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Dive into the research topics where Sylke R. Zeissig is active.

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Featured researches published by Sylke R. Zeissig.


Psycho-oncology | 2014

Fear of recurrence in long-term breast cancer survivors - Still an issue. Results on prevalence, determinants, and the association with quality of life and depression from the Cancer Survivorship - A multi-regional population-based study

Lena Koch; Heike Bertram; Andrea Eberle; Bernd Holleczek; Sieglinde Schmid-Höpfner; Annika Waldmann; Sylke R. Zeissig; Hermann Brenner; Volker Arndt

Fear of recurrence (FoR) is a widespread problem among breast cancer survivors. So far, little is known about prevalence, determinants, and consequences of FoR specifically in long‐term breast cancer survivors, even though it was found to be one of the most important concerns in this group.


PLOS ONE | 2015

Depression, Anxiety and Quality of Life in Long-Term Survivors of Malignant Melanoma: A Register-Based Cohort Study

Manfred E. Beutel; Sabine Fischbeck; Harald Binder; Maria Blettner; Elmar Brähler; Katharina Emrich; Peter Friedrich-Mai; Barbara H. Imruck; Veronika Weyer; Sylke R. Zeissig

Aim The purpose of the study was to determine anxiety and depression, quality of life, and their determinants in long-term survivors of malignant melanoma. Methods In a state cancer registry a cohort of survivors of malignant melanoma was contacted via the physician registered. Of 1302 contactable patients, 689 (52.2%) completed a questionnaire including the Patient Health Questionnaire with generalized anxiety (GAD-7) and depression (PHQ-9) and the EORTC Quality of Life Questionnaire (EORTC QLQ 30). Based on multiple regression analysis, predictors of quality of life and distress were identified. Comparison data were assessed in two waves of representative face-to-face household surveys of the adult German population. Results An average of 8.4 (5.7 to 12.2) years after diagnosis, distress was higher in women compared to men and in middle adulthood (vs. older patients). Symptoms were higher in women than in men, and there was a decline of functioning and increase of symptoms across the age range of both genders. Compared to the general population, there were slightly increased depression and anxiety (only women), but no impaired global quality of life. Yet, survivors evidenced functional decline and more physical symptoms. Distress and reduced quality of life were consistently predicted by lack of social support, fear of recurrence, pessimism and self-blame. Distress was increased by a family history of melanoma, and additional mental and somatic diseases. Conclusion Overall, long-term survivors have adjusted well achieving a global quality of life comparable to the general population. Yet, compromised functional dimensions, physical symptoms and distress indicate the need for integrating psychooncological screening into oncological follow-up, which might be guided by predictors such as family history or social support. Further prospective study is needed to determine the course of adaptation to the disease and corroborate the risk factors identified.


PLOS ONE | 2015

Psychosocial Care Needs of Melanoma Survivors: Are They Being Met?

Sabine Fischbeck; Barbara H. Imruck; Maria Blettner; Veronika Weyer; Harald Binder; Sylke R. Zeissig; Katharina Emrich; Peter Friedrich-Mai; Manfred E. Beutel

Patients who have survived malignant melanoma for more than five years may lack the opportunity to talk about their burden. As a consequence their psychosocial care needs remain undetected and available supportive interventions may not be utilised. Therefore, the psychosocial burden of this patient group needs to be assessed using specific screening instruments. The aim of this study was to investigate the psychosocial burden of long-term melanoma survivors, their psychosocial care needs and the determinants of these needs. We wanted to find out if the use of professional support corresponds to the care needs defined by experts. Using the cancer registry of Rhineland-Palatinate, melanoma patients diagnosed at least 5 years before the survey were contacted by physicians. N = 689 former patients completed the Hornheide Questionnaire (short form HQ-S) to identify psychosocial support need (scale cut off ≥ 16 or item-based cut-off score) and the potential psychosocial determinants of these needs. Additionally, they were asked about their utilisation of the professional support system. More than one third (36%) of them was in need for professional psychosocial support. The highest burden scores concerned worry about tumour progression. Younger age (< 50), higher general fatigue, higher symptom burden, lower general health, negative social interactions and unfulfilled information needs were significant predictors of the need for psychosocial intervention. Related to the percentage of survivors identified as ‘in need’, the professional support system was underused. Further studies should investigate whether using the HQ-S to routinely identify burdened melanoma patients could lead to better fulfilment of their intervention needs, ultimately enhancing health-related quality of life.


