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Dive into the research topics where Roland Kurdow is active.

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Featured researches published by Roland Kurdow.


Chest | 2009

The Extent of Lung Parenchyma Resection Significantly Impacts Long-Term Quality of Life in Patients With Non-Small Cell Lung Cancer

Tobias Schulte; Bodo Schniewind; Peter Dohrmann; Thomas Küchler; Roland Kurdow

BACKGROUND Secondary to clinical outcome, health-related quality of life (QOL) after resection of non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC) is of particular interest. However, few studies have explored QOL following lung resection. METHODS Between January 1998 and December 2004, a total of 159 patients with NSCLC underwent surgical resection and were enrolled in this prospective study. QOL and clinical data were assessed prior to resection and for up to 24 months after surgery by applying the European Organization for Research and Treatment of Cancer core questionnaire and the lung-specific questionnaire, the European Organization for Research and Treatment of Cancer lung-specific module. QOL was calculated, and QOL following bilobectomy/lobectomy was compared with QOL after pneumonectomy. RESULTS Overall, the 5-year survival rate was 42%. Mean survival of the pneumonectomy group was slightly lower than that of the bilobectomy/lobectomy group, although the difference was not statistically significant (p = 0.058). The rate of complications was not significantly different between the two groups. After a postoperative drop, most QOL indicators remained near baseline for up to 24 months, with the exception of physical function (p < 0.001), pain (p = 0.034), and dyspnoea (p < 0.001), which remained significantly impaired. QOL was significantly better (difference > 10 points) after bilobectomy/lobectomy than after pneumonectomy. However, differences were statistically significant only with regards to physical function (at 3 months), social function (at 3 and 6 months), role function (at 3, 6, and 12 months), global health (at 3 and 6 months), and pain (at 6 months). CONCLUSIONS Patients who underwent lung resection for NSCLC failed to make a complete recovery after 24 months. Patients who underwent pneumonectomy had significantly worse QOL values and a decreased tendency to recover, compared with patients who underwent bilobectomy/lobectomy. Therefore, major lung resection has a much more serious impact on the QOL of affected patients than does major visceral surgery.


The Annals of Thoracic Surgery | 2001

Effective treatment of malignant pleural effusion by minimal invasive thoracic surgery: thoracoscopic talc pleurodesis and pleuroperitoneal shunts in 101 patients

Maren Schulze; Arnd S. Boehle; Roland Kurdow; Peter Dohrmann; Doris Henne-Bruns

BACKGROUND For effective palliation of patients with malignant pleural effusion due to advanced neoplastic disease, any proposed treatment should have low procedure-related mortality and morbidity. METHODS The clinical outcome of 119 thoracoscopies in 101 patients (56 women, 45 men), from 42 to 91 years of age (mean, 68 +/- 9 years) with malignant pleural effusions was evaluated in a retrospective study. Video-assisted thoracoscopy (VATS) talc pleurodesis was done in 105 instances, and a pleuroperitoneal shunt was performed 14 times as an alternative when complete expansion of the lung could not be achieved due to tumor implants on the visceral pleura. RESULTS The VATS talc pleurodesis resulted in clinically significant improvement of dyspnea in 92.2% of the patients. Thirty-day mortality was 2.8% and morbidity was 2.8%. The mean duration of postoperative survival was 6.7 months. Recurrent pleural effusion occurred in 5.7% of patients after a mean interval of 6 months. Clinical relief of dyspnea was obtained in 73% of the patients treated with pleuroperitoneal shunts. Thirty-day mortality in this group was 21% and morbidity was 14.3%. The mean duration of survival was 4.2 months. CONCLUSIONS The VATS talc pleurodesis is appropriate for palliation of patients with malignant pleural effusions and should be performed once the diagnosis has been confirmed. Patients with lungs trapped by visceral carcinomatosis may benefit from placement of a pleuroperitoneal shunt as an alternative.


