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Featured researches published by Thomas Lehrnbecher.


Blood | 2012

Diagnosis and management of acute myeloid leukemia in children and adolescents: recommendations from an international expert panel

Ursula Creutzig; Marry M. van den Heuvel-Eibrink; Brenda Gibson; Michael Dworzak; Souichi Adachi; Eveline S. J. M. de Bont; Jochen Harbott; Henrik Hasle; Donna L. Johnston; Akitoshi Kinoshita; Thomas Lehrnbecher; Guy Leverger; Ester Mejstrikova; Soheil Meshinchi; Andrea Pession; Susana C. Raimondi; Lillian Sung; Jan Stary; Christian M. Zwaan; Gertjan J. L. Kaspers; Dirk Reinhardt

Despite major improvements in outcome over the past decades, acute myeloid leukemia (AML) remains a life-threatening malignancy in children, with current survival rates of ∼70%. State-of-the-art recommendations in adult AML have recently been published in this journal by Döhner et al. The primary goal of an international expert panel of the International BFM Study Group AML Committee was to set standards for the management, diagnosis, response assessment, and treatment in childhood AML. This paper aims to discuss differences between childhood and adult AML, and to highlight recommendations that are specific to children. The particular relevance of new diagnostic and prognostic molecular markers in pediatric AML is presented. The general management of pediatric AML, the management of specific pediatric AML cohorts (such as infants) or subtypes of the disease occurring in children (such as Down syndrome related AML), as well as new therapeutic approaches, and the role of supportive care are discussed.


Journal of Clinical Oncology | 2004

Early Deaths and Treatment-Related Mortality in Children Undergoing Therapy for Acute Myeloid Leukemia: Analysis of the Multicenter Clinical Trials AML-BFM 93 and AML-BFM 98

Ursula Creutzig; Martin Zimmermann; Dirk Reinhardt; Michael Dworzak; Jan Stary; Thomas Lehrnbecher

PURPOSE The rates of early death (ED) and treatment-related mortality (TRM) are unacceptably high in children undergoing intensive chemotherapy for acute myeloid leukemia (AML). Better strategies of supportive care might help to improve overall survival in these children. PATIENTS AND METHODS In a retrospective study, we analyzed incidence, clinical features, and risk factors for lethal complications of 901 children enrolled onto the multicenter trials Acute Myeloid Leukemia-Berlin-Frankfurt-Muenster (AML-BFM) 93 and AML-BFM 98. RESULTS One hundred four patients (11.5%) enrolled onto the clinical trials AML-BFM 93 and AML-BFM 98 died shortly after diagnosis or as a result of treatment-related complications. Thirty-two patients (3.5%) died before (six patients) or during (26 patients) the first 14 days of treatment, mainly as a result of bleeding or leukostasis. Low performance status, hyperleukocytosis, and French-American-British type M5 were the main risk factors for a lethal event before day 15. After day 15, the predominant causes of death were complications caused by infections, particularly bacterial and fungal infections. The incidence of lethal infections was highest during induction therapy and decreased thereafter. When comparing both clinical trials, significantly fewer patients died within the first 6 weeks in AML-BFM 98 than in AML-BFM 93 (14 [3.5%] of 430 patients v 35 [7.4%] of 471 patients; P = .01). CONCLUSION To reduce the high incidence of ED and TRM in children with AML, early diagnosis and adequate treatment of complications are needed. Children with AML should be treated in specialized pediatric cancer centers only. Prophylactic and therapeutic regimens for better treatment management of bleeding disorders and infectious complications have to be assessed in future trials to ultimately improve overall survival in children with AML.


Leukemia | 2004

Infectious complications in pediatric acute myeloid leukemia: analysis of the prospective multi-institutional clinical trial AML-BFM 93.

Thomas Lehrnbecher; D Varwig; J Kaiser; Dirk Reinhardt; Thomas Klingebiel; Ursula Creutzig

Infections still remain a major cause of therapy-associated morbidity and mortality in children with acute myeloid leukemia (AML). To improve supportive care measurements, detailed information on frequency and characteristic features of infectious complications is needed. We retrospectively analyzed the medical charts of 304 children, treated in 30 hospitals according to the multi-institutional clinical trial AML-BFM 93. Overall, 855 infectious complications occurred in 304 patients (fever without identifiable source (n=523; 61.2%), clinically (n=57; 6.7%) and microbiologically documented infections (n=275; 32.1%)). Neutropenia was present in 74.1% of the infectious episodes. In all, 20 patients died of infection-associated complications (15/276 (5.4%) patients without and 5/28 (17.9%) with Down syndrome), most of them during early induction therapy (n=11). Blood stream infections occurred in 228 episodes (Gram-positive (n=202) and Gram-negative (n=42) pathogens). Invasive fungal infection was probable or proven in 15 patients. In 113 out of the 855 infectious episodes (13.3%), pneumonia was radiologically diagnosed. Better strategies of supportive care might help to improve overall survival in children undergoing chemotherapy for AML. Therefore, children with AML should be treated in specialized pediatric centers, and there should be a very low threshold to readmit patients, in particular patients with pulmonary symptoms.


