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Dive into the research topics where Wolfgang Hübl is active.

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Featured researches published by Wolfgang Hübl.


Journal of Neurology | 2008

Elevated levels of kappa free light chains in CSF support the diagnosis of multiple sclerosis

Stefan Presslauer; Dejan Milosavljevic; Thomas Brücke; Peter Michael Bayer; Wolfgang Hübl

BackgroundNumerous studies have demonstrated elevated kappa free light chains (KFLCs) in CSF of multiple sclerosis (MS) patients. However, so far only small cohorts have been examined, and generally only through qualitative KFLCs analysis. Using a recently developed free light chain (FLC) immunoassay, it is now possible to quantitatively measure KFLCs by automated nephelometry. Our objective was to determine the extent to which KFLC levels in CSF correlated with the diagnosis of MS and CISSMS (clinically isolated syndrome suggestive of MS) compared to oligoclonal banding (OCB) and the immunoglobulin G (IgG) index.MethodsCSF and serum samples from 438 unselected patients, including a MS group of 70 patients (41 MS, 29 CISSMS), were analysed using nephelometry and isoelectric focusing. We then retrospectively correlated results with patients’ diagnoses.ResultsOf the MS group (n = 70), 67 patients had elevated KFLCs using the KFLC index (≥ 5.9), 64 patients showed OCB and 56 patients presented with an elevated IgG index (≥ 0.6). Sensitivities were 0.96 for the KFLC index, 0.91 for OCB and 0.80 for the IgG index. The specificity of the KFLC index for the MS group (0.86) was lower than that of OCB (0.92) but distinctly higher compared to the IgG index (0.77).ConclusionIn this study, an elevated KFLC-index represented the most sensitive and specific quantitative diagnostic parameter for MS. As it is measured by automated, routinely available laboratory methods, KFLC quantitation can provide a rapid and reproduceable indication of intrathecal immunological processes supporting current MS diagnostic criteria.


Leukemia & Lymphoma | 2006

Rituximab treatment provides no clinical benefit in patients with pretreated advanced multiple myeloma

Niklas Zojer; Klaus Kirchbacher; Michael Vesely; Wolfgang Hübl; Heinz Ludwig

In the present phase II study, we tested the efficacy of a single course of rituximab (375 mg/m2 on days 1, 8, 15 and 22) as treatment for relapsed myeloma. The rationale for this study was the identification of a population of clonotypic CD20+ B cells that are believed to be precursors of malignant plasma cells. In addition, CD20 was expressed on 10% and 50% of bone marrow plasma cells in two of the ten patients enrolled. Following rituximab treatment, none of the patients achieved an objective response. Two patients had stable disease at month 6, the predefined end of the study, while, at that time, two patients were classified as having progressive disease. One patient opted to withdraw from the study at month 3, at which time he had stable disease. The other five patients had to be withdrawn early from the post-treatment observation because of need of salvage therapy for progressive disease. WHO grade ≤2 toxicity was seen in four patients. Peripheral B cells significantly decreased at 3 months, while no significant change of bone marrow myeloma cells was noted at that time. Mean paraprotein levels increased slightly during follow-up but IgM levels dropped in all patients, indicating an effective targeting of normal, short-lived plasma cells. Taken together, rituximab treatment yielded significant reductions in circulating B cells and serum IgM levels but had no beneficial clinical effect.


Cytometry | 1997

Toward a New Reference Method for the Leukocyte Five-Part Differential

Wolfgang Hübl; Georg Wolfbauer; Sylvia Andert; Johannes Streicher; Christin Hübner; Alexander Lapin; Peter Michael Bayer

A flow cytometric method performing a five-part leukocyte differential based on three-color staining with anti-CD45-fluorescein isothiocyanate (FITC), anti-CD-14-phycoerythrin (PE)/Cy5, and a cocktail of PE-labeled anti-CD2, anti-CD16, and anti-HLA-DR antibodies was evaluated. Results obtained by using three different sample preparation procedures and two different flow cytometers were compared with those of a 1,000-cell manual differential for evaluation of accuracy. We observed excellent correlations with the manual differential for all leukocyte subclasses and even higher correlations between the different flow cytometric methods. Flow cytometric basophil results were identical to the manual counts, regardless of which sample preparation technique or flow cytometer was used. Therefore, we propose our flow cytometric method as the first acceptable automated reference method for basophil counting. The flow cytometric results for the other leukocyte subclasses were apparently influenced by the sample preparation, which could not be explained by cell loss during washing steps. Moreover, a small influence of the flow cytometer was also observed. Assessing the influence of sample storage, we found only minimal changes within 24 h. In establishing reference values, high precision of flow cytometric results facilitated detection of a significantly higher monocyte count for males (relative count: 7.08 +/- 1.73% vs. 6.44 +/- 1.33%, P < 0.05; absolute count: 0.536 +/- 0.181 x 10(9)/liter vs. 0.456 +/- 139 x 10(9)/liter, P < 0.01). Our data indicate that monoclonal antibody-based flow cytometry is a highly suitable reference method for the five-part differential: It also shows, however, that studies will have to put more emphasis on methodological issues to define a method that shows a high interlaboratory reproducibility.


