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Featured researches published by Martin Klimpfinger.


Annals of Surgical Oncology | 2006

Solitary and multiple isolated metastases of clear cell renal carcinoma to the pancreas : An indication for pancreatic surgery

Franz Sellner; Natascha Tykalsky; Maria De Santis; Jörg Pont; Martin Klimpfinger

BackgroundIsolated pancreatic metastases (isPMs) of clear cell renal carcinoma are rare. Most of them are solitary; some are multiple. The reported rates and the clinical implications of multiple isPMs from clear cell renal cancer vary. Therefore, the available literature was analyzed to shed light on the clinical significance of these extremely rare metastatic lesions.MethodsA literature search brought to light 236 cases of isPMs (both solitary and multiple) from renal cell carcinoma. These were analyzed.ResultsA total of 12% of the metastases were synchronous with the primary tumor, and 88% were metachronous, occurring 10.0 ± 6.5 years (mean ± SD) after nephrectomy. A predilection for a specific part of the pancreas was not identifiable. The localization of the renal cell cancer (left or right kidney) did not have any effect on the site of the metastases. Seventy-four (39%) of the metastases to the pancreas were multiple (3.2 ± 1.5). Their epidemiology did not differ from that of solitary metastatic lesions. Actuarial 3- and 5-year survival rates after radical resection were 78% and 78%, respectively, for multiple versus 75% and 64% for solitary metastases.ConclusionsThe epidemiological data do not support a direct local lymphogenous or venous spread from the primary tumor to the pancreas. They rather suggest a systemic spread. Because of the positive outcome, radical removal of both solitary and multiple metastases should be attempted in eligible patients.


British Journal of Cancer | 2010

Fibroblast growth factor receptor 3-IIIc mediates colorectal cancer growth and migration

Gudrun Sonvilla; Sigrid Allerstorfer; Christine Heinzle; Stefan Stättner; Josef Karner; Martin Klimpfinger; Fritz Wrba; Hendrik Fischer; Christine Gauglhofer; Sabine Spiegl-Kreinecker; Bettina Grasl-Kraupp; Klaus Holzmann; Michael Grusch; Walter Berger; Brigitte Marian

Background:Deregulation of fibroblast growth factor receptor 3 (FGFR3) is involved in several malignancies. Its role in colorectal cancer has not been assessed before.Methods:Expression of FGFR3 in human colorectal tumour specimens was analysed using splice variant-specific real-time reverse transcriptase PCR assays. To analyse the impact of FGFR3-IIIc expression on tumour cell biology, colon cancer cell models overexpressing wild-type (WT-3b and WT3c) or dominant-negative FGFR3 variants (KD3c and KD3b) were generated by either plasmid transfection or adenoviral transduction.Results:Although FGFR3 mRNA expression is downregulated in colorectal cancer, alterations mainly affected the FGFR3-IIIb splice variant, resulting in an increased IIIc/IIIb ratio predominantly in a subgroup of advanced tumours. Overexpression of WT3c increased proliferation, survival and colony formation in all colon cancer cell models tested, whereas WT3b had little activity. In addition, it conferred sensitivity to autocrine FGF18-mediated growth and migration signals in SW480 cells with low endogenous FGFR3-IIIc expression. Disruption of FGFR3-IIIc-dependent signalling by dominant-negative FGFR3-IIIc or small interfering RNA-mediated FGFR3-IIIc knockdown resulted in inhibition of cell growth and induction of apoptosis, which could not be observed when FGFR3-IIIb was blocked. In addition, KD3c expression blocked colony formation and migration and distinctly attenuated tumour growth in SCID mouse xenograft models.Conclusion:Our data show that FGFR3-IIIc exerts oncogenic functions by mediating FGF18 effects in colorectal cancer and may constitute a promising new target for therapeutic interventions.


Annals of Surgery | 2009

Neuromuscular electrical stimulation reduces skeletal muscle protein degradation and stimulates insulin-like growth factors in an age- and current-dependent manner: A randomized, controlled clinical trial in major abdominal surgical patients

Eva Strasser; Stefan Stättner; Josef Karner; Martin Klimpfinger; Matthias Freynhofer; Vera Zaller; Alexandra Graf; Barbara Wessner; Norbert Bachl; Erich Roth; Michael Quittan

Objective:To investigate the effect of neuromuscular electrical stimulation (NMES) on skeletal muscle metabolism after major abdominal surgery. Summary Background Data:Protein catabolism associated with surgical interventions leads to reduced muscle strength, increased clinical complications and prolonged convalescence. Immobilization is suggested as a major stimulus for muscle wasting. This study investigates the potency of NMES on skeletal muscle growth factors and degradation processes in surgical patients. Methods:This observer blind study included 26 patients after major abdominal surgery mainly due to cancer aged 60 ± 10 years. Starting on the first postoperative day, 1 randomly assigned thigh of each patient was treated on 4 consecutive days with NMES, whereas the other leg was used as sham-stimulated control. Thereafter, muscle biopsies from both legs were performed. Differences in mRNA level, protein expression, and enzyme activity between legs were analyzed by cross-over analysis of variance (Clinical Trial Registration Number: NCT00635440). Results:NMES significantly increased total RNA content and total sarcoplasmatic protein content. NMES significantly reduced ubiquitin-conjugated sarcoplasmatic proteins and proteasome activity. The mechano growth factor mRNA level correlated positively with the applied current and negatively with the body mass index of the patients. The increase in insulin like growth factor-1Ea mRNA after NMES correlated negatively with the age of the patients. Conclusions:This study shows that NMES significantly increases total RNA content and reduces protein degradation in postoperative patients. Moreover, the induction of growth factors by NMES reveals dependency on body mass index, age, and applied current. We conclude that NMES is a useful clinical tool to reduce protein catabolism in postoperative patients.


