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Dive into the research topics where Reza Parwaresch is active.

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Featured researches published by Reza Parwaresch.


Journal of Clinical Oncology | 2005

Immunochemotherapy With Rituximab and Cyclophosphamide, Doxorubicin, Vincristine, and Prednisone Significantly Improves Response and Time to Treatment Failure, But Not Long-Term Outcome in Patients With Previously Untreated Mantle Cell Lymphoma: Results of a Prospective Randomized Trial of the German Low Grade Lymphoma Study Group (GLSG)

Georg Lenz; Martin Dreyling; Eva Hoster; Bernhard Wörmann; Ulrich Dührsen; Bernd Metzner; Hartmut Eimermacher; Andreas Neubauer; Hannes Wandt; Hjalmar Steinhauer; Sonja Martin; Else Heidemann; Ali Aldaoud; Reza Parwaresch; Joerg Hasford; Michael Unterhalt; Wolfgang Hiddemann

PURPOSE Mantle cell lymphoma (MCL) is characterized by a poor prognosis with a low to moderate sensitivity to chemotherapy and a median survival of only 3 to 4 years. In an attempt to improve outcome, the German Low Grade Lymphoma Study Group (GLSG) initiated a randomized trial comparing the combination of cyclophosphamide, doxorubicin, vincristine, and prednisone (CHOP) and rituximab (R-CHOP) with CHOP alone as first-line therapy for advanced-stage MCL. PATIENTS AND METHODS One hundred twenty-two previously untreated patients with advanced-stage MCL were randomly assigned to six cycles of CHOP (n = 60) or R-CHOP (n = 62). Patients up to 65 years of age achieving a partial or complete remission underwent a second randomization to either myeloablative radiochemotherapy followed by autologous stem-cell transplantation or interferon alfa maintenance (IFNalpha). All patients older than 65 years received IFNalpha maintenance. RESULTS R-CHOP was significantly superior to CHOP in terms of overall response rate (94% v 75%; P = .0054), complete remission rate (34% v 7%; P = .00024), and time to treatment failure (TTF; median, 21 v 14 months; P = .0131). No differences were observed for progression-free survival. Toxicity was acceptable, with no major differences between the two therapeutic groups. CONCLUSION The combined immunochemotherapy with R-CHOP resulted in a significantly higher response rate and a prolongation of the TTF as compared with chemotherapy alone. Hence, R-CHOP may serve as a new baseline regimen for advanced stage MCL, but needs to be further improved by novel strategies in remission.


Nature Medicine | 2002

Preimplantation-stage stem cells induce long-term allogeneic graft acceptance without supplementary host conditioning

Fred Fändrich; X Lin; Gui X. Chai; Maren Schulze; Detlev Ganten; Michael Bader; Julia U. Holle; Dong-Sheng Huang; Reza Parwaresch; Nicholaus Zavazava; Bert Binas

Hematopoietic stem cells have been successfully employed for tolerance induction in a variety of rodent and large animal studies. However, clinical transplantation of fully allogeneic bone marrow or blood-borne stem cells is still associated with major obstacles, such as graft-versus-host disease or cytoreductive conditioning-related toxicity. Here we show that when rat embryonic stem cell-like cells of WKY origin are injected intraportally into fully MHC-mismatched DA rats, they engraft permanently (>150 days) without supplementary host conditioning. This deviation of a potentially alloreactive immune response sets the basis for long-term graft acceptance of second-set transplanted WKY cardiac allografts. Graft survival was strictly correlated with a state of mixed chimerism, which required functional thymic host competence. Our results provide a rationale for using preimplantation-stage stem cells as vehicles in gene therapy and for the induction of long-term graft acceptance.