Cancer Biology & Therapy | 2005

Paraneoplastic leukemoid reaction and rapid progression in a patient with malignant melanoma: establishment of KT293, a novel G-CSF-secreting melanoma cell line.

Bodo Schniewind; Matthias Christgen; Axel Hauschild; Roland Kurdow; Holger Kalthoff; Hans Jürgen Klomp

Paraneoplastic leukemoid reaction (PLR) is a rare condition of leucocytosis in cancer patients. Here we report the rapid progression of a patient suffering from a metastasized malignant melanoma and PLR. The patient’s white blood cell count exceeded 200,000 cells per µl and the serum level of Granulocyte Colony-Stimulating Factor (G-CSF) was elevated up to 780 pg/µl. A Tc-m99-labeled anti-NCA90/95 based granulocyte scan demonstrated reactive bone marrow expansion, splenomegaly and granulocyte infiltration into the tumor. KT293, a S100, gp100 and CD68 positive melanoma cell line derived from an axillary metastasis, produced large amounts of G-CSF in vitro and induced rapidly growing tumors and PLR after subcutaneous inoculation in SCID mice. In contrast to G-CSF-secreting cancer cells of other tissue origin, G-CSF-neutralizing antibodies failed to inhibit the growth of KT293 cells. In addition, KT293 cells did not express G-CSF-receptor. These observations suggest that paracrine effects of G-CSF-secretion and PLR might promote an aggressive melanoma phenotype, as seen in this patient.


International Journal of Cancer | 2001

Human endostatin inhibits growth of human non-small-cell lung cancer in a murine xenotransplant model.

Arnd S. Boehle; Roland Kurdow; Maren Schulze; Ursula Kliche; Bence Sipos; Krishna Soondrum; Alirza Ebrahimnejad; Peter Dohrmann; Holger Kalthoff; Doris Henne-Bruns; Michael Neumaier

Overall prognosis in human NSCLC remains poor. Antiangiogenic treatment has become a promising concept for the treatment of solid malignancies. Our purpose was to evaluate the efficacy of recombinant HSENDO for the treatment of human NSCLC in an orthotopic murine xenotransplantation model. The efficacy of HSENDO was tested in vitro in cell‐proliferation, cell‐migration and tube‐formation assays. In vivo, the effect of HSENDO on tumor growth was tested in s.c. xenotransplanted human NSCLC and on intrapulmonary induced human NSCLC. In vitro, HSENDO inhibited both human and rodent endothelial cell proliferation in a time‐ and dose‐dependent fashion. Endothelial cell migration was inhibited by 97%. Tube formation of murine endothelial cells was inhibited and preexisting tubes degenerated after HSENDO exposure. In vivo, HSENDO delayed growth of s.c. xenotransplanted tumors. Immunohistochemic staining demonstrated no change in microvessel density but a significant reduction of proliferating tumor cells and an increase in bFGF and VEGF expression, reflecting the antiangiogenic effect of HSENDO. Intrapulmonary tumor induction caused death subsequent to metastatic disease. Systemic HSENDO application extended survival significantly. HSENDO was demonstrated to inhibit endothelial cell proliferation, migration and tube formation effectively. In vivo growth of s.c. transplanted tumors was delayed and survival extended by 32% and 69%, respectively, after intrapulmonary NSCLC induction.


Langenbeck's Archives of Surgery | 2002

Wortmannin inhibits growth of human non-small-cell lung cancer in vitro and in vivo

Arnd S. Boehle; Roland Kurdow; Lars Boenicke; Bodo Schniewind; Fred Faendrich; Peter Dohrmann; Holger Kalthoff