Cancer Research | 2012

Differential effects of polymorphic alleles of FGF receptor 4 on colon cancer growth and metastasis.

Christine Heinzle; Andrea Gsur; Monika Hunjadi; Zeynep Erdem; Christine Gauglhofer; Stefan Stättner; Josef Karner; Martin Klimpfinger; Friedrich Wrba; Andrea Réti; Balazs Hegedus; Andreas Baierl; Bettina Grasl-Kraupp; Klaus Holzmann; Michael Grusch; Walter Berger; Brigitte Marian

A gly(388)arg polymorphism (rs351855) in the transmembrane domain of the fibroblast growth factor receptor (FGFR4) is associated with increased risk, staging, and metastasis in several different types of cancer. To specifically assess the impact of the polymorphic FGFR4 in colorectal cancer (CRC), we engineered CRC cell lines with distinct endogenous expression patterns to overexpress either the FGFR4(gly) or FGFR4(arg) alleles. The biologic analyses revealed an oncogenic importance for both polymorphic alleles, but FGFR4(gly) was the stronger inducer of tumor growth, whereas FGFR4(arg) was the stronger inducer of migration. An evaluation of clinical specimens revealed that FGFR4 was upregulated in 20/71 patients independent of gly(388)arg status. There was no correlation between the presence of an FGFR4(arg) allele and CRC or polyp risk in 3,471 participants of the CORSA study. However, among 182 patients with CRC, FGFR4(arg)-carriers had a fivefold higher risk of tumors that were stage II or greater. Together, our results established that both allelic forms of FGFR4 exert an oncogenic impact and may serve equally well as therapeutic targets in CRC. One important implication of our findings is that FGFR4(arg)-carriers are at a higher risk for more aggressive tumors and therefore may profit from early detection measures.


Experimental Cell Research | 2012

Up-regulation of 12(S)-lipoxygenase induces a migratory phenotype in colorectal cancer cells

T. Klampfl; E. Bogner; W. Bednar; L. Mager; D. Massudom; I. Kalny; Christine Heinzle; Walter Berger; Stefan Stättner; Josef Karner; Martin Klimpfinger; G. Fürstenberger; P. Krieg; Brigitte Marian

12(S)-Lipoxygenase (LOX) and its product 12(S)-hydroxyeicosatetraenic (HETE) acid have been implicated in angiogenesis and tumour invasion in several tumour types while their role in colorectal cancer progression has not yet been studied. We have analysed 12(S)-LOX expression in colorectal tumours and found gene expression up-regulated in colorectal cancer specimens for which the pathology report described involvement of inflammation. Using cell line models exposed to 12(S)-HETE or over-expressing 12(S)-LOX malignant cell growth as well as tumour cell migration was found to be stimulated. Specifically, Caco2 and SW480 cells over-expressing 12(S)-LOX formed fewer colonies from sparse cultures, but migrated better in filter-migration assays. SW480 LOX cells also had higher anchorage-independent growth capacity and a higher tendency to metastasise in vivo. Knock-down or inhibition of 12(S)-LOX inhibited cell migration and anchorage-independent growth in both 12(S)-LOX transfectants and SW620 cells that express high endogenous levels of 12(S)-LOX. On the cell surface E-cadherin and integrin-β1 expression were down-regulated in a 12(S)-LOX-dependent manner disturbing cell–cell interactions. The results demonstrate that 12(S)-LOX expression in inflammatory areas of colorectal tumours has the capacity to induce an invasive phenotype in colorectal cancer cells and could be targeted for therapy.


Oncotarget | 2016

Epithelial splicing regulatory protein 1 and 2 paralogues correlate with splice signatures and favorable outcome in human colorectal cancer

Abigail J. Deloria; Doris Höflmayer; Philip Kienzl; Justyna Łopatecka; Sandra Sampl; Martin Klimpfinger; Tamara Braunschmid; Fabienne Bastian; Lingeng Lu; Brigitte Marian; Stefan Stättner; Klaus Holzmann

