Christian Scheuba |
|
|
|
Medical University of Vienna
·
Universitätsklinik für Chirurgie
|
| a |
| a |
| a |
| a |
35.31
Publications (70) View all
-
Article: German Association of Endocrine Surgeons practice guideline for the surgical management of malignant thyroid tumors.
Henning Dralle, Thomas J Musholt, Jochen Schabram, Thomas Steinmüller, Andreja Frilling, Dietmar Simon, Peter E Goretzki, Bruno Niederle, Christian Scheuba, Thomas Clerici, [......], Andreas Zielke, Wolfram Karges, Markus Luster, Kurt W Schmid, Dirk Vordermark, Hans-Joachim Schmoll, Reinhard Mühlenberg, Otmar Schober, Harald Rimmele, Andreas Machens[show abstract] [hide abstract]
ABSTRACT: INTRODUCTION: Over the past years, the incidence of thyroid cancer has surged not only in Germany but also in other countries of the Western hemisphere. This surge was first and foremost due to an increase of prognostically favorable ("low risk") papillary thyroid microcarcinomas, for which limited surgical procedures are often sufficient without loss of oncological benefit. These developments called for an update of the previous practice guideline to detail the surgical treatment options that are available for the various disease entities and tumor stages. METHODS: The present German Association of Endocrine Surgeons practice guideline was developed on the basis of clinical evidence considering current national and international treatment recommendations through a formal expert consensus process in collaboration with the German Societies of General and Visceral Surgery, Endocrinology, Nuclear Medicine, Pathology, Radiooncology, Oncological Hematology, and a German thyroid cancer patient support organization. RESULTS: The practice guideline for the surgical management of malignant thyroid tumors includes recommendations regarding preoperative workup; classification of locoregional nodes and terminology of surgical procedures; frequency, clinical, and histopathological features of occult and clinically apparent papillary, follicular, poorly differentiated, undifferentiated, and sporadic and hereditary medullary thyroid cancers, thyroid lymphoma and thyroid metastases from primaries outside the thyroid gland; extent of thyroidectomy; extent of lymph node dissection; aerodigestive tract resection; postoperative follow-up and surgery for recurrence and distant metastases. CONCLUSION: These evidence-based recommendations for surgical therapy reflect various "treatment corridors" that are best discussed within multidisciplinary teams and the patient considering tumor type, stage, progression, and inherent surgical risk.Langenbeck s Archives of Surgery 03/2013; · 1.81 Impact Factor -
SourceAvailable from: Andreas Weinhäusel
Dataset: Weinhaeusel 2008 Thyroid 18 2008.0139 highres
Andreas Weinhaeusel, Christian Scheuba, Martin Lauss, Albert Kriegner, Klaus Kaserer, Klemens Vierlinger, Oskar A Haas, Bruno Niederle -
Article: Current trends in surgery for renal hyperparathyroidism (RHPT)-an international survey.
[show abstract] [hide abstract]
ABSTRACT: PURPOSE: The indications and results of preoperative localization, surgical strategy, indication for thymectomy, the application of intraoperative parathyroid hormone (PTH) monitoring, cryopreservation, and replantation of cryopreserved parathyroid tissue are not well documented in renal hyperparathyroidism (RHPT). The current trends in surgery for RHPT are to be evaluated in an international online survey. METHODS: Thirty