Cytometry | 1996

Proposed reference method for peripheral-blood monocyte counting using fluorescence-labelled monoclonal antibodies.

Wolfgang Hübl; Lukas Tlustos; Angelika Erath; Sylvia Andert; Peter Michael Bayer

Flow cytometry using fluorescence-labelled monoclonal antibodies has been proposed as a possible new reference method to evaluate the monocyte counting performance of automated hematology analyzers. Since in previous studies only one such technique was applied, we investigated how different flow cytometric techniques compared to the manual differential and a hematology analyzer. Relative monocyte counts of 60 samples of the daily routine were determined on a Coulter Profile II flow cytometer after incubation with two different CD45-FITC/CD 14-PE antibody combinations and subsequent preparation with two whole-blood lysis techniques, including one no-wash technique. Results were compared to those of a 600-cell manual differential and to those of the Coulter STKS hematology analyzer. All flow cytometric methods correlated very well with the manual differential (r > or = 0.925) and none showed a significant bias. The Coulter STKS relative monocyte counts were slightly higher than those of the manual differential (8.76% vs. 8.18%). The correlations between the methods employing monoclonal antibodies were excellent (r > or = 0.995) and the mean monocyte counts identical although a small, non-systematic influence of sample preparation techniques was noted. An influence of the antibody clones was not observed. The precision of the Profile II results was far superior to that of the manual differential and the STKS. Our data show that flow cytometry employing fluorescence-labelled monoclonal antibodies is a potentially ideal new reference method for monocyte counting. However, they also show that establishing a new reference method will require extensive investigation and exact definition of the sample preparation procedure to be used.


American Journal of Hematology | 2016

Suppression of the noninvolved pair of the myeloma isotype correlates with poor survival in newly diagnosed and relapsed/refractory patients with myeloma.

Heinz Ludwig; Dejan Milosavljevic; Oscar Berlanga; Niklas Zojer; Wolfgang Hübl; Veronique Fritz; Stephen E. Harding

Heavy light chain (HLC) assays allow precise measurement of the monoclonal and of the noninvolved polyclonal immunoglobulins of the same isotype as the M‐protein (e.g., monoclonal IgAκ and polyclonal IgAλ in case of an IgAκ myeloma), which was not possible before. The noninvolved polyclonal immunoglobulin is termed ‘HLC‐matched pair’. We investigated the impact of the suppression of the HLC‐matched pair on outcome in 203 patients with multiple myeloma, a phenomenon that likely reflects the hosts attempt to control the myeloma clone. Severe (>50%) HLC‐matched pair suppression was identified in 54.5% of the 156 newly diagnosed patients and was associated with significantly shorter survival (45.4 vs. 71.9 months, P = 0.019). This correlation was statistically significant in IgG patients (46.4 vs. 105.1 months, P = 0.017), but not in patients with IgA myelomas (32.9 vs. 54.1 months, P = 0.498). At best response, HLC‐matched pair suppression improved only in patients with ≥VGPR, indicating partial or complete humoral immune reconstitution during remission in those with excellent response. Severe HLC‐matched pair suppression retained its prognostic impact also during follow‐up after first response. In the 47 pretreated patients with relapsed/refractory disease, a similar correlation between severe HLC suppression and survival was noted (22.8 vs. not reached, P = 0.028). Suppression of the polyclonal immunoglobulins of the other isotypes than the myeloma protein correlated neither with HLC‐matched pair suppression, nor with outcome. Multivariate analysis identified severe HLC‐matched pair suppression as independent risk factor for shorter survival, highlighting the impact of isotype specific immune dysregulation on outcome in multiple myeloma. Am. J. Hematol. 91:295–301, 2016.