ESRPs are master splice regulators implicated in alternative mRNA splicing programs important for epithelial-mesenchymal transition (EMT) and tumor progression. ESRP1 was identified in some tumors as good or worse predictor of outcome, but in colorectal cancer (CRC) the prognostic value of ESRPs and relation with mesenchymal splice variants is not clear. Here, we studied 68 CRC cases, compared tissue expression of ESRPs with clinical data and with EMT gene splice patterns of conditional CRC cells with deficient ESRP1 expression. Around 72% of patients showed global decreased transcript expression of both ESRPs in tumor as compared to matched non-neoplastic colorectal epithelium. Reduction of ESRP1 in tumor cells was evaluated by immunohistochemistry, associated with microsatellite stability and switch to mesenchymal splice signatures of FGFRs, CD44, ENAH and CTNND1(p120-catenin). Expression of ESRPs was significantly associated with favorable overall survival (log-rank test, P=0.0186 and 0.0408), better than prognostic stratification by tumor staging; and for ESRP1 confirmed with second TCGA cohort (log-rank test, P=0.0435). Prognostic value is independent of the pathological stage and microsatellite instability (ESRP1: HR=0.36, 95%CI 0.15–0.91, P=0.032; ESRP2: HR=0.23, 95%CI 0.08–0.65, P=0.006). Our study supports the role of ESRP1 as tumor suppressor and strongly suggests that ESRPs are candidate markers for early detection, diagnosis, and prognosis of CRC.


Digestion | 2015

Tumor and patient characteristics of individuals with mismatch repair deficient colorectal cancer

Elisabeth Waldmann; Monika Ferlitsch; Nicolas Binder; Franz Sellner; Josef Karner; Birgit Heinisch; Martin Klimpfinger; Michael Trauner

Aims: To investigate tumor and patient characteristics of individuals with mismatch repair (MMR)-deficient colorectal carcinomas. Methods: We immunhistochemically investigated tissue samples of 307 consecutive patients with colorectal cancer for defects in DNA MMR proteins (hMLH1, hMSH2, hMSH6, hPMS2) and those with mutations further for microsatellite instability (MSI) and BRAF V600E mutations. Results: 32/308 (10.4%) tumors showed MMR deficiency. Seventy five percent (n = 24) had loss of hMLH1 and hPMS2 expression, 3% (n = 1) of hPMS2 alone, 18.8% (n = 6) of hMSH6 and hMSH2, 3% (n = 1) of hMSH2 alone. All MMR-deficient tumors showed high MSI. These tumors occurred preferably in the right-sided colon, in women and showed specific histological features. We obtained the family history of 18/32 patients; 2 (11.1%) met Amsterdam Criteria, 5 (27.8%) Bethesda Guidelines and 6 (33.3%) revised Bethesda Guidelines. BRAF V600E mutations were found in 16 (67%) of hMLH1 and none of the hMSH2 deficient tumors. Conclusion: We suggest using immunhistochemical testing of tumor tissues with subsequent MSI analysis, which may be justified as a screening method for MMR deficiency in colorectal cancer, since it identifies patients with possibly hereditary defects and unalike response to chemotherapy.


Digestion | 2015

Contents Vol. 91, 2015

Christine Koch; Joerg Trojan; Teppei Omori; Shinichi Nakamura; Keiko Shiratori; Kerstin Herzer; Andreas Paul; Angela Papadopoulos-Köhn; Andreas Walker; Anne Achterfeld; Ali Canbay; Jörg Timm; Guido Gerken; Hiroaki Miyajima; Valmir Mocelin; Renato Nisihara; Shirley Ramos da Rosa Utiyama; Lorete Maria da Silva Kotze; Odery Ramos; Iara Messias-Reason; Mitsushige Sugimoto; Satoshi Osawa; Takahisa Furuta; Shu Sahara; Takahiro Uotani; Hitomi Ichikawa; Mihoko Yamade; Takuma Kagami; Yasushi Hamaya; Moriya Iwaizumi

Founded as ‘Archiv für Verdauungskrankheiten’ 1895 by I. Boas Continued as ‘Gastroenterologia’ 1939–1967 Former Editors: P. Morawitz (1934–1936), R. Staehelin (1937–1943), A. Hurst (1940–1945), W. Löffler (1943–1961), T.C. Hunt (1947–1967), N. Henning (1953–1962), B. Ihre (1953–1967), H. Bartelheimer (1963–1967), M. Demole (1963–1971), H. Kapp (1968–1970), R. Lambert (1972–1978), W. Creutzfeldt (1979–1992), R. Arnold (1993–2003), C. Beglinger (2004–2011), B. Göke (2004–2014)


Ejso | 2008

Well or poorly differentiated nonfunctioning neuroendocrine carcinoma of the pancreas: A single institution experience with 17 cases

Franz Sellner; B. Sobhian; M. De Santis; Jörg Pont; St. Staettner; St. Sellner; J. Karner; Martin Klimpfinger


Wiener Klinische Wochenschrift | 1999

Hypersensitivitatsvaskulitis als ursache eines akuten abdomens

Sandra Hanelt; Josef Karner; Peter Peichl; Werner Hackl; Martin Klimpfinger

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Stefan Stättner

Innsbruck Medical University

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Brigitte Marian

Medical University of Vienna

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Christine Heinzle

Medical University of Vienna

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Klaus Holzmann

Medical University of Vienna

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Walter Berger

Medical University of Vienna

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Jörg Pont

University of Tübingen

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Christine Gauglhofer

Medical University of Vienna

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