Health Psychology | 2016

Fear of recurrence in long-term cancer survivors-Do cancer type, sex, time since diagnosis, and social support matter?

Lena Koch-Gallenkamp; Heike Bertram; Andrea Eberle; Bernd Holleczek; Sieglinde Schmid-Höpfner; Annika Waldmann; Sylke R. Zeissig; Hermann Brenner; Volker Arndt

OBJECTIVE Fear of recurrence (FoR) is among the most important concerns for cancer survivors. Studies on potentially influencing variables, like time since diagnosis, cancer type, and sex, have yielded heterogeneous results. Also social support has rarely been examined as an influencing factor. This study aims to increase knowledge on these factors. METHOD Analyses are based on cross-sectional data of long-term survivors of breast, colorectal, and prostate cancer (5-16 years postdiagnosis), recruited by 6 German population-based cancer registries. Six thousand fifty-seven women and men were included in the analyses. FoR was assessed using the short form of the Fear of Progression Questionnaire (FoP-Q-SF). The associations of cancer type, age, sex, time since diagnosis, and social support with moderate/high FoR were identified via multiple logistic regression analyses. RESULTS The majority of long-term cancer survivors reported experiencing FoR, mostly in low intensity. Female survivors, survivors ≤54 or 55-59 years of age, 5 to 7 years postdiagnosis, with a lower education, with recurrence/metastases, or being socially isolated were at greater risk to experience moderate/high FoR. Cancer type and stage at diagnosis did not reach statistical significance. CONCLUSION Our results indicate a potential vulnerability for women to experience FoR in moderate/high severity. Also younger and socially isolated survivors were at greater risk to suffer from moderate/high levels of FoR and should thus be monitored for high levels of FoR and be offered the support needed to manage their fears. (PsycINFO Database Record


Transplant International | 2014

The joint impact of donor and recipient parameters on the outcome of heart transplantation in Germany after graft allocation

Marcus Kutschmann; Carl-Ludwig Fischer-Fröhlich; Irene Schmidtmann; Sven Bungard; Sylke R. Zeissig; Frank Polster; Günter Kirste; Nils R. Frühauf

Organ shortage in heart transplantation (HTx) results in increased use of grafts from donors with substantial risk factors. It is discussed controversially which donor characteristics may be detrimental. Therefore, we evaluated the joint impact of donor‐ and patient‐related risk factors in HTx on patient survival by multiple analysis in a nationwide multicentre study after donor selection was carried out. The research database consists of data concerning hearts donated and transplanted in Germany between 2006 and 2008 as provided by Deutsche Stiftung Organtransplantation and the BQS Institute. Multiple Cox regression (significance level 5%, hazard ratio [95% CI]) was conducted (n = 774, recipient age ≥ 18 years). Survival was significantly decreased by donor age (1.021 [1.008–1.035] per year), nontraumatic cause of death (1.481 [1.079–2.034]), troponin >0.1 ng/ml (2.075 [1.473–2.921]), ischaemia time (1.197 [1.041–1.373] per hour), recipient age (1.017 [1.002–1.031] per year) and in recipients with pulmonary vascular resistance ≥320 dyn*s*cm−5 (1.761 [1.115–2.781]), with ventilator dependency (3.174 [2.211–6.340]) or complex previous heart surgery (1.763 [1.270–2.449]). After donor selection had been conducted, multiple Cox regression revealed donor age, nontraumatic cause of death, troponin and ischaemia time as well as recipient age, pulmonary hypertension, ventilator dependency and previous complex heart surgery as limiting risk factors concerning patient survival.