Journal of Clinical Oncology | 2001

Primary Gastrointestinal Non-Hodgkin’s Lymphoma: I. Anatomic and Histologic Distribution, Clinical Features, and Survival Data of 371 Patients Registered in the German Multicenter Study GIT NHL 01/92

Peter Koch; Francisco del Valle; Wolfgang E. Berdel; Normann Willich; Berthold Reers; Wolfgang Hiddemann; Bernward Grothaus-Pinke; Gabriele Reinartz; Jens Brockmann; Altfried Temmesfeld; Rudolf Schmitz; Christian Rübe; Andreas Probst; Gert Jaenke; Heinrich Bodenstein; Arved Junker; Christiane Pott; Jürgen Schultze; Achim Heinecke; Reza Parwaresch; Markus Tiemann

PURPOSE The study was initiated to obtain epidemiologic data and information on anatomic and histologic distribution, clinical features, and treatment results in patients with primary gastrointestinal non-Hodgkins lymphomas (PGI NHL). PATIENTS AND METHODS Between October 1992 and November 1996, 371 PGI NHL patients were eligible to evaluate clinical features. Radiotherapy and chemotherapy were stratified according to histologic grading, stage, and whether surgery had been carried out or not. RESULTS A total of 74.8% patients had gastric NHL (PGL). Within the intestine, the small bowel and the ileocecal region were involved in 8.6% and 7.0% of the cases, respectively. Multiple GI involvement (MGI) was 6.5%. Approximately 90% of the GI NHL were in stages IE/IIE. Aggressive NHL accounted for the majority, with a distinguishable pattern in several sites. Forty percent of PGL were of low-grade mucosa-associated lymphatic tissue type. One third of large-cell lymphomas had low-grade components. Most intestinal NHL were germinal-center lymphomas. The site of origin was prognostic. In gastric and ileocecal lymphoma, event-free (EFS) and overall survival (OS) were significantly higher as compared with the small intestine or MGI (median time of observation, 51 months). In PGL, localized disease was prognostic for EFS and OS. Histologic grade influenced only EFS significantly. Numbers in intestinal lymphomas were too small for subanalyses. CONCLUSION PGI NHL are heterogeneous diseases. The number of localized PGL allowed for detailed analyses. Larger studies are needed for stages III and IV and for intestinal NHL. A uniform reporting system for PGI NHL, in terms of definitions and histologic and staging classifications, is needed to facilitate comparison of treatment results.


Journal of Clinical Oncology | 1995

Non-Hodgkin's lymphomas of childhood and adolescence: results of a treatment stratified for biologic subtypes and stage--a report of the Berlin-Frankfurt-Münster Group.

Alfred Reiter; Martin Schrappe; Reza Parwaresch; Günter Henze; S Müller-Weihrich; S Sauter; Karl-Walter Sykora; Wolf-Dieter Ludwig; Helmut Gadner; H. Riehm

PURPOSE To prove the efficacy of a treatment stratified according to histology for children with non-Hodgkins lymphoma (NHL), including acute B-cell leukemia (B-ALL). PATIENTS AND METHODS From October 1986 to March 1990, 302 assessable patients, 0.6 to 17.8 years of age, with newly diagnosed NHL were enrolled onto study ALL/NHL-BFM 86. Fifty percent of patients had Burkitt-type lymphomas, including B-ALL; 24% had lymphoblastic lymphoma; 18% had diffuse large-cell lymphoma; and 8% had an NHL not further classified. Therapy group B included Burkitts-type lymphomas, B-ALL, and most large-cell lymphomas including Ki-1 anaplastic large-cell lymphoma. Patients with stage I and II disease resected received three, while all others received six, 5-day therapy courses (dexamethasone, methotrexate [MTX] 0.5 g/m2 [5 g/m2 for stage IV and B-ALL], and intrathecal [IT] therapy in each course, plus ifosfamide, cytarabine, and etoposide alternating with cyclophosphamide and doxorubicin). Therapy for group non-B patients (lymphoblastic lymphoma and pleomorphic T-cell lymphoma [PTCL]) consisted of a Berlin-Frankfurt-Münster (BFM) acute lymphoblastic leukemia protocol, including cranial irradiation for advanced stage. Local therapy was restricted to patients with incomplete tumor regression. RESULTS The probabilities of event-free survival (pEFS) at 7 years were 80% +/- 2% for the whole group, 81% +/- 3% for group B (n = 225), and 78% +/- 5% for group non-B (n = 77) with a follow-up duration of 3.6 to 7 years (median 5 years). Treatment results were comparable between NHL subtypes, except for PTCL, in which three of four patients suffered from relapse. Local disease manifestations were the most frequent site of failure. CONCLUSION This therapy strategy provided patients of all NHL subtypes with an equally high chance to survive event-free, except patients with PTCL. With reduced systemic failure, local tumor control may become more important.