Lancet Oncology | 2014

Fourth European Conference on Infections in Leukaemia (ECIL-4): guidelines for diagnosis, prevention, and treatment of invasive fungal diseases in paediatric patients with cancer or allogeneic haemopoietic stem-cell transplantation

Andreas H. Groll; Elio Castagnola; Simone Cesaro; Jean Hugues Dalle; Dan Engelhard; William W. Hope; Emmanuel Roilides; Jan Styczynski; Adilia Warris; Thomas Lehrnbecher

Invasive opportunistic fungal diseases (IFDs) are important causes of morbidity and mortality in paediatric patients with cancer and those who have had an allogeneic haemopoietic stem-cell transplantation (HSCT). Apart from differences in underlying disorders and comorbidities relative to those of adults, IFDs in infants, children, and adolescents are unique with respect to their epidemiology, the usefulness of diagnostic methods, the pharmacology and dosing of antifungal agents, and the absence of interventional phase 3 clinical trials for guidance of evidence-based decisions. To better define the state of knowledge on IFDs in paediatric patients with cancer and allogeneic HSCT and to improve IFD diagnosis, prevention, and management, the Fourth European Conference on Infections in Leukaemia (ECIL-4) in 2011 convened a group that reviewed the scientific literature on IFDs and graded the available quality of evidence according to the Infectious Diseases Society of America grading system. The final considerations and recommendations of the group are summarised in this manuscript.


Pediatric Infectious Disease Journal | 2010

A Randomized, Double-Blind, Multicenter Study of Caspofungin Versus Liposomal Amphotericin B for Empiric Antifungal Therapy in Pediatric Patients With Persistent Fever and Neutropenia

Johan Maertens; Luis Madero; Anne F. Reilly; Thomas Lehrnbecher; Andreas H. Groll; Hasan S. Jafri; Michael Green; Joseph J. Nania; Michael R. Bourque; Beth Ann Wise; Kim M. Strohmaier; Arlene Taylor; Nicholas A. Kartsonis; Joseph W. Chow; Carola Arndt; Ben E. dePauw; Thomas J. Walsh

Background: Persistently febrile neutropenic children at risk for invasive fungal infections receive empiric antifungal therapy as a standard of care. However, little is known about the role of echinocandins and liposomal amphotericin B (L-AmB) for empiric antifungal therapy in pediatric patients. Methods: Patients between the ages of 2 to 17 years with persistent fever and neutropenia were randomly assigned to receive caspofungin (70 mg/m2 loading dose on day 1, then 50 mg/m2 daily [maximum 70 mg/d]) or l-AmB (3 mg/kg daily) in a 2:1 ratio. Evaluation of safety was the primary objective of the study. Efficacy was also evaluated, with a successful outcome defined as fulfilling all components of a prespecified 5-part composite endpoint. Suspected invasive fungal infections were evaluated by an independent, treatment-blinded adjudication committee. Results: Eighty-two patients received study therapy (caspofungin 56, l-AmB 26), and 81 were evaluated for efficacy (caspofungin 56; l-AmB 25). Outcomes for safety and efficacy endpoints were similar for both study arms. Adverse drug-related event rates [95% confidence interval] were similar between the caspofungin and l-AmB groups (clinical 48.2% [34.7–62.0] versus 46.2% [26.6–66.6]; laboratory 10.7% [4.0–21.9] versus 19.2% [6.6–39.4]). Serious drug-related adverse events occurred in 1 (1.8%) of caspofungin-treated patients and 3 (11.5%) of l-AmB-treated patients. Overall success rates [95% CI] were 46.4% [33.4–59.5] for caspofungin and 32.0% [13.7–50.3] for l-AmB. Conclusions: Caspofungin and l-AmB were comparable in tolerability, safety, and efficacy as empiric antifungal therapy for persistently febrile neutropenic pediatric patients.