Abstract Background and aims. Recently we demonstrated that phosphatidylinositol 3-kinase (PI3K) is overexpressed in human lung cancer. This study evaluated whether the PI3K inhibiting agent wortmannin affects proliferation of human lung cancer cells in vitro and in vivo. Methods. Effects of exposure of human non-small-cell lung cancer (NSCLC) cells (KNS-62, Colo-699) to wortmannin were investigated in vitro by proliferation, cytotoxicity, and DNA fragmentation assays. In vivo we examined the effects of blocking PI3K by wortmannin prior to xenotransplantation of human NSCLC cells into SCID-bg mice and the effect of systemic wortmannin administration following intrapulmonary xenotransplantation of human NSCLC. Results. Exposure of KNS-62 and Colo-699 lung cancer cells to wortmannin inhibited proliferation in correlation to concentration in vitro. In vivo the blocking of PI3K by wortmannin prior to xenotransplantation caused a significant delay in the growth of subcutaneously induced tumors. Systemic wortmannin administration increased mean survival after intrapulmonary xenotransplantation of human NSCLC significantly by 38% and 47%. Conclusions. These data suggest inhibition of PI3K activity as a potential target for treatment of human NSCLC. Systemic toxicity of wortmannin requires development of improved PI3K inhibitors with favorable pharmacological properties.


Journal of Carcinogenesis | 2006

Combination phenylbutyrate/gemcitabine therapy effectively inhibits in vitro and in vivo growth of NSCLC by intrinsic apoptotic pathways

Bodo Schniewind; Kirsten Heintz; Roland Kurdow; Ole Ammerpohl; Anna Trauzold; Doris Emme; Peter Dohrmann; Holger Kalthoff

Background Standard chemotherapy protocols in NSCLC are of limited clinical benefit. Histone deacetylase (HDAC) inhibitors represent a new strategy in human cancer therapy. In this study the combination of the HDAC inhibitor phenylbutyrate (PB) and the nucleoside analogue gemcitabine (GEM) was evaluated and the mechanisms underlying increased cell death were analyzed. Methods Dose escalation studies evaluating the cytotoxicity of PB (0.01–100 mM), GEM (0.01–100 μg/ml) and a combination of the two were performed on two NSCLC cell lines (BEN and KNS62). Apoptotic cell death was quantified. The involvement of caspase-dependent cell death and MAP-kinase activation was analyzed. Additionally, mitochondrial damage was determined. In an orthotopic animal model the combined effect of PB and GEM on therapy was analyzed. Results Applied as a single drug both GEM and PB revealed limited potential to induce apoptosis in KNS62 and Ben cells. Combination therapy was 50–80% (p = 0.012) more effective than either agent alone. On the caspase level, combination therapy significantly increased cleavage of the pro-forms compared to single chemotherapy. The broad spectrum caspase-inhibitor zVAD was able to inhibit caspase cleavage completely, but reduced the frequency of apoptotic cells only by 30%. Combination therapy significantly increased changes in MTP and the release of cyto-c, AIF and Smac/Diabolo into the cytoplasm. Furthermore, the inhibitors of apoptosis c-IAP1 and c-IAP2 were downregulated and it was shown that in combination therapy JNK activation contributed significantly to induction of apoptosis. The size of the primary tumors growing orthotopically in SCID mice treated for 4 weeks with GEM and PB was significantly reduced (2.2–2.7 fold) compared to GEM therapy alone. The Ki-67 (KNS62: p = 0.015; Ben: p = 0.093) and topoisomerase IIα (KNS62: p = 0.008; Ben: p = 0.064) proliferation indices were clearly reduced in tumors treated by combination therapy, whereas the apoptotic index was comparably low in all groups. Conclusion Therapy combining GEM and the HDAC inhibitor PB initiates a spectrum of apoptosis-inducing mitochondrial and further JNK-dependent events, thereby overcoming the therapeutic resistance of NSCLC tumor cells. In vivo, the combination therapy substantially reduced tumor cell proliferation, suggesting that the well tolerated PB is a useful supplemental therapeutic agent in NSCLC.


