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Dive into the research topics where Mechthild Salzer-Kuntschik is active.

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Featured researches published by Mechthild Salzer-Kuntschik.


Cancer | 1991

MIC2 is a specific marker for ewing's sarcoma and peripheral primitive neuroectodermal tumors. Evidence for a common histogenesis of ewing's sarcoma and peripheral primitive neuroectodermal tumors from MIC2 expression and specific chromosome aberration

Inge M. Ambros; Peter F. Ambros; Sabine Strehl; Heinrich Kovar; Helmut Gadner; Mechthild Salzer-Kuntschik

This study reports on the specific expression of the MIC2 gene, a pseudoautosomal gene located on the short arms of the X and Y chromosomes, on Ewings sarcoma (ES) and peripheral primitive neuroectodermal tumor (pPNET) cells. The gene product, a cell membrane protein, is recognized by the newly established monoclonal antibody (MoAb) HBA‐71 and the previously described MoAb 12E7 and RFB‐1. Furthermore, the reaction pattern of the MIC2 antibodies, especially HBA‐71, with normal tissues and a great number of benign and malignant tumors (70 different tumors, 199 tumor samples), as well as the correlation between the specific chromosomal aberrations, i.e., the t(11;22) and the del(22) and the expression of this antigen, are demonstrated. Both ES and pPNET cells express the MIC2 gene in very high amounts, which represents a highly selective and almost unique feature of these cells, making an assignment of these tumors in one entity even more likely. The MIC2 antibodies are of great value for clinical and research purposes.


Journal of Clinical Oncology | 2003

Primary Metastatic Osteosarcoma: Presentation and Outcome of Patients Treated on Neoadjuvant Cooperative Osteosarcoma Study Group Protocols

Leo Kager; Andreas Zoubek; Ulrike Pötschger; Ulrike Kastner; Silke Flege; Beate Kempf-Bielack; Detlev Branscheid; Rainer Kotz; Mechthild Salzer-Kuntschik; Winfried Winkelmann; Gernot Jundt; Hartmut Kabisch; Peter Reichardt; Heribert Jürgens; Helmut Gadner; Stefan S. Bielack

PURPOSE To determine demographic data and define prognostic factors for long-term outcome in patients presenting with high-grade osteosarcoma of bone with clinically detectable metastases at initial presentation. PATIENTS AND METHODS Of 1,765 patients with newly diagnosed, previously untreated high-grade osteosarcomas of bone registered in the neoadjuvant Cooperative Osteosarcoma Study Group studies before 1999, 202 patients (11.4%) had proven metastases at diagnosis and therefore were enrolled onto an analysis of demographic-, tumor-, and treatment-related variables, response, and survival. The intended therapeutic strategy included pre- and postoperative multiagent chemotherapy as well as aggressive surgery of all resectable lesions. RESULTS With a median follow-up of 1.9 years (5.5 years for survivors), 60 patients were alive, 37 of whom were in continuously complete surgical remission. Actuarial overall survival rates at 5 and 10 (same value for 15) years were 29% (SE = 3%) and 24% (SE = 4%), respectively. In univariate analysis, survival was significantly correlated with patient age, site of the primary tumor, number and location of metastases, number of involved organ systems, histologic response of the primary tumor to preoperative chemotherapy, and completeness and time point of surgical resection of all tumor sites. However, after multivariate Cox regression analysis, only multiple metastases at diagnosis (relative hazard rate [RHR] = 2.3) and macroscopically incomplete surgical resection (RHR = 2.4) remained significantly associated with inferior outcomes. CONCLUSION The number of metastases at diagnosis and the completeness of surgical resection of all clinically detected tumor sites are of independent prognostic value in patients with proven primary metastatic osteosarcoma.


Journal of Clinical Oncology | 1984

Neoadjuvant chemotherapy for osteogenic sarcoma: results of a Cooperative German/Austrian study.