British Journal of Haematology | 2005

Histopathology, cell proliferation indices and clinical outcome in 304 patients with mantle cell lymphoma (MCL): a clinicopathological study from the European MCL Network

Markus Tiemann; Carsten Schrader; Wolfram Klapper; Martin Dreyling; Elias Campo; Andrew J. Norton; Françoise Berger; Philip M. Kluin; German Ott; Stephano Pileri; Ennio Pedrinis; Alfred C. Feller; Hartmut Merz; Dirk Janssen; Martin Leo Hansmann; Han van Krieken; Peter Möller; Harald Stein; Michael Unterhalt; Wolfgang Hiddemann; Reza Parwaresch

Mantle cell lymphoma (MCL) is a distinct lymphoma subtype with a particularly poor clinical outcome. The clinical relevance of the morphological characteristics of these tumours remains uncertain. The European MCL Network reviewed 304 cases of MCL to determine the prognostic significance of histopathological characteristics. Cytomorphological subtypes, growth pattern and markers of proliferation (mitotic and Ki‐67 indices) were analysed. In addition to the known cytological subtypes, classical (87·5%), small cell (3·6%), pleomorphic (5·9%) and blastic (2·6%), we identified new pleomorphic subgroups with mixtures of cells (classical + pleomorphic type; 1·6%) or transitions (classical/pleomorphic type; 1·6%), which, however, did not differ significantly in overall survival time. Exactly 80·5% of cases displayed a diffuse growth pattern, whereas 19·5% of cases had a nodular growth pattern, which was associated with a slightly more favourable prognosis. A high proliferation rate (mitotic or Ki‐67 indices) was associated with shorter overall survival. Cut‐off levels were defined that allowed three subgroups with different proliferation rates to be discriminated, which showed significantly different clinical outcomes (P < 0·0001). Based on this large clinicopathological study of prospective clinical trials, multivariate analysis confirmed the central prognostic role of cell proliferation and its superiority to all other histomorphological and clinical criteria.


Journal of Clinical Oncology | 1994

Successful treatment strategy for Ki-1 anaplastic large-cell lymphoma of childhood: a prospective analysis of 62 patients enrolled in three consecutive Berlin-Frankfurt-Munster group studies.

Alfred Reiter; Martin Schrappe; Markus Tiemann; Reza Parwaresch; Martin Zimmermann; Elif Yakisan; Roland Dopfer; Peter Bucsky; Georg Mann; Helmut Gadner

PURPOSE To prove prospectively the efficacy of a short-pulse chemotherapy for treatment of Ki-1 anaplastic large-cell lymphoma (ALCL) of childhood. PATIENTS AND METHODS From October 1983 to December 1992, 62 patients (median age, 9.7 years) with newly diagnosed Ki-1 ALCL were enrolled onto Non-Hodgkins Lymphoma-Berlin-Frankfurt-Munster (NHL-BFM) studies 83, 86, and 90. The most frequent immunophenotype was T cell. Ki-1 ALCL differed from other subsets of NHL of childhood by the more frequent involvement of bone, soft tissue, and skin, and by the lack of bone marrow (BM) disease. A 5-day prephase course (prednisone/cyclophosphamide) was followed by two different 5-day courses of chemotherapy: course A consisted of dexamethasone, methotrexate (MTX) 0.5 g/m2 (24-hour infusion), intrathecal chemotherapy, ifosfamide, cytarabine (Ara-C), and etoposide (VP-16); course B consisted of cyclophosphamide and doxorubicin instead of ifosfamide, and Ara-C/VP-16, respectively. Treatment was stratified into three branches. Branch 1 (stage I and stage II resected) received three courses; branch 2 (stage II not resected, stage III), six courses; and branch 3 (stage IV), six intensified courses containing MTX 5 g/m2, and Ara-C 2 g/m2. Local radiotherapy was not performed. RESULTS Four patients failed to enter remission, and one died of infection. Seven patients relapsed within 9 months after diagnosis; two patients had isolated local relapses, but BM and CNS were never involved. Fifty patients have been in first continuous complete remission (CR) for 0.6 to 9.7 years (median, 2.5), and 56 are alive. The probabilities for survival and event-free survival (EFS) at 9 years are 83% +/- 7% (SE) and 81% +/- 5%. Skin involvement was the only negative prognostic parameter. CONCLUSION Short-pulse chemotherapy over 2 to 5 months without local therapy modalities is effective in the treatment of Ki-1 ALCL.


