Nikolas H. Stoecklein; Martin Anlauf; Wolfram T. Knoefel

Recently, a novel WHO-classification has been introduced that divided gastroenteropancreatic neuroendocrine neoplasms (GEP-NEN) according to their proliferation index into G1- or G2-neuroendocrine tumors (NET) and poorly differentiated small-cell or large-cell G3-neuroendocrine carcinomas (NEC). Our knowledge on primary NECs of the GEP-system is limited due to the rarity of these tumors and chemotherapeutic concepts of highly aggressive NEC do not provide convincing results. The aim of this study was to establish a reliable cell line model for NEC that could be helpful in identifying novel druggable molecular targets. Cell lines were established from liver (NEC-DUE1) or lymph node metastases (NEC-DUE2) from large cell NECs of the gastroesophageal junction and the large intestine, respectively. Morphological characteristics and expression of neuroendocrine markers were extensively analyzed. Chromosomal aberrations were mapped by array comparative genomic hybridization and DNA profiling was analyzed by DNA fingerprinting. In vitro and in vivo tumorigenicity was evaluated and the sensitivity against chemotherapeutic agents assessed. Both cell lines exhibited typical morphological and molecular features of large cell NEC. In vitro and in vivo experiments demonstrated that both cell lines retained their malignant properties. Whereas NEC-DUE1 and -DUE2 were resistant to chemotherapeutic drugs such as cisplatin, etoposide and oxaliplatin, a high sensitivity to 5-fluorouracil was observed for the NEC-DUE1 cell line. Taken together, we established and characterized the first GEP large-cell NEC cell lines that might serve as a helpful tool not only to understand the biology of these tumors, but also to establish novel targeted therapies in a preclinical setup.


Oncotarget | 2017

Preclinical assesement of survivin and XIAP as prognostic biomarkers and therapeutic targets in gastroenteropancreatic neuroendocrine neoplasia

Levent Dizdar; Kira A. Oesterwind; Jasmin C. Riemer; Thomas A. Werner; Sabrina Mersch; Birte Möhlendick; Sina Christin Schütte; Pablo E. Verde; Katharina Raba; Stefan A. Topp; Nikolas H. Stoecklein; Irene Esposito; Wolfram T. Knoefel; Andreas Krieg

Gastroenteropancreatic neuroendocrine neoplasms (GEP-NEN) represent a rare and heterogenous tumor entity. Importantly, the highly proliferative subgroup of neuroendocrine carcinoma (GEP-NEC) is characterized by high resistance to conventional chemotherapy. Consequently, there is an urgent need to identify novel therapeutic targets, especially for GEP-NEC. Thus, we focused on Inhibitor of apoptosis protein (IAP) family members survivin and XIAP that orchestrate inhibition of apoptosis, induce resistance against chemotherapeutics and facilitate tumor metastasis. Copy number gains (CNGs) could be detected by microarray comparative genomic hybridization for survivin and XIAP in 60 % and 26.7 % of all GEP-NENs, respectively. Immunohistochemical staining of tissue specimens from 77 consecutive patients with GEP-NEN demonstrated increased survivin protein expression levels in tissue specimens of highly proliferative GEP-NEC or GEP-NEN located in the stomach and colon. In contrast, XIAP overexpression was associated with advanced tumor stages. Knockdown of survivin and XIAP markedly reduced cell proliferation and tumor growth. In vitro, YM155 induced apoptotic cell death accompanied by a reduction in cell proliferation and inhibited GEP-NEC xenograft growth. Taken together, our data provide evidence for a biological relevance of these IAPs in GEP-NEN and support a potential role of survivin as therapeutic target especially in the subgroup of aggressive GEP-NEC.


Endocrine-related Cancer | 2018

IAPs cause resistance to TRAIL-dependent apoptosis in follicular thyroid cancer

Thomas A. Werner; Inga Nolten; Levent Dizdar; Jasmin C. Riemer; Sina Christin Schütte; Pablo E. Verde; Katharina Raba; Matthias Schott; Wolfram T. Knoefel; Andreas Krieg

Follicular thyroid cancers (FTC) excellent long-term prognosis is mainly dependent on postoperative radioactive iodine (RAI) treatment. However, once the tumour becomes refractory, the 10-year disease-specific survival rate drops below 10%. The aim of our study was to evaluate the prognostic and biological role of the TRAIL system in FTC and to elucidate the influence of small-molecule-mediated antagonisation of inhibitor of apoptosis proteins (IAPs) on TRAIL sensitivity in vitro Tissue microarrays were constructed from forty-four patients with histologically confirmed FTC. Expression levels of TRAIL and its receptors were correlated with clinicopathological data and overall as well as recurrence-free survival. Non-iodine-retaining FTC cell lines TT2609-bib2 and FTC133 were treated with recombinant human TRAIL alone and in combination with Smac mimetics GDC-0152 or Birinapant. TRAIL-R2/DR5 as well as TRAIL-R3/DcR1 and TRAIL-R4/DcR2 were significantly higher expressed in advanced tumour stages. Both decoy receptors were negatively associated with recurrence-free and overall survival. TRAIL-R4/DcR2 additionally proved to be an independent negative prognostic marker in FTC (HR = 1.446, 95% CI: 1.144-1.826; P < 0.001). In vitro, the co-incubation of Birinapant or GDC-0152 with rh-TRAIL-sensitised FTC cell lines for TRAIL-induced apoptosis, through degradation of cIAP1/2. The TRAIL system plays an important role in FTC tumour biology. Its decoy receptors are associated with poor prognosis as well as earlier recurrence. The specific degradation of cIAP1/2 sensitises FTC cells to TRAIL-induced apoptosis and might highlight a new point of attack in patients with RAI refractory disease.