Kurt Winkler; G Beron; R Kotz; Mechthild Salzer-Kuntschik; J Beck; W Beck; W Brandeis; W Ebell; R Erttmann; U. Göbel

From December 1979 to August 1982 158 patients were registered for an adjuvant chemotherapy (CT) study COSS -80. To compare the effect of cisplatin (CPL) to that of the drug combination bleomycin, cyclophosphamide, and dactinomycin (BCD), patients were randomized to receive either drug(s) within a course of sequential multidrug CT including doxorubicin and high-dose methotrexate (HDMTX). Definite surgery was done 10-18 weeks after the start of CT. Patients were randomized a second time to receive or not to receive fibroblast interferon in addition to CT beginning at week 16. At a median observation time of 19.5 months (range, 4-34 months), 116 (73%) of 158 patients were continuously disease-free (CDF). After exclusion of 42 patients because of some deviation in history and/or management, 86 (74%) of 116 patients actually were CDF with a 30-month calculated CDF-rate of 68%. There was no difference in CDF rates in the patients receiving BCD versus CPL or receiving interferon versus no interferon. Whereas, in comparison to the previous study COSS -77, the over-all increase in CDF rate does not reach statistical significance, it does, however, for the younger (less than or equal to 12 years) and for male patients, which is assumed to be the effect of increasing the methotrexate dose from 6 to 12 g/m2 in the COSS -80 study.


Annals of Oncology | 1998

Long-term results of the co-operative German-Austrian-Swiss osteosarcoma study group's protocol COSS-86 of intensive multidrug chemotherapy and surgery for osteosarcoma of the limbs

N. Fuchs; Stefan S. Bielack; D. Epler; P. Biding; G. Delling; Dieter Körholz; Norbert Graf; U. Heise; Heribert Jürgens; R. Kotz; Mechthild Salzer-Kuntschik; P. Weinel; M. Werner; K. Winkler

BACKGROUND In an effort to intensify osteosarcoma therapy, systemic ifosfamide was added pre- and postoperatively to an already aggressive three-drug regimen. In a subgroup of patients, loco-regional treatment intensification was attempted by using the intraarterial route to give cisplatin. PATIENTS AND METHODS Patients < or = 40 years at diagnosis of a localised, de novo high-grade central extremity osteosarcoma were eligible for inclusion into study COSS-86 if registered within three weeks from biopsy. Doxorubicin, high-dose methotrexate, and cisplatin were given to all patients. Patients who fulfilled one or more of three defined high-risk criteria received early systemic treatment intensification by adding ifosfamide as the fourth agent. Preoperatively, these high-risk patients received cisplatin either intraarterially or intravenously. RESULTS 171 eligible patients were entered, of which 128 were stratified into the high-risk group. When all 171 were analysed by intention-to-treat, actuarial overall and event-free survival rates at ten years were 72% and 66%, respectively. No benefit of intraarterial cisplatin application was detected. Cumulative treatment toxicity was considerable. CONCLUSIONS In a multicenter setting, intensive treatment of osteosarcoma according to protocol COSS-86 led to long-term disease-free survival for two thirds of patients. We saw no benefit of using the intraarterial route to administer cisplatin.


Journal of Clinical Oncology | 2003

Osteosarcoma of the Pelvis: Experience of the Cooperative Osteosarcoma Study Group

Toshifumi Ozaki; Silke Flege; Matthias Kevric; Norbert Lindner; Rainer Maas; Günter Delling; Rudolf Schwarz; Arthur R. von Hochstetter; Mechthild Salzer-Kuntschik; Wolfgang E. Berdel; Heribert Jürgens; G. Ulrich Exner; Peter Reichardt; Regine Mayer-Steinacker; Volker Ewerbeck; Rainer Kotz; Winfried Winkelmann; Stefan S. Bielack

PURPOSE To define patients and tumor characteristics as well as therapy results, patients with pelvic osteosarcoma who were registered in the Cooperative Osteosarcoma Study Group (COSS) were analyzed. PATIENTS AND METHODS Sixty-seven patients with a high-grade pelvic osteosarcoma were eligible for this analysis. Fifteen patients had primary metastases. All patients received chemotherapy according to COSS protocols. Thirty-eight patients underwent limb-sparing surgery, 12 patients underwent hemipelvectomy, and 17 patients did not undergo definitive surgery. Eleven patients received irradiation to the primary tumor site: four postoperatively and seven as the only form of local therapy. RESULTS Local failure occurred in 47 of all 67 patients (70%) and in 31 of 50 patients (62%) who underwent definitive surgery. Five-year overall survival (OS) and progression-free survival rates were 27% and 19%, respectively. Large tumor size (P =.0137), primary metastases (P =.0001), and no or intralesional surgery (P <.0001) were poor prognostic factors. In 30 patients with no or intralesional surgery, 11 patients with radiotherapy had better OS than 19 patients without radiotherapy (P =.0033). Among the variables, primary metastasis, large tumor, no or intralesional surgery, no radiotherapy, existence of primary metastasis (relative risk [RR] = 3.456; P =.0009), surgical margin (intralesional or no surgical excision; RR = 5.619; P <.0001), and no radiotherapy (RR = 4.196; P =.0059) were independent poor prognostic factors. CONCLUSION An operative approach with wide or marginal margins improves local control and OS. If the surgical margin is intralesional or excision is impossible, additional radiotherapy has a positive influence on prognosis.