Journal of Clinical Oncology | 2005

Treatment Results in Localized Primary Gastric Lymphoma: Data of Patients Registered Within the German Multicenter Study (GIT NHL 02/96)

Peter Koch; Andreas Probst; Wolfgang E. Berdel; Normann Willich; Gabriele Reinartz; Jens Brockmann; Rüdiger Liersch; Francisco del Valle; Hermann Clasen; Carsten Hirt; Regine Breitsprecher; Rudolf Schmits; Mathias Freund; Rainer Fietkau; Peter Ketterer; Eva-Maria Freitag; Margit Hinkelbein; Achim Heinecke; Reza Parwaresch; Markus Tiemann

PURPOSE In the prospective study 02/96 on primary GI lymphoma, we have collected data on histology, clinical features, and treatment results. In particular, in stages I and II localized primary gastric lymphoma (PGL), our objectives were to reduce treatment intensity and to confirm our hypothesis from study 01/92, which maintained that an organ-preserving approach is not inferior to primary surgery. PATIENTS AND METHODS Patients receiving radiotherapy and/or chemotherapy were stratified for histologic grade, stage, and whether surgery had been carried out or not (as decided by each participating center). Patients with aggressive PGL received six cycles of CHOP-14 (cyclophosphamide, doxorubicin, vincristine, and prednisone) followed by involved-field radiotherapy (40 Gy). Patients with indolent PGL (including patients experiencing treatment failure with antibiotic therapy for Helicobacter pylori) were treated with extended-field radiotherapy. The volume depended on stage. The irradiation dose was 30 Gy, followed by a boost of 10 Gy (the latter omitted after complete resection) to the tumor region. RESULTS Seven hundred forty-seven patients were accrued. Of these patients, 393 with localized PGL were treated with radiotherapy and/or chemotherapy only or additional surgery between December 1996 and December 2003. The survival rate at 42 months for patients treated with surgery was 86% compared with 91.0% for patients without surgery. CONCLUSION In this nonrandomized study (02/96), we reproduced the previous results of study 01/92 showing no disadvantage for an organ-preserving treatment. Therefore, primary stomach resection should be questioned.


British Journal of Haematology | 2005

The impact of age and gender on biology, clinical features and treatment outcome of non-Hodgkin lymphoma in childhood and adolescence.

Birgit Burkhardt; Martin Zimmermann; Ilske Oschlies; Felix Niggli; Georg Mann; Reza Parwaresch; Hansjoerg Riehm; Martin Schrappe; Alfred Reiter