The Annals of Thoracic Surgery | 2002

Ganciclovir prodrug therapy is effective in a murine xenotransplant model of human lung cancer

Roland Kurdow; Arnd S. Boehle; Sieglinde Haye; Lars Boenicke; Bodo Schniewind; Peter Dohrmann; Holger Kalthoff

BACKGROUND Therapy failures have been reported for retroviral gene transfer of herpes simplex virus thymidine kinase (HSV-TK) gene followed by systemic ganciclovir application in human lung cancer. Use of the HSV-TK mutant TK30 in combination with a VSV-G pseudotyped retroviral vector was found to enhance the efficacy of prodrug therapy. The present study evaluated this therapeutic strategy in human non-small cell lung cancer cell lines in a preclinical murine xenotransplant model. METHODS Intrathoracally induced by HSV-TK30 transduced non-small cell lung cancer cell lines Colo 699 (adenocarcinoma) and KNS 62 (squamous cell carcinoma) were monitored for local tumor growth, survival, and metastases. So-called bystander effects were investigated in tumors consisting of as little as 25% TK30 transfected cells and by analysis of gap junctional protein connexin-43 expression. RESULTS Survival was significantly prolonged, and tumor growth and pleural metastases were reduced in HSV-TK30-positive tumors of both cell lines. A significant therapeutic effect in bystander experiments was observed in squamous cell carcinoma. This was correlated with higher expression of connexin-43. CONCLUSIONS Delivery of HSV-TK30 in a VSV-G pseudotyped retroviral vector and subsequent ganciclovir application provided therapeutic efficacy. Despite of low transduction rates achievable in gene transfer in situ, prodrug therapy appears to be feasible in tumor cells with efficient bystander effects.


Journal of Molecular Medicine | 2003

Efficient dose-dependent and time-dependent protein transduction of pancreatic carcinoma cells in vitro and in vivo using purified VP22-EGFP fusion protein.

Lars Boenicke; Kang Chu; Regina Pauls; Claudia Tams; Marie-Luise Kruse; Roland Kurdow; Bodo Schniewind; A. S. Böhle; Bernd Kremer; Holger Kalthoff

We constructed a prokaryotic vector expressing a truncated VP22-EGFP gene and purified this fusion protein from Escherichia coli cultures using nickel resin. Application of purified VP22-EGFP protein to human pancreatic carcinoma cells showed a highly efficient time-dependent and dose-dependent uptake and resulted in green fluorescence predominantly located in the nuclei of treated cells. Purified VP22-EGFP efficiently translocated into deeper layers of pancreatic tumor cell spheroids. Homogeneous uptake into the whole tumor was observed after peritumoral injection in human pancreatic tumors in SCID mice. We conclude that the direct application of purified VP22 fusion proteins offers a new, peptide-mediated and potentially systemic therapy for pancreatic cancer. This opens the possibility of achieving specific antitumor effects induced by fused apoptosis-enhancing proteins.


Langenbecks Archiv für Chirurgie. Supplement | 1998

Die videoassistierte Thorakoskopie zur effektiven Palliation maligner Pleuraergüsse. Pleurodese — Pleuroperitonealer Shunt

A. S. Böhle; Roland Kurdow; Peter Dohrmann

Dyspnoe und reduzierte korperliche Belastbarkeit infolge maligner Pleuraergusse stellen eine erhebliche Einschrankung der Lebensqualitat der betroffenen Patienten dar. Die Wertigkeit der videoassistierten thorakoskopischen Talkumpleurodese und der alternativen Applikation pleuroperitonealer Shunts als Verfahren zur dauerhaften Palliation dieses Zustandes wurden im Rahmen einer retrospektiven Untersuchung evaluiert.


International Journal of Cancer | 2004

Resistance of pancreatic cancer to gemcitabine treatment is dependent on mitochondria-mediated apoptosis.

Bodo Schniewind; Matthias Christgen; Roland Kurdow; Sieglinde Haye; Bernd Kremer; Holger Kalthoff; Hendrik Ungefroren

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Bence Sipos

University of Tübingen

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