Scientific Reports | 2017

Survivin and XIAP – two potential biological targets in follicular thyroid carcinoma

Thomas A. Werner; Levent Dizdar; Inga Nolten; Jasmin C. Riemer; Sabrina Mersch; Sina Christin Schütte; Christiane Driemel; Pablo E. Verde; Katharina Raba; Stefan A. Topp; M. Schott; Wolfram T. Knoefel; Andreas Krieg

Follicular thyroid carcinoma’s (FTC) overall good prognosis deteriorates if the tumour fails to retain radioactive iodine. Therefore, new druggable targets are in high demand for this subset of patients. Here, we investigated the prognostic and biological role of survivin and XIAP in FTC. Survivin and XIAP expression was investigated in 44 FTC and corresponding non-neoplastic thyroid specimens using tissue microarrays. Inhibition of both inhibitor of apoptosis proteins (IAP) was induced by shRNAs or specific small molecule antagonists and functional changes were investigated in vitro and in vivo. Survivin and XIAP were solely expressed in FTC tissue. Survivin expression correlated with an advanced tumour stage and recurrent disease. In addition, survivin proved to be an independent negative prognostic marker. Survivin or XIAP knockdown caused a significant reduction in cell viability and proliferation, activated caspase3/7 and was associated with a reduced tumour growth in vivo. IAP-targeting compounds induced a decrease of cell viability, proliferation and cell cycle activity accompanied by an increase in apoptosis. Additionally, YM155 a small molecule inhibitor of survivin expression significantly inhibited tumour growth in vivo. Both IAPs demonstrate significant functional implications in the oncogenesis of FTCs and thus prove to be viable targets in patients with advanced FTC.


British Journal of Cancer | 2017

CXCR4/CXCR7/CXCL12 axis promotes an invasive phenotype in medullary thyroid carcinoma

Thomas A. Werner; Christina Maria Forster; Levent Dizdar; Pablo E. Verde; Katharina Raba; M. Schott; Wolfram T. Knoefel; Andreas Krieg

Background:Medullary thyroid carcinoma (MTC) is a rare and challenging endocrine malignancy. Once spread, the therapeutic options are limited and the outcome poor. For these patients, the identification of new druggable biological markers is of great importance. Here, we investigated the prognostic and biological role of the C-X-C chemokine receptors type 4 and 7 (CXCR4/7) in MTC.Methods:Eighty-six MTC and corresponding non-neoplastic thyroid specimens were immunohistochemically stained for CXCR4/7 using tissue microarray technology and expression levels correlated with clinicopathological variables. Medullary thyroid carcinoma cell line TT was treated with recombinant human SDF1α/CXCL12 (rh-SDF1α) and CXCR4 antagonists AMD3100 and WZ811. Changes in cell cycle activation, tumour cell invasiveness as well as changes in mRNA expression levels of genes associated with epithelial–mesenchymal transition (EMT) were investigated.Results:High CXCR4 expression was associated with large tumour size and metastatic disease. CXCR4 antagonists significantly reduced tumour cell invasiveness, while the treatment with rh-SDF1α stimulated invasive growth, caused cell cycle activation and induced EMT.Conclusions:The CXCR4/CXCR7/CXCL12 axis plays an important role in MTC. We provide first evidence that the chemokine receptors might serve as potential therapeutic targets in patients with advanced MTC and offer new valuable insight into the underlying molecular machinery of metastatic MTC.


British Journal of Cancer | 2017

Disseminated tumour cells with highly aberrant genomes are linked to poor prognosis in operable oesophageal adenocarcinoma

Sarah Schumacher; Christoph Bartenhagen; M. Hoffmann; Daniel Will; Johannes C. Fischer; Stephan Baldus; Christian Vay; Georg Fluegen; Levent Dizdar; Daniel Vallböhmer; Christoph A. Klein; Wolfram T. Knoefel; Nikolas H. Stoecklein; Birte Möhlendick

Background:Chromosomal instability (CIN) has repeatedly been identified as a prognostic marker. Here we evaluated the percentage of aberrant genome per cell (PAG) as a measure of CIN in single disseminated tumour cells (DTC) isolated from patients with operable oesophageal adenocarcinoma (EAC), to assess the impact of CINhigh DTCs on prognosis.Methods:We isolated CK18positive DTCs from bone marrow (BM) or lymph node (LN) preparations of operable EAC patients. After whole-genome amplification, single DTCs were analysed for chromosomal gains and losses using metaphase-based comparative genomic hybridisation (mCGH). We calculated the PAG for each DTC and determined the critical threshold value that identifies high-risk patients by STEPP (Subpopulation Treatment Effect Pattern Plot) analysis in two independent EAC patient cohorts (cohort #1, n=44; cohort #2; n=29).Results:The most common chromosomal alterations observed among the DTCs were typical for EAC, but the DTCs showed a varying PAG between individual patients. Generally, LNDTCs displayed a significantly higher PAG than BMDTCs. STEPP analysis revealed an increasing PAG of DTCs to be correlated with an increased risk for short survival in two independent EAC cohorts as well as in the corresponding pooled analysis. In all three data sets (cohort #1, cohort #2 and pooled cohort), PAGhigh DTCs conferred an independent risk for a significantly decreased survival.Conclusions:The analysis of PAG/CIN in solitary marker-positive DTCs identifies operable EAC patients with poor prognosis, indicating a more aggressive minimal residual disease.

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Andreas Krieg

University of Düsseldorf

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Pablo E. Verde

University of Düsseldorf

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Katharina Raba

University of Düsseldorf

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Stefan A. Topp

University of Düsseldorf

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