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E. Thiel

University Hospital of Zurich

Publishes on Acute Myeloid Leukemia Research, Acute Lymphoblastic Leukemia research, Chronic Lymphocytic Leukemia Research. 206 papers and 3.6k citations.

206Publications
3.6kTotal Citations

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Intestinal Non-Hodgkin’s Lymphoma: A Multicenter Prospective Clinical Study From the German Study Group on Intestinal Non-Hodgkin’s Lymphoma
S Daum, Reiner Ullrich, W. Heise et al.|Journal of Clinical Oncology|2003
Cited by 259

PURPOSE: Intestinal non-Hodgkin's lymphomas are not well characterized. We therefore studied prospectively their clinical features and response to standardized therapy. PATIENTS AND METHODS: Fifty-six patients with primary intestinal lymphoma were included in a prospective, nonrandomized multicenter study. Lymphoma resection was recommended and staging was performed according to the Ann Arbor classification. Patients were scheduled to receive six cycles of cyclophosphamide, doxorubicin, vincristine, and prednisolone (CHOP) chemotherapy, and at stages EIII to EIV, they received additional involved-field radiotherapy. Corticosteroids were used in patients who could not receive chemotherapy. RESULTS: Thirty-five patients had intestinal T-cell lymphoma (ITCL), 21 patients had intestinal B-cell lymphoma (IBCL; 18 diffuse large-cell lymphomas, two marginal-cell lymphomas, and one follicle-center lymphoma). Thirty-four patients at stages EI to EII (14 ITCL and 20 IBCL) and nine patients at stages EIII to EIV (all ITCL) received chemotherapy. No patient in stages EIII to EIV received radiotherapy, because death occurred in 12 of 14 patients. Two-year cumulative survival in patients with IBCL was 94% (95% CI, 82% to 100%) and higher than in patients with ITCL (28% [95% CI, 13% to 43%]; P <.0001), even when only stages EI to EII were considered (ITCL, 37.5% [95% CI, 16.5% to 58.5%]; P <.0001). IBCL patients compared with ITCL patients were at lower lymphoma stages (P <.01), had higher Karnofsky status (P <.005), had intestinal perforation less often (P <.05), required emergency operation less often (P <.05), received CHOP (P <.05) more often, and reached complete remission (P <.0005) more frequently. CONCLUSION: IBCL patients at stages EI and EII respond well to chemotherapy, but the prognosis and treatment of ITCL patients is unsatisfactory.

Successful treatment of cerebral aspergillosis with a novel triazole (voriconazole) in a patient with acute leukaemia
Stefan Schwartz, D. Milatović, E. Thiel|British Journal of Haematology|1997
Cited by 164Open Access

Invasive aspergillosis is an increasing problem in patients with acute leukaemia, bone marrow transplantation, immunosuppression after solid organ transplantation, or acquired immunodeficiency syndrome. Despite available antifungal treatment, the mortality approaches 100% in patients with dissemination of the infection into the central nervous system (CNS). Using a novel triazole, voriconazole, we successfully treated an Aspergillus brain abscess in a patient with acute leukaemia. Drug levels above the minimal fungicidal concentration for Aspergillus species were detected in cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) specimens, and the treatment achieved an objective response.

Effects of Long-Term Intravenous Ibandronate Therapy on Skeletal-Related Events, Survival, and Bone Resorption Markers in Patients With Advanced Multiple Myeloma
Hans D. Menssen, A Sakalová, A Fontana et al.|Journal of Clinical Oncology|2002
Cited by 159

PURPOSE: Bisphosphonates have been found to reduce the incidence of skeletal-related events (SREs) in patients with multiple myeloma. This is the first double-blind, randomized, placebo-controlled study to assess the efficacy of ibandronate, a third-generation amino-bisphosphonate, in preventing SREs in advanced-stage multiple myeloma patients. PATIENTS AND METHODS: Patients with multiple myeloma stage II or III were randomly assigned to receive either ibandronate 2 mg or placebo as a monthly intravenous (IV) bolus injection for 12 to 24 months in addition to conventional chemotherapy. SREs such as peripheral pathologic or vertebral fractures, hypercalcemia, severe bone pain, and bone radiotherapy or surgery were analyzed. Bone-turnover markers were also studied. Finally, post hoc analyses of bone morbidity and survival were performed. RESULTS: Ninety-nine patients per treatment group were assessable for efficacy analysis. The occurrence of SRE per patient year and the time to first SRE were not significantly different between the two treatment groups. In overall evaluation, no differences were found between the treatment groups regarding bone pain, analgesic drug use, quality of life, and median survival (33.1 v 28.2 months, respectively). Explorative post hoc analyses revealed that ibandronate patients with strongly suppressed bone-turnover markers (> or = 30% and > or = 50% mean reduction of serum osteocalcin and urinary C-terminal telopeptides) developed significantly less bone morbidity. Ibandronate was tolerated well during as many as 25 therapy cycles. CONCLUSION: Monthly injections of ibandronate 2 mg IV neither reduced bone morbidity nor prolonged survival in the overall population of stage II/III multiple myeloma patients.

Segmental analysis of Ti-201 stress myocardial scintigraphy.
Cited by 132Open Access

Thallium-201 scintigraphy of the exercised myocardium was performed in 70 male patients admitted for coronary arteriography and left-ventricular angiography. Left ventricular scintigrams were collected in left lateral, left anterior oblique (65 degrees, 45 degrees, and 25 degrees), and anterior views, and the images were divided into eight segments: apical, anteroseptal, anterior, antero-lateral, posterolateral, posterior, inferior, and posteroseptal. A correlative study between segmental hypoperfusion on scintigram and coronary-artery stenosis visualized by contrast artriorgraphy allowed selection of specific segments for each main coronary artery. Hypoactivity in the apical and posterior segments did not appear reliable. Using selected segments, we were able to identify LAD disease in 84%, LCx disease in 49%, and RCA disease in 79% of documented significant stenosis, with specificity of 95%, 89%, and 88%, respectively. Coronary-artery disease could be detected in 95% of patients having more than 50% coronary-artery stenosis, with 93% specificity. In most cases, patients with two-vessels disease and three-vessel disease could not be distinguished from each other. Multiple-vessel disease suggested by segmental analysis of myocardial scinitgrams after exercise was confirmed artriographically in 88% of the patients, but 52% with scintigrams suggesting signle-vessel disease had, in fact, multiple-vessel disease.