Pediatric Infectious Disease Journal | 2012

Results from a Prospective, International, Epidemiologic Study of Invasive Candidiasis in Children and Neonates

William J. Steinbach; Emmanuel Roilides; David M. Berman; Jill A. Hoffman; Andreas H. Groll; I. Bin-Hussain; Debra L. Palazzi; Elio Castagnola; Natasha Halasa; Aristea Velegraki; Christopher C. Dvorak; A. Charkabarti; Lillian Sung; Lara Danziger-Isakov; Catherine S. Lachenauer; Arrieta A; Katherine M. Knapp; Mark J. Abzug; C. Ziebold; Thomas Lehrnbecher; L. Klingspor; Adilia Warris; Kateri H. Leckerman; T. Martling; Thomas J. Walsh; Daniel K. Benjamin; Theoklis E. Zaoutis

Background: Candida species are the third most common cause of pediatric health care–associated bloodstream infection in the United States and Europe. To our knowledge, this report from the International Pediatric Fungal Network is the largest prospective, multicenter observational study dedicated to pediatric and neonatal invasive candidiasis. Methods: From 2007 to 2011, we enrolled 196 pediatric and 25 neonatal patients with invasive candidiasis. Results: Non-albicans Candida species predominated in pediatric (56%) and neonatal (52%) age groups, yet Candida albicans was the most common species in both groups. Successful treatment responses were observed in pediatric (76%) and neonatal patients (92%). Infection with Candida parapsilosis led to successful responses in pediatric (92%) and neonatal (100%) patients, whereas infection with Candida glabrata was associated with a lower successful outcome in pediatric patients (55%). The most commonly used primary antifungal therapies for pediatric invasive candidiasis were fluconazole (21%), liposomal amphotericin B (20%) and micafungin (18%). Outcome of pediatric invasive candidiasis was similar in response to polyenes (73%), triazoles (67%) and echinocandins (73%). The most commonly used primary antifungal therapies for neonatal invasive candidiasis were fluconazole (32%), caspofungin (24%) and liposomal amphotericin B (16%) and micafungin (8%). Outcomes of neonatal candidiasis by antifungal class again revealed similar response rates among the classes. Conclusions: We found a predominance of non-albicans Candida infection in children and similar outcomes based on antifungal class used. This international collaborative study sets the foundation for large epidemiologic studies focusing on the unique features of neonatal and pediatric candidiasis and comparative studies of therapeutic interventions in these populations.


Blood | 2013

Randomized trial comparing liposomal daunorubicin with idarubicin as induction for pediatric acute myeloid leukemia: results from Study AML-BFM 2004

Ursula Creutzig; Martin Zimmermann; Jean-Pierre Bourquin; Michael Dworzak; Gudrun Fleischhack; Norbert Graf; Thomas Klingebiel; Bernhard Kremens; Thomas Lehrnbecher; Christine von Neuhoff; J. Ritter; Annette Sander; André Schrauder; Arend von Stackelberg; Jan Starý; Dirk Reinhardt

Outcomes of patients with acute myeloid leukemia (AML) improve significantly by intensification of induction. To further intensify anthracycline dosage without increasing cardiotoxicity, we compared potentially less cardiotoxic liposomal daunorubicin (L-DNR) to idarubicin at a higher-than-equivalent dose (80 vs 12 mg/m(2) per day for 3 days) during induction. In the multicenter therapy-optimization trial AML-BFM 2004, 521 of 611 pediatric patients (85%) were randomly assigned to L-DNR or idarubicin induction. Five-year results in both treatment arms were similar (overall survival 76% ± 3% [L-DNR] vs 75% ± 3% [idarubicin], Plogrank = .65; event-free survival [EFS] 59% ± 3% vs 53% ± 3%, Plogrank = .25; cumulative incidence of relapse 29% ± 3% vs 31% ± 3%, P(Gray) = .75), as were EFS results for standard (72% ± 5% vs 68% ± 5%, Plogrank = .47) and high-risk (51% ± 4% vs 46% ± 4%, Plogrank = .45) patients. L-DNR resulted in significantly better probability of EFS in patients with t(8;21). Overall, treatment-related mortality was lower with L-DNR than idarubicin (2/257 vs 10/264 patients, P = .04). Grade 3/4 cardiotoxicity was rare after induction (4 L-DNR vs 5 idarubicin). Only 1 L-DNR and 3 idarubicin patients presented with subclinical or mild cardiomyopathy during follow-up. In conclusion, at the given dose, L-DNR has overall antileukemic activity comparable to idarubicin, promises to be more active in subgroups, and causes less treatment-related mortality. This trial was registered at www.clinicaltrials.gov as #NCT00111345.