Cancer | 2002

Osteosarcoma of the spine: experience of the Cooperative Osteosarcoma Study Group.

Toshifumi Ozaki; Silke Flege; Ulf Liljenqvist; Axel Hillmann; Günter Delling; Mechthild Salzer-Kuntschik; Heribert Jürgens; Rainer Kotz; Winfried Winkelmann; Stefan S. Bielack

Due to the low incidence rate, the optimal strategy for the treatment of patients with spinal osteosarcoma is unknown.


Cancer | 1990

Effect of intraarterial versus intravenous cisplatin in addition to systemic doxorubicin, high-dose methotrexate, and ifosfamide on histologic tumor response in osteosarcoma (study COSS-86)

K. Winkler; S. Bielack; G. Delling; Mechthild Salzer-Kuntschik; R. Kotz; C. Greenshaw; H. Jürgens; J. Ritter; C. Kusnierz-Glaz; R. Erttmann; G. Gädicke; Norbert Graf; R. Ladenstein; Serge Leyvraz; Rolf Mertens; P. Weinel

In osteosarcoma, intraarterial (IA) administration of systemic treatment has been advocated to improve local tumor response preparing for, or even obviating, definitive surgery. Because data from the literature did not unequivocally support the local superiority of IA infusion, a comparative study was started in 1986. Preoperative chemotherapy consisted of 45 mg/m2 of doxorubicin on days 1 and 2; 12 g/m2 of high‐dose methotrexate on days 15 and 22; and 3 g/m2 of ifosfamide on days 29, 30, 50, and 51 followed on days 31 and 52 by intravenous (IV) versus IA tourniquet infusion of cisplatin (DDP). A strict randomization of patients was not feasible. A balanced distribution of risk factors was strived for by stratifying and allocating the appropriate patients centrally. The infusion time was prolonged from 1 to 5 hours in the IV group, and the DDP dose was reduced from 150 to 120 mg/m2 in both arms when intolerable ototoxicity became apparent. A multivariate analysis was performed to exclude a bias on the response rates from risk factor distribution and from modifications of DDP infusion time and dosage. The overall fraction of histologic good responders (> 90% necrosis) was not found to be different after IA versus IV treatment (34/50 [68%] vs. 41/59 [69%]). Intraarterial instead of IV use of DDP within an aggressive systemic treatment does not seem to improve the local tumor response.


Clinical Orthopaedics and Related Research | 1996

Limb salvage in periacetabular sarcomas : Review of 21 consecutive cases

R. Windhager; J. Karner; Hans-Paul Kutschera; P. Polterauer; Mechthild Salzer-Kuntschik; Rainer Kotz

The oncologic and functional outcome was reviewed in 21 consecutive patients who underwent limb salvaging surgery for periacetabular sarcoma using a new surgical approach and different types of reconstruction between 1972 and 1990. Histologic diagnosis in 86% showed osteosarcomas, chondrosarcomas, and Ewings tumors. Age ranged from 10.0 to 61.5 years (mean age, 32.9 years). The resection margin was wide in 15 patients but marginal in 2 patients and intralesional in 4 patients. All of the latter patients died of their disease. In all cases where 3-dimensional imaging was used, wide resection margins could be achieved, whereas this was possible only in 50% of the cases with conventional imaging techniques. Seven patients died of their disease 3 to 15 months after surgery, 2 died of chemotherapy induced sepsis, and 2 patients died perioperatively. At followup, 8 patients had no evidence of disease (mean, 57.6 months; range, 12-190 months), and 2 patients were alive with disease. Fourteen patients could be observed for at least 12 months (mean, 41.1 months) and were functionally evaluated according to Ennekings criteria. If extensive resection was necessary, the best results were found if the defect had been reconstructed with a custom made prosthesis. The results were only satisfactory after implantation of saddle prostheses and poor with allografts or when no reconstruction of the bone defect was done.


