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Featured researches published by Peter Scheunemann.


Cancer Cell | 2008

Direct Genetic Analysis of Single Disseminated Cancer Cells for Prediction of Outcome and Therapy Selection in Esophageal Cancer

Nikolas H. Stoecklein; Stefan B. Hosch; Martin Bezler; Franziska Stern; Claudia Hartmann; Christian Vay; Annika Siegmund; Peter Scheunemann; Paulus G. Schurr; Wolfram T. Knoefel; Pablo E. Verde; Uta Reichelt; Andreas Erbersdobler; Roger Grau; Axel Ullrich; Jakob R. Izbicki; Christoph A. Klein

The increasing use of primary tumors as surrogate markers for prognosis and therapeutic decisions neglects evolutionary aspects of cancer progression. To address this problem, we studied the precursor cells of metastases directly for the identification of prognostic and therapeutic markers and prospectively analyzed single disseminated cancer cells from lymph nodes and bone marrow of 107 consecutive esophageal cancer patients. Whole-genome screening revealed that primary tumors and lymphatically and hematogenously disseminated cancer cells diverged for most genetic aberrations. However, we identified chromosome 17q12-21, the region comprising HER2, as the most frequent gain in disseminated tumor cells that were isolated from both ectopic sites. Survival analysis demonstrated that HER2 gain in a single disseminated tumor cell but not in primary tumors conferred high risk for early death.


Journal of Clinical Oncology | 2001

Esophageal Cancer: The Mode of Lymphatic Tumor Cell Spread and Its Prognostic Significance

Stefan B. Hosch; Nikolas H. Stoecklein; Uwe Pichlmeier; Alexander Rehders; Peter Scheunemann; Axel Niendorf; Wolfram T. Knoefel; Jakob R. Izbicki

PURPOSE: Data on skip metastases and their significance are lacking for esophageal cancer. This issue is important to determine the extent of lymphadenectomy for esophageal resection. In this study we examined the lymphatic spread in esophageal cancer by routine histopathology and by immunohistochemistry. PATIENTS AND METHODS: A total of 1,584 resected lymph nodes were obtained from 86 patients with resected esophageal carcinoma and evaluated by routine histopathology. Additionally, frozen tissue sections of 540 lymph nodes classified as tumor-free by routine histopathology were screened for micrometastases by immunohistochemistry with the monoclonal antibody Ber-EP4. The lymph nodes were mapped according to the mapping scheme of the American Thoracic Society modified by Casson et al. RESULTS: Forty-four patients (51%) had pN1 disease, and 61 patients (71%) harbored lymphatic micrometastases detected by immunohistochemistry. Skip metastases detected by routine histopathology were present in 34% of pN1 pat...


BMC Cancer | 2006

Ep-CAM expression in squamous cell carcinoma of the esophagus: a potential therapeutic target and prognostic marker

Nikolas H. Stoecklein; Annika Siegmund; Peter Scheunemann; Andreas M. Luebke; Andreas Erbersdobler; Pablo E. Verde; Claus F. Eisenberger; Matthias Peiper; Alexander Rehders; Jan Schulte am Esch; Wolfram T. Knoefel; Stefan B. Hosch

BackgroundTo evaluate the expression and test the clinical significance of the epithelial cellular adhesion molecule (Ep-CAM) in esophageal squamous cell carcinoma (SCC) to check the suitability of esophageal SCC patients for Ep-CAM directed targeted therapies.MethodsThe Ep-CAM expression was immunohistochemically investigated in 70 primary esophageal SCCs using the monoclonal antibody Ber-EP4. For the interpretation of the staining results, we used a standardized scoring system ranging from 0 to 3+. The survival analysis was calculated from 53 patients without distant metastasis, with R0 resection and at least 2 months of clinical follow-up.ResultsEp-CAM neo-expression was observed in 79% of the tumors with three expression levels, 1+ (26%), 2+ (11%) and 3+ (41%). Heterogeneous expression was observed at all expression levels. Interestingly, tumors with 3+ Ep-CAM expression conferred a significantly decreased median relapse-free survival period (log rank, p = 0.0001) and median overall survival (log rank, p = 0.0003). Multivariate survival analysis disclosed Ep-CAM 3+ expression as independent prognostic factor.ConclusionOur results suggest Ep-CAM as an attractive molecule for targeted therapy in esophageal SCC. Considering the discontenting results of the current adjuvant concepts for esophageal SCC patients, Ep-CAM might provide a promising target for an adjuvant immunotherapeutic intervention.