The Journal of Infectious Diseases | 2011

Human Natural Killer Cells Exhibit Direct Activity Against Aspergillus fumigatus Hyphae, But Not Against Resting Conidia

Stanislaw Schmidt; Lars Tramsen; Mitra Hanisch; Jean-Paul Latgé; Sabine Huenecke; Ulrike Koehl; Thomas Lehrnbecher

Because natural killer (NK) cells kill tumor cells and combat infections, there is growing interest in adoptively transferring NK cells to hematopoietic stem cell recipients. Unfortunately, in humans, the activity of NK cells against Aspergillus species, the major cause of invasive fungal infection in stem cell recipients, are poorly characterized. Our results show that unstimulated and interleukin-2 prestimulated human NK cells kill Aspergillus fumigatus hyphae but do not affect resting conidia. Killing is also induced by the supernatant of prestimulated NK cells and human perforin. The high levels of interferon-γ and granulocyte macrophage colony-stimulating factor produced by prestimulated NK cells are significantly reduced by Aspergillus, indicating an immunosuppressive effect of the fungus. Whereas Aspergillus hyphae activate NK cells, resting, and germinating, conidia and conidia of ΔrodA mutants lacking the hydrophobic surface layer do not. Our results suggest that adoptively transferred human NK cells may be a potential antifungal tool in the transplantation context.


Blood | 2013

Effectiveness of supportive care measures to reduce infections in pediatric AML: a report from the Children’s Oncology Group

Lillian Sung; Richard Aplenc; Todd A. Alonzo; Robert B. Gerbing; Thomas Lehrnbecher; Alan S. Gamis

Objective was to describe the effect of antibiotic and granulocyte colony-stimulating factor (G-CSF) prophylaxis and discharge policy on infection risk and nonrelapse-related mortality (NRM) during chemotherapy for children with acute myeloid leukemia. Patients were non-Down syndrome children enrolled on Childrens Oncology Group (COG) trial AAML0531. We surveyed sites to determine institutional standards for systemic antibacterial, antifungal, and G-CSF prophylaxis, and mandatory hospitalization during neutropenia. COG institution survey response rate was 180 of 216 (83.3%). Of 1024 patients enrolled on AAML0531, 897 were non-Down patients from survey-responding institutions. In multiple regression, antibacterial prophylaxis reduced any sterile-site bacterial infection (incidence rate ratio [IRR] 0.85; 95% confidence interval [CI], 0.72-1.01; P = .058) and Gram-positive sterile-site infection (IRR 0.71; 95% CI, 0.57-0.90; P = .004). Prophylactic G-CSF reduced bacterial (IRR 0.79; 95% CI, 0.67-0.92; P = .004) and Clostridium difficile infections (CDIs; IRR 0.46; 95% CI, 0.25-0.84; P = .012). Mandatory hospitalization did not reduce bacterial/fungal infection or significantly reduce NRM but did increase CDI (IRR 1.96; 95% CI, 1.34-2.87; P < .001). Antibacterial and G-CSF prophylaxis reduced infection rates while mandatory hospitalization did not reduce infection or significantly affect NRM. This trial was registered at www.clinicaltrials.gov as #AAML0531.


Leukemia Research | 2014

Leukapheresis and low-dose chemotherapy do not reduce early mortality in acute myeloid leukemia hyperleukocytosis: a systematic review and meta-analysis.

Sapna Oberoi; Thomas Lehrnbecher; Bob Phillips; Johann Hitzler; Marie-Chantal Ethier; Joseph Beyene; Lillian Sung

The role of leukapheresis and low-dose chemotherapy is unclear in decreasing early mortality in acute myeloid leukemia (AML) patients with hyperleukocytosis. This systematic review was conducted to describe early mortality (deaths during first induction) in patients with AML with an initial white blood count≥100×10(9)L(-1) stratified by the approach to leukapheresis and hydroxyurea/low-dose chemotherapy. Twenty-one studies were included. Weighted mean early deaths rate (20 studies, 1354 patients) was 20.1% (95% confidence interval 15.0-25.1). Neither leukapheresis strategy (p=0.67) nor hydroxyurea/low-dose chemotherapy (p=0.23) influenced the early death rate. Early mortality related to hyperleukocytosis in AML is not influenced by universal or selected use of leukapheresis or hydroxyurea/low-dose chemotherapy.

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Thomas Klingebiel

Goethe University Frankfurt

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Andreas H. Groll

Boston Children's Hospital

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Ulrike Koehl

Hannover Medical School

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Lars Tramsen

Goethe University Frankfurt

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Stanislaw Schmidt

Goethe University Frankfurt

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Michael Dworzak

Medical University of Vienna

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Konrad Bochennek

Goethe University Frankfurt

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Peter Bader

Goethe University Frankfurt

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