American Journal of Hematology | 2015

Suppression of the non‐involved pair of the myeloma isotype (HLC‐matched pair) correlates with poor survival in newly diagnosed and relapsed/refractory patients with myeloma

Heinz Ludwig; Dejan Milosavljevic; Oscar Berlanga; Niklas Zojer; Wolfgang Hübl; Veronique Fritz; Stephen E. Harding

Heavy light chain (HLC) assays allow precise measurement of the monoclonal and of the noninvolved polyclonal immunoglobulins of the same isotype as the M‐protein (e.g., monoclonal IgAκ and polyclonal IgAλ in case of an IgAκ myeloma), which was not possible before. The noninvolved polyclonal immunoglobulin is termed ‘HLC‐matched pair’. We investigated the impact of the suppression of the HLC‐matched pair on outcome in 203 patients with multiple myeloma, a phenomenon that likely reflects the hosts attempt to control the myeloma clone. Severe (>50%) HLC‐matched pair suppression was identified in 54.5% of the 156 newly diagnosed patients and was associated with significantly shorter survival (45.4 vs. 71.9 months, P = 0.019). This correlation was statistically significant in IgG patients (46.4 vs. 105.1 months, P = 0.017), but not in patients with IgA myelomas (32.9 vs. 54.1 months, P = 0.498). At best response, HLC‐matched pair suppression improved only in patients with ≥VGPR, indicating partial or complete humoral immune reconstitution during remission in those with excellent response. Severe HLC‐matched pair suppression retained its prognostic impact also during follow‐up after first response. In the 47 pretreated patients with relapsed/refractory disease, a similar correlation between severe HLC suppression and survival was noted (22.8 vs. not reached, P = 0.028). Suppression of the polyclonal immunoglobulins of the other isotypes than the myeloma protein correlated neither with HLC‐matched pair suppression, nor with outcome. Multivariate analysis identified severe HLC‐matched pair suppression as independent risk factor for shorter survival, highlighting the impact of isotype specific immune dysregulation on outcome in multiple myeloma. Am. J. Hematol. 91:295–301, 2016.


Thrombosis and Haemostasis | 2012

Vasodilator-stimulated phosphoprotein-phosphorylation assay in patients on clopidogrel: Does standardisation matter?

Matthias K. Freynhofer; Veronika Bruno; Martin Willheim; Wolfgang Hübl; Johann Wojta; Kurt Huber

The vasodilator-stimulated phosphoprotein-phosphorylation (VASP-P) flow-cytometric assay is mainly used in clinical trials to measure thienopyridine effects. However, there are remarkable differences in the reported optimal cut-offs, ranging from 48-61% platelet reactivity index (PRI). We therefore investigated whether a lack of standardisation might explain the differences in the cut-offs. We measured VASP-P in 62 individuals. PRI was calculated using the mean, geometric mean and median fluorescence intensities (FI). Stability of the blood-samples (time-to-assay, 0-2 days) and stability of the processed samples (0-120 minutes) within the recommended time-span were tested. Time-to-assay significantly influenced the PRI (p<0.001): the PRI from mean FI after two days was lower compared to values on day 1 (52 ± 22.9 vs. 57.7 ± 24.1, p<0.001). The PRI from the geometric mean FI after two days was lower compared to day 0 as well as day 1 (51.3 ± 23 vs. 58.2 ± 24.2 and vs. 59.1 ± 23.7, both p<0.001). The PRI from median FI was stable over time (day 0: 59.1 ± 25%, day 1: 59.7 ± 24.1% and day 2: 56.4 ± 23.9%, all p=ns). Furthermore, the lag time of the processed samples significantly altered the PRI (all p<0.001) with a maximum difference for PRI based on geometric mean FI after 90 minutes compared to baseline (Δ=3.92%PRI, p<0.001). The differences in the reported cut-offs might be explained by a lack of standardisation. More precise standardisation is inevitable, as the PRI significantly depends on the method of calculation, the time-to-assay as well as on the lag time after processing. Tolerably stable results were obtained for the PRI from the median FI.


Critical Care Medicine | 1999

Differential expression of tumor necrosis factor receptor subtypes on leukocytes in systemic inflammatory response syndrome.

Wolfgang Hübl; Georg Wolfbauer; Johannes Streicher; Sylvia Andert; Gunther Stanek; Sylvia Fitzal; Peter Michael Bayer

OBJECTIVE To determine the expression of tumor necrosis factor (TNF) receptor in patients with systemic inflammatory response syndrome (SIRS). DESIGN Prospective study. SETTING Intensive care unit and central laboratory. PATIENTS Blood specimens from 18 healthy volunteers (controls) and 16 patients with SIRS. INTERVENTIONS None. MEASUREMENTS AND MAIN RESULTS Using monoclonal antibodies, fluorescence labeling, and high sensitivity flow cytometry, we measured the expression of membrane TNF receptor subtypes TNF-R55 and TNF-R75 on peripheral blood leukocytes. Receptor expression is expressed as mean fluorescence intensity +/- SD (units: detection channel number). In controls, TNF-R55 was only weakly expressed (monocytes: 2.5+/-1.8; neutrophils: 0.7+/-0.8), whereas expression of TNF-R75 was higher (monocytes: 28.6+/-9.0; neutrophils: 4.8+/-1.0) and was also found on lymphocytes (on CD8+ lymphocytes: 5.7+/-1.8; CD16+: 5.5+/-1.2; CD4+: 9.7+/-3.7). In SIRS, we observed increased expression of TNF-R55 on monocytes (6.9+/-3.4, p<.001) and neutrophils (2.2+/-1.9, p<.01), as well as decreased expression of TNF-R75 on monocytes (17.3+/-13.2; p<.001). The extent of TNF-R55 up-regulation did not correlate with that of TNF-R75 down-regulation. TNF-R55 on monocytes and neutrophils strongly correlated with body temperature but not with survival, whereas monocyte TNF-R75 was considerably lower in nonsurvivors, albeit not significantly (12.3+/-7.1 vs. 23.9+/-16.7; p = .07). CONCLUSIONS These data indicate that leukocyte TNF-R55 and TNF-R75 react differentially and probably serve different functions in SIRS, which prompts the investigation of receptor subtype-specific therapeutic approaches.