Journal of Clinical Oncology | 2004

Copy Number of Chromosome 17 but Not HER2 Amplification Predicts Clinical Outcome of Patients With Pancreatic Ductal Adenocarcinoma

Nikolas H. Stoecklein; Andreas M. Luebke; Andreas Erbersdobler; Wolfram T. Knoefel; Winfried Schraut; Pablo E. Verde; Franziska Stern; Peter Scheunemann; Matthias Peiper; Claus F. Eisenberger; Jakob R. Izbicki; Christoph A. Klein; Stefan B. Hosch

PURPOSE To determine the frequency and the potential clinical use of HER2 (17q21) gene amplification and chromosome 17 aneuploidy in pancreatic ductal adenocarcinoma (PDAC). MATERIALS AND METHODS Serial tissue sections of 50 resected PDACs were analyzed with chromogenic in situ hybridization using locus-specific HER2 probes and centromeric probes for chromosome 17. Centromeric probes for chromosome 7 and 8 were hybridized to confirm ploidy levels. Expression of HER2 protein was assessed by immunohistochemistry. Correlations of experimental findings with clinical and follow-up data were tested. RESULTS The HER2 gene locus was frequently (24%) amplified in PDAC and the rate of overexpression (2+ and 3+) was 10%, but no prognostic significance was found. Copy number analysis of chromosomes 7, 8, and 17 revealed disomic (40%), trisomic (36%), and hypertetrasomic (24%) tumors. Compared with patients with disomic tumors, patients with hypertetrasomic tumors exhibited a significantly decreased relapse-free and overall survival (5.0 v 13.0 months, P = .0144 and 7.0 v 20.0 months, P = .0099, respectively). Multivariate analysis confirmed the independent prognostic significance of hypertetrasomy. CONCLUSION Tumor ploidy levels correlate with prognosis of PDAC patients, indicating characteristic biologic properties of PDAC with high chromosomal instability. In contrast, no prognostic influence on patient outcome was found for the amplification of the HER2 oncogene or p185(HER2) overexpression. Therefore, evaluation of ploidy levels offers new opportunities for patient stratification in clinical trials and enables novel approaches to study the well-known aggressiveness of PDAC.


International Journal of Cancer | 2004

EXPRESSION OF CANCER TESTIS ANTIGENS IN PANCREATIC CARCINOMA CELL LINES, PANCREATIC ADENOCARCINOMA AND CHRONIC PANCREATITIS

Boris Kubuschok; Xiaoxiun Xie; Ralf Jesnowski; Klaus-Dieter Preuss; Bernd Romeike; Frank Neumann; Evi Regitz; Georg A. Pistorius; Martin K. Schilling; Peter Scheunemann; Jakob R. Izbicki; J.-Matthias Löhr; Michael Pfreundschuh

In order to define antigens that might be suitable as vaccines for pancreatic carcinoma, we investigated the composite expression of 10 cancer testis (CT) antigens (SCP‐1, NY‐ESO‐1, SSX‐1, SSX‐2, SSX‐4, GAGE, MAGE‐3, MAGE‐4, CT‐7 and CT‐8) by Reverse Transcriptase‐PCR (RT‐PCR) in fresh biopsies of human pancreatic adenocarcinoma, chronic pancreatitis and pancreatic carcinoma cell lines. While all CT genes were frequently expressed in cell lines derived from pancreatic cancer, no expression of MAGE‐3, SSX‐1, SSX‐2, NY‐ESO‐1 and CT‐7 was detected in fresh tumor biopsies, and MAGE‐4 (1/52), SSX‐4 (1/39) and CT‐8 (2/41) were only rarely expressed. In contrast, HOM‐TES‐14/SCP‐1 was expressed in 48% (29/61) and GAGE in 21% (13/61) of cases, respectively. One CT gene was expressed by 59% (75% in male, 46% in female patients; p = 0.05) and 2 or more CT genes by 15% of the samples. SCP‐1 protein expression correlated well with mRNA expression. While SCP‐1 and GAGE were absent in normal pancreas, they were found in 2/8 (SCP‐1) and 1/8 (GAGE) samples of chronic pancreatitis, respectively, supporting the concept of chronic pancreatitis as a premalignant condition. SCP‐1 and GAGE represent promising candidates for vaccine development in pancreatic carcinoma. Whether SCP‐1 and GAGE expression identify cases of chronic pancreatitis with a high risk of malignant transformation remains to be shown.


