@article{SchubertJoniauGonteroetal.2012, author = {Schubert, Maria and Joniau, Steven and Gontero, Paolo and Kneitz, Susanne and Scholz, Claus-J{\"u}rgen and Kneitz, Burkhard and Briganti, Alberto and Karnes, R. Jeffery and Tombal, Bertrand and Walz, Jochen and Hsu, Chao-Yu and Marchioro, Giansilvio and Bader, Pia and Bangma, Chris and Frohneberg, Detlef and Graefen, Markus and Schr{\"o}der, Fritz and van Cangh, Paul and van Poppel, Hein and Spahn, Martin}, title = {The Role of Adjuvant Hormonal Treatment after Surgery for Localized High-Risk Prostate Cancer: Results of a Matched Multiinstitutional Analysis}, series = {Advances in Urology}, volume = {2012}, journal = {Advances in Urology}, doi = {10.1155/2012/612707}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-137712}, year = {2012}, abstract = {Introduction. To assess the role of adjuvant androgen deprivation therapy (ADT) in high-risk prostate cancer patients (PCa) after surgery. Materials and Methods. The analysis case matched 172 high-risk PCa patients with positive section margins or non-organ confined disease and negative lymph nodes to receive adjuvant ADT (group 1, n=86 ) or no adjuvant ADT (group 2, n=86). Results. Only 11.6\% of the patients died, 2.3\% PCa related. Estimated 5-10-year clinical progression-free survival was 96.9\% (94.3\%) for group 1 and 73.7\% (67.0\%) for group 2, respectively. Subgroup analysis identified men with T2/T3a tumors at low-risk and T3b margins positive disease at higher risk for progression. Conclusion. Patients with T2/T3a tumors are at low-risk for metastatic disease and cancer-related death and do not need adjuvant ADT. We identified men with T3b margin positive disease at highest risk for clinical progression. These patients benefit from immediate adjuvant ADT.}, language = {en} } @article{KneitzKalogirouSpahnetal.2013, author = {Kneitz, Burkhard and Kalogirou, Charis and Spahn, Martin and Krebs, Markus and Joniau, Steven and Lerut, Evelyne and Burger, Maximilian and Scholz, Claus-J{\"u}rgen and Kneitz, Susanne and Riedmiller, Hubertus}, title = {MiR-205 Is Progressively Down-Regulated in Lymph Node Metastasis but Fails as a Prognostic Biomarker in High-Risk Prostate Cancer}, series = {International Journal of Molecular Sciences}, journal = {International Journal of Molecular Sciences}, doi = {10.3390/ijms141121414}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-97321}, year = {2013}, abstract = {The treatment of high-risk prostate cancer (HRPCa) is a tremendous challenge for uro-oncologists. The identification of predictive moleculobiological markers allowing risk assessment of lymph node metastasis and systemic progression is essential in establishing effective treatment. In the current study, we investigate the prognostic potential of miR-205 in HRPCa study and validation cohorts, setting defined clinical endpoints for both. We demonstrate miR-205 to be significantly down-regulated in over 70\% of the HRPCa samples analysed and that reconstitution of miR-205 causes inhibition of proliferation and invasiveness in prostate cancer (PCa) cell lines. Additionally, miR-205 is increasingly down-regulated in lymph node metastases compared to the primary tumour indicating that miR-205 plays a role in migration of PCa cells from the original location into extraprostatic tissue. Nevertheless, down-regulation of miR-205 in primary PCa was not correlated to the synchronous presence of metastasis and failed to predict the outcome for HRPCa patients. Moreover, we found a tendency for miR-205 up-regulation to correlate with an adverse outcome of PCa patients suggesting a pivotal role of miR-205 in tumourigenesis. Overall, we showed that miR-205 is involved in the development and metastasis of PCa, but failed to work as a useful clinical biomarker in HRPCa. These findings might have implications for the use of miR-205 as a prognostic or therapeutic target in HRPCa.}, language = {en} }