Vascular | 2008

Effects of enoxaparin and unfractionated heparin on platelet activity and reactivity during carotid endarterectomy.

Afshin Assadian; Christian Senekowitsch; Georg W. Hagmüller; Jaqueline Lax; Wolfgang Hübl

The aim of this study was to determine platelet activity and reactivity and the effects of unfractionated heparin (UFH) and enoxaparin on platelet function during carotid eversion endarterectomy under local anesthesia. Twenty symptomatic patients undergoing carotid endarterectomy were randomly assigned to either 5,000 units of UFH or body weight–adjusted enoxaparin (0.5 mg/kg body weight) as an intraoperative intravenous bolus. The activity of platelets was assessed by measuring the expression of CD62p and CD41 with flow cytometry. Additionally, platelet-leukocyte aggregates (PLAs) were enumerated. The reactivity of platelets was evaluated by measuring the expression of the same antigens after stimulation. In addition, platelet reactivity was also analyzed using a PFA-100 analyzer. A significant increase in platelet activity was observed during surgery for CD41 and CD62p (p  =  .002 and < .001, respectively). The number of PLAs showed no significant changes during surgery. Yet there was a significant difference between patients treated with UFH and patients treated with enoxaparin. No difference for platelet activity or reactivity for patients receiving either UFH or enoxaparin prior to cross-clamping of the carotid arteries was seen. The formation of PLAs after endarterectomy was significantly higher in the UFH group; thus, PLAs are probably a useful surrogate parameter for measuring platelet activity.


Platelets | 2014

Variability of on-treatment platelet reactivity in patients on clopidogrel

Matthias K. Freynhofer; Veronika Bruno; Ivan Brozovic; Rudolf Jarai; Birgit Vogel; Serdar Farhan; Wolfgang Hübl; Martin Willheim; Johann Wojta; Kurt Huber

Abstract Response to clopidogrel therapy is subject to inter-individual variability. However, data with regard to on-treatment platelet reactivity over time in patients undergoing coronary stenting are scarce. For this prospective observational study, 102 consecutive patients on dual antiplatelet therapy undergoing coronary stenting due to stable coronary artery disease (CAD; n = 29), non ST-elevation acute coronary syndrome (NSTE-ACS; n = 45) and ST-elevation myocardial infarction (STEMI; n = 28) were enrolled. Vasodilator-stimulated phosphoprotein-phosphorylation assay was performed at baseline, as well as 1, 3 and 6 months thereafter. Platelet reactivity index (PRI) measured after 1, 3 and 6 months was lower compared to baseline values (p < 0.001). Variables responsible for reduced response to clopidogrel at baseline (reticulated platelet fraction, simvastatin therapy) and during steady-state phase (body mass index, blood glucose concentrations, cholesterol/HDL-ratio and quality of life score) were different. High on-treatment platelet reactivity (HTPR)-phenotype (cut-off = 50% PRI) within the first month changed in 31% of stable CAD, 33% of NSTE-ACS and 39% of STEMI patients, respectively. HTPR-phenotype in the steady-state phase (month 1 to 6) changed in 45% of stable CAD, 33% of NSTE-ACS and 25% of STEMI patients. Response to clopidogrel and accordingly platelet function might vary over time, especially when a cut-off based approach, is used. There was a significant reduction of on-treatment platelet reactivity within the first month after percutaneous coronary intervention with stenting which was maintained for up to 6 months. Variables associated with reduced response to clopidogrel at baseline and during steady-state phase were different, as the latter mainly reflected an unfavorable metabolic profile, comprising elevated BMI, blood glucose levels as well as cholesterol/HDL-ratio.

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Heinz Ludwig

Erasmus University Rotterdam

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Niklas Zojer

University of Southampton

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Kurt Huber

Medical University of Vienna

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Johann Wojta

Medical University of Vienna

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