Ejso | 2003

Klatskin tumors and Klatskin mimicking lesions of the biliary tree

Wolfram T. Knoefel; K.L Prenzel; M Peiper; Stefan B. Hosch; Matthias Gundlach; C.F Eisenberger; T Strate; Peter Scheunemann; Xavier Rogiers; Jakob R. Izbicki

AIM We report on the preoperative capability of imaging modalities and clinical assessment to differentiate between Klatskin tumors and Klatskin mimicking lesions of the biliary tree. Adenocarcinomas of the hepatic ducts (Klatskin tumors) mimic benign fibrosing cholangitis. Extensive resections carry a substantial risk but offer the only chance for cure in patients with a Klatskin tumor. METHODS Thirty-three consecutive patients who underwent resection for suspicion of a malignant tumor of the hepatic hilum were reviewed. All patients underwent preoperative ultrasonography, computed tomography, ERCP and angiography. The patients were divided into a group of true Klatskin tumors and a group of benign Klatskin mimicking lesions. RESULTS Twenty-seven of the resected specimens were malignant tumors, and six lesions showed only fibrosing cholangitis. Preoperative clinical presentation and imaging modalities were very similar between Klatskin tumors and fibrosing cholangitis. CONCLUSIONS Management of obstruction of the liver hilum is dictated by the suspicion of malignancy. Complete removal of the tumor remains the therapeutic aim but clinical presentation and imaging modalities cannot help to differentiate between Klatskin tumors and Klatskin mimicking lesions prior to surgery.


Langenbeck's Archives of Surgery | 2009

Occult disseminated tumor cells in lymph nodes of patients with gastric carcinoma. A critical appraisal of assessment and relevance

Peter Scheunemann; Nikolas H. Stoecklein; Kai Hermann; Alexander Rehders; Claus F. Eisenberger; Wolfram T. Knoefel; Stefan B. Hosch

Background and aimsIn gastric cancer, regional lymph node metastasis verified by histopathological examination is the most important prognostic factor after complete surgical tumor resection (R0). However, the prognostic value of immunohistochemically identifiable disseminated tumor cells in lymph nodes without histopathological tumor burden in patients with gastric cancer is still controversially discussed. The aim of the study was to assess the frequency and prognostic impact of minimal tumor cell spread to lymph nodes in these patients.Patients–methodsOne hundred sixty lymph nodes judged as “tumor free” on routine histopathology obtained from 58 patients with gastric adenocarcinoma were analyzed immunohistochemically using the monoclonal anti-EpCAM antibody Ber-EP4 for occult disseminated tumor cells.ResultsTumor cells in lymph nodes were detected in 62 (38.8%) of the 160 “tumor-free” lymph nodes obtained from 39 (67.2%) patients. Multivariate Cox regression analysis confirmed the presence of disseminated tumor cells in “tumor-free” lymph nodes as an independent prognostic factor for both a significantly reduced relapse-free survival (p = 0.008) and overall survival (p = 0.009).ConclusionsThe frequent occurrence and prognostic impact of minimal disseminated tumor cells in lymph nodes of patients with gastric carcinoma support the need for a refined staging system of excised lymph nodes, which should include immunohistochemical examination.


Journal of Gastrointestinal Surgery | 2001

Expression of 17-1A antigen and complement resistance factors CD55 and CD59 on liver metastasis in colorectal cancer

Stefan B. Hosch; Peter Scheunemann; Manuel Lüth; Stefan Inndorf; Nikolas H. Stoecklein; Andreas Erbersdobler; Alexander Rehders; Matthias Gundlach; Wolfram T. Knoefel; Jakob R. Izbicki

Despite radical surgery, the prognosis for colorectal cancer patients with liver metastases has not changed markedly. Furthermore, no standard adjuvant therapeutic regimen has been developed. Adjuvant therapy with monoclonal antibodies (e.g., against 17-l A), which has been shown to be effective in preventing metastatic relapse in patients with Dukes’ C colorectal cancer, might be a promising approach for these patients. However, the cytotoxic effects of monoclonal antibodies can be blocked by coexpression of complement resistance factors that inhibit antibody-dependent complement-mediated cytotoxicity. We therefore analyzed immunohistochemically the expression of 17-1A and the membrane-bound complement resistance factors CD55 and CDS9 on metastatic tumor cells in the livers of 71 patients with colorectal carcinoma who had undergone resection of their metastases with curative intent. In 67 (94%) of 71 patients, liver metastases with homogeneous expression of 17-IA was seen. Heterogeneous expression of 17-1A was seen in four patients (6%). Heterogeneous expression of CD55 or CD59 was observed in 8 (11%) of 71 patients and 4 (6%) of 71 patients, respectively. None of the patients showed homogeneous expression of either CD55 or CD59. All patients with CD55 or CD59 expression showed homogeneous 17-1A expression, whereas none of the four patients with heterogeneous 17-1A expression was positive for CD55 or CD59. Our data indicate that 17-IA is widely expressed on liver metastases of patients with colorectal carcinoma. Therefore patients with completely resected liver metastases might be suitable candidates for adjuvant therapy with anti-l7-1A antibody since only a few of these lesions showed coexpression of complement resistance factors.