Cancer treatment and research | 1993

Treatment of osteosarcoma: experience of the Cooperative Osteosarcoma Study Group (COSS).

Kurt Winkler; Stefan S. Bielack; Günter Delling; H. Jürgens; Rainer Kotz; Mechthild Salzer-Kuntschik

Using high-dose methotrexate, doxorubicin, and cisplatinum (or BCD) for adjuvant chemotherapy in osteosarcoma of the extremities, we achieved 8-year metastasis-free survival rates of 60-70%. No relapse has been observed after that time. A dose of 12 g/m2 of high-dose methotrexate seems superior to 6 g; doxorubicin was found to be indispensable for efficient therapy and administering ifosfamide in addition seemed to be beneficial. Primary chemotherapy appeared to be safe and to facilitate surgery. The response on chemotherapy provided valuable prognostic information. Salvage of poor responders by alternative postsurgical chemotherapy was unsuccessful. Intraarterial, as opposed to intravenous, use of cisplatinum, in addition to systemic three-drug chemotherapy, did not improve the local tumor response rate. The local failure rate was low (4.7%); it was higher, however, after limb-salvage procedures than after amputation and rotationplasty (11.1% vs. 2.2%, p < 0.05). The outcome after local failure was almost universally fatal. The most intriguing late sequelae of chemotherapy were cardiomyopathy due to doxorubicin and hearing loss due to cisplatinum. Given the limited number of effective drugs, it might be difficult to further improve the cure rate and also to diminish late toxicity. Exploration of the most effective but least toxic mode of drug administration might be one possibility. Another might be reduction of the cumulative doses and therapy duration, while simultaneously increasing the dose rate.


Human Pathology | 1999

Relation of neuroglial marker expression and EWS gene fusion types in MIC2/CD99-positive tumors of the Ewing family

Gabriele Amann; Andreas Zoubek; Mechthild Salzer-Kuntschik; R. Windhager; Heinrich Kovar

The Ewing family of tumors (EFT) is characterized by high MIC2/CD99 expression and specific EWS/ETS gene rearrangements, resulting in different chimeric transcripts. Further division into peripheral primitive neuroectodermal tumors and Ewings sarcoma is still debated and, in the absence of distinct morphological parameters, has been based on the reactivity with neuroglial markers (NgM). We investigated 44 EFT in terms of a possible correlation between the type of EWS chimeric transcripts and reactivity with the following NgM: polyclonal and monoclonal neuron-specific enolase (NSE), S-100, chromogranin A, synaptophysin, Leu-7, glial fibrillary acid protein, and neurofilament. EWS/Fli1 fusion type 1 was detected in 30 of 44 and type 2 in 11 of 44 tumors. Three tumors, presenting with an uncommon morphology, carried rare chimeric transcripts. Our results indicate an association of lack of NgM staining with type 1 EWS/Fli1 translocations, found in 16 of 18 tumors with no NgM expression as detectable by any of the antibodies we applied. Using the monoclonal NSE antibody, 21 of 26 tumors without NgM staining expressed type 1 EWS/FLI1chimeric RNA, whereas in the groups with 1 or more and 2 or more NgM, only 9 of 17 and 1 of 5 tumors, respectively, carried type 1 EWS/Fli1 fusion transcripts. Despite this association of increased NgM expression with a non-type 1 EWS/Fli1 gene fusion, a strict correlation between the extent of NgM expression and certain EWS fusion types was not evident. This fortifies the concept to consider EFT as a spectrum of tumors and suggests the type of EWS fusion transcripts as one, but not the only parameter influencing the extent of differentiation.

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Andreas Zoubek

Boston Children's Hospital

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Helmut Gadner

Boston Children's Hospital

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Kurt Winkler

Boston Children's Hospital

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Stefan S. Bielack

Boston Children's Hospital

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Heinrich Kovar

Medical University of Vienna

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Günter Delling

Boston Children's Hospital

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