We analysed the impact of age and gender on biology and outcome of 2084 patients diagnosed with non‐Hodgkin lymphoma (NHL) between October 1986 and December 2002 and treated according to the Berlin‐Frankfurt‐Münster (BFM) multicentre protocols NHL‐BFM‐86, ‐90 and ‐95. Median age at diagnosis was 8·0 years for 97 precursor B‐lymphoblastic lymphoma (pB‐LBL) patients, 8·8 years for 335 T‐lymphoblastic lymphoma (T‐LBL) patients, 8·4 years for 1004 Burkitts lymphoma/leukaemia (BL/B‐AL) patients, 11·4 years for 173 diffuse large B‐cell lymphoma (centroblastic subtype) (DLBCL‐CB) patients, 13·2 years for 40 primary mediastinal large B‐cell lymphoma (PMLBL) patients and 10·8 years for 215 anaplastic large‐cell lymphoma (ALCL) patients (P < 0·00001). The male:female ratio was 0·9:1 for pB‐LBL and PMLBL, 1·7:1 for DLBCL‐CB, 1·8:1 for ALCL, 2·5:1 for T‐LBL and 4·5:1 for BL/B‐AL (P < 0·00001). The probability of event‐free survival at 5 years (5‐year pEFS) was 85 ± 1% for all 2084 patients [median follow‐up 5·7 (0·1–15·9) years], and was significantly superior for male T‐LBL and DLBCL‐CB patients. Comparing age‐groups 0–4, 5–9, 10–14 and 15–18 years, pEFS was inferior for the youngest patients only in the pB‐LBL‐ and ALCL‐groups. T‐LBL and DLBCL‐CB adolescent females had worse outcome than younger girls while age had no impact on pEFS for boys. We conclude that the distribution of age and gender differed between NHL‐subtypes. The impact of gender on outcome differed between NHL subgroups. The prognostic impact of age differed not only by NHL‐subtype but also according to gender in some subtypes.


Virchows Archiv | 2000

Telomeres, telomerase and cancer: an up-date

Karl Dhaene; E. Van Marck; Reza Parwaresch

Abstract In the mid 1990s, the hypothesis emerged that the upregulation or re-expression of a telomere- synthesising ribonucleoprotein, called telomerase, is a critical event responsible for continuous tumour cell growth. In contrast to normal cells, in which gradual mitosis-related erosion of telomeres eventually limits replicative life span, tumour cells have telomerase and show no loss of these chromosomal ends. These data suggest that telomere stabilisation may be required for cells to escape replicative senescence and to proliferate indefinitely. Because of the close association between telomerase and malignancy, both pathologists and clinicians expect this molecule to be a useful malignancy-marker and a new therapeutic target. This review focuses on the components of the human telomere and of the human telomerase enzyme. A synopsis of reports studying the clinical–diagnostic value of telomere length measurements, of telomerase activity analyses and of the in situ telomerase detection is given. Finally, a summary of recent experimental work that sheds new light on the biological role of this fascinating molecule is presented.


Human Pathology | 1998

Immunophenotype, proliferation, DNA ploidy, and biological behavior of gastrointestinal stromal tumors: a multivariate clinicopathologic study.

Pierre Rudolph; Katharina Gloeckner; Reza Parwaresch; Dieter Harms; Dietmar Schmidt

To determine the prognostic impact of clinical, immunohistochemical, and biological parameters, we examined 52 gastrointestinal stromal tumors (GIST) by conventional light microscopy and immunohistochemistry. DNA ploidy was analyzed by image cytometry on cytospin preparation. The proliferative activity was determined by mitosis counting and assessment of Ki-67 reactivity by means of monoclonal antibody Ki-S5. A histopathologic grade was assigned to each tumor according to the French Federation of Cancer Centers (FNCLCC) grading system. Next to vimentin, CD34 was the most prevalent antigen, followed by markers of neural and muscular differentiation. Many tumors exhibited a mixed phenotype. Twenty-one tumors were diploid, eight hypodiploid, and 23 aneuploid. In univariate analysis, tumor grade, Ki-S5 labeling index, mitotic count, atypical mitoses, cellularity, and sex were predictive of both mortality and metastasis risk. DNA ploidy only correlated with overall survival, whereas the tumor location affected the occurrence of metastases. Multivariate analysis selected Ki-S5 scores (P < .0001) and atypical mitoses (P=.012) as independent prognosticators for overall survival, and tumor grade (P=.0036) and size (P=.0055) as predictors of metastatic spread. We conclude that GIST are primitive mesenchymal tumors capable of divergent differentiation, which does not influence their prognosis. The latter appears to be best predicted by histopathologic grading and the Ki-67 labeling index.

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