Langenbeck's Archives of Surgery | 2008

Occult tumor cells in lymph nodes as a predictor for tumor relapse in pancreatic adenocarcinoma.

Peter Scheunemann; Nikolas H. Stoecklein; Alexander Rehders; Minu Bidde; Sylvia Metz; Matthias Peiper; Claus F. Eisenberger; Jan Schulte am Esch; Wolfram T. Knoefel; Stefan B. Hosch

Background and aimsOccurrence of tumor relapse is frequent in patients with pancreatic cancer despite the absence of residual tumor detectable at primary surgery and in histopathological examination. Therefore, it has to be assumed that current tumor staging procedures fail to identify minimal amounts of disseminated tumor cells, which might be precursors of subsequent metastatic relapse. The aim of this study was to assess the prognostic impact of minimal tumor cell spread detected in lymph nodes classified as “tumor-free” in routine histopathologic evaluation.Materials and methodsA total of 154 “tumor-free” lymph nodes from 59 patients with pancreatic cancer who underwent intentionally curative tumor resection were examined by immunohistochemistry for disseminated tumor cells.ResultsFifty (32.5%) of the “tumor-free” lymph nodes obtained from 36 (61%) patients displayed disseminated tumor cells. Multivariate survival analysis revealed that the presence of disseminated tumor cells in “tumor-free” lymph nodes is an independent prognostic factor for both a significantly reduced relapse-free survival (p = 0.03) and overall survival (p = 0.02).ConclusionsThe frequent occurrence and prognostic impact of immunohistochemically identifiable disseminated tumor cells in lymph nodes of patients with operable pancreatic cancer supports the need for a refined staging system of excised lymph nodes, which should include immunohistochemical examination.


PLOS ONE | 2014

Integrin expression in esophageal squamous cell carcinoma: loss of the physiological integrin expression pattern correlates with disease progression.

Christian Vay; Stefan B. Hosch; Nikolas H. Stoecklein; Christoph A. Klein; Daniel Vallböhmer; Björn-Christian Link; Emre F. Yekebas; Jakob R. Izbicki; Wolfram T. Knoefel; Peter Scheunemann

The integrins are a family of heterodimeric transmembrane signaling receptors that mediate the adhesive properties of epithelial cells affecting cell growth and differentiation. In many epithelial malignancies, altered integrin expression is associated with tumor progression and often correlates with unfavorable prognosis. However, only few studies have investigated the role of integrin expression in esophageal squamous cell carcinoma (ESCC). Using a novel quantifying immunofluorescence-staining assay, we investigated the expression of the integrins α2β1, α3β1, α6β1, and α6β4 in primary ESCC of 36 patients who underwent surgical resection. Magnitude and distribution of expression were analyzed in primary tumor samples and autologous esophageal squamous epithelium. The persistence of the physiologically polarized expression of the subunits α6, β1, and β4 in the tumor tissue was significantly associated with prolonged relapse-free survival (p = 0.028, p = 0.034, p = 0.006). In contrast, patients with reduced focal α6 expression at the tumor invasion front shared a significantly shortened relapse-free survival compared to patients with strong α6 expression at their stromal surfaces, as it was regularly observed in normal esophageal epithelium (p = 0.001). Multivariate regression analysis identified the maintenance of strong α6 immunoreactivity at the invasion front as an independent prognostic factor for increased relapse-free and disease-specific survival (p = 0.003; p = 0.003). Our findings suggest that alterations in both pattern and magnitude of integrin expression may play a major role in the disease progression of ESCC patients. Particularly, the distinct expression of the integrins α6β4 and α6β1 at the invasion front as well as the maintenance of a polarized integrin expression pattern in the tumor tissue may serve as valuable new markers to assess the aggressiveness of ESCC.

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Stefan B. Hosch

University of Düsseldorf

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Matthias Peiper

University of Düsseldorf

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Pablo E. Verde

University of Düsseldorf

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