Acta Oncologica | 2017

Quality of life in long-term and very long-term cancer survivors versus population controls in Germany

Volker Arndt; Lena Koch-Gallenkamp; Lina Jansen; Heike Bertram; Andrea Eberle; Bernd Holleczek; Sieglinde Schmid-Höpfner; Annika Waldmann; Sylke R. Zeissig; Hermann Brenner

Abstract Background: With the increasing number and diversity of cancer survivors, studies of survivors’ physical, emotional, and social health are of growing importance. While there is a growing body of literature on the quality of life (QoL) of cancer patients during the early years past diagnosis, less is known regarding QoL in long-term survivors (LTS) (5 + years past diagnosis) and particularly in very long-term survivors (VLTS) (10 + years past diagnosis). The objective of our study is to: (1) compare QoL of long-term cancer survivors and population norms; and (2) assess whether any deficits in QoL of survivors observed 5–10 years past diagnosis persist beyond the 10th year past diagnosis. Methods: In total 6952 long-term cancer survivors (5–16 years past diagnosis of breast, colorectal, or prostate cancer) from Germany recruited in the context of the population-based CAESAR + study were compared with 1878 population-based controls without a history of cancer. QoL was assessed with the EORTC QLQ-C30. Differences in QoL between survivors and controls were assessed via multiple regression while controlling for age, gender, education, and case mix for survivors 5–9 years and 10 + years past diagnosis separately. Results: Overall QoL in long-term cancer survivors was comparable to population norms but specific deficits in social, role, emotional, cognitive, and physical functioning and symptoms such as insomnia, fatigue, dyspnea, constipation, diarrhea, and financial difficulties were more prevalent in LTSs. Detriments in QoL persisted during the observation period and affected particularly cancer survivors at younger ages (<50 years). Non-significant aggravations in QoL with longer time since diagnosis were observed in very young and very old cancer survivors. Conclusions: Detriments in health-related quality of life persist over more than a decade and affect predominantly younger patients. Improvements both in early and long-term follow-up care of cancer survivors seem warranted.


Psycho-oncology | 2015

Utilisation of psychosocial and informational services in immigrant and non-immigrant German cancer survivors

Sylke R. Zeissig; Susanne Singer; Lena Koch; Hajo Zeeb; Martin Merbach; Heike Bertram; Andrea Eberle; Sieglinde Schmid-Höpfner; Bernd Holleczek; Annika Waldmann; Volker Arndt

We examined psychosocial and informational services used by long‐term survivors of breast, colon and prostate cancer in immigrants versus non‐immigrants.


BMC Public Health | 2018

Strengthening health data on a rare and heterogeneous disease: sarcoma incidence and histological subtypes in Germany

Meike Ressing; Eva Wardelmann; Peter Hohenberger; Jens Jakob; Bernd Kasper; Katharina Emrich; Andrea Eberle; Maria Blettner; Sylke R. Zeissig

BackgroundThe population-based incidence of sarcoma and its histological subtypes in Germany is unknown. Up-to-date information on a disease with an incidence comparable to other cancer entities is of high public health relevance. The aim of this study was to determine this incidence and to detect significant changes in incidence trends using data from German epidemiological cancer registries.MethodsPooled data from the German Centre for Cancer Registry Data with a primary diagnosis occurring in 2013 were used. To date, this is the latest data on cancer incidence available for Germany. All German cancer registries with sufficient completeness were included (10 out of 11), covering a population of 70.0 million people, representing 87% of the German population. All malignant sarcomas according to the RARECARE Project and the WHO classification 2002 were considered for analysis and, above all, gastrointestinal stromal tumours (GIST) of uncertain behaviour. Sensitivity analysis was performed excluding certain histologies.ResultsThe analysis included 3404 cases in men and 3442 cases in women diagnosed in 2013. The age adjusted sarcoma incidence (European standard) was 7.4 (men) and 6.6 (women) per 100,000 inhabitants. About 70% of sarcomas were soft tissue sarcomas, about 22% GIST, and about 9% bone sarcomas. The most common histological subtypes besides GIST were fibrosarcomas (14%) and liposarcomas (12%) in men and complex mixed and stromal neoplasms (22%), non-uterine leiomysarcomas (10%) and fibrosarcomas (9%) in women. Considering the trend for the years of diagnosis 2004 to 2013, there was a significant increase in incidence for GIST while the incidence of soft tissue sarcomas (only men) as well as of bone sarcoma stayed constant over time. As to soft tissue sarcoma in women, the incidence stayed constant up to the year 2009 and significantly decreased afterwards.ConclusionThis study is the first detailed analysis of a German-wide population-based sarcoma incidence showing results comparable to the incidence detected in the RARECARE Project.


Nurse Education Today | 2017

Laparoscopic assistance by operating room nurses: Results of a virtual-reality study

M. Paschold; T. Huber; S. Maedge; Sylke R. Zeissig; Hauke Lang; W. Kneist

BACKGROUND Laparoscopic assistance is often entrusted to a less experienced resident, medical student, or operating room nurse. Data regarding laparoscopic training for operating room nurses are not available. OBJECTIVES The aim of the study was to analyse the initial performance level and learning curves of operating room nurses in basic laparoscopic surgery compared with medical students and surgical residents to determine their ability to assist with this type of procedure. DESIGN The study was designed to compare the initial virtual reality performance level and learning curves of user groups to analyse competence in laparoscopic assistance. PARTICIPANTS The study subjects were operating room nurses, medical students, and first year residents. METHODS Participants performed three validated tasks (camera navigation, peg transfer, fine dissection) on a virtual reality laparoscopic simulator three times in 3 consecutive days. Laparoscopic experts were enrolled as a control group. Participants filled out questionnaires before and after the course. RESULTS Nurses and students were comparable in their initial performance (p>0.05). Residents performed better in camera navigation than students and nurses and reached the expert level for this task. Residents, students, and nurses had comparable bimanual skills throughout the study; while, experts performed significantly better in bimanual manoeuvres at all times (p<0.05). CONCLUSION The included user groups had comparable skills for bimanual tasks. Residents with limited experience reached the expert level in camera navigation. With training, nurses, students, and first year residents are equally capable of assisting in basic laparoscopic procedures.


Journal of Oral Pathology & Medicine | 2017

Incidence of lip malignancies in Germany—data from nine population-based cancer registries

Susanne Singer; Sylke R. Zeissig; Katharina Emrich; Bernd Holleczek; Klaus Kraywinkel; Meike Ressing

BACKGROUND The objective of this study was to analyse the incidence of lip malignancies in Germany. METHODS Data from population-based cancer registries covering a population of 39 million inhabitants from 14 federal states were pooled. Lip malignancies were classified according to the International Classification of Diseases (ICD-10). Age-standardised incidence rates and annual percentage changes in the incidence trends of lip cancer (C00), melanoma of the lip (C43.0), and non-melanoma skin cancer of the lip (C44.0) were calculated. RESULTS Lip cancer (C00) incidence rate was 0.57/0.15 per 100 000 (men/women) in 2003 and 0.52/0.18 in 2012. In women, the change was statistically significant. Melanoma lip cancer (C43.0) incidence rates both in men and women were 0.02 in 2003 and 0.01 in 2012. Incidence rates of non-melanoma skin cancer of the lip (C44.0) significantly increased from 1.6 in 2003 to 2.1 in 2012 in men and from 1.5 in 2003 to 2.4 in 2012 in women. In lip cancer (C00), the vast majority (98% in men/93% in women) were squamous cell carcinomas and 2%/7% were basal cell carcinoma. In men, 56% of non-melanoma skin cancers (C44.0) were squamous cell carcinoma, whereas these were only 27% in women. CONCLUSIONS The incidences of non-melanoma skin cancer of the lip increased over time in Germany in both sexes. Lip cancer incidence increased in women, while it stayed stable in men. Melanoma of the lip did not change in incidence. The distribution of histology in non-melanoma skin cancer of the lip differed by sex.

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Bernd Holleczek

German Cancer Research Center

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Hermann Brenner

German Cancer Research Center

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Volker Arndt

German Cancer Research Center

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Lena Koch-Gallenkamp

German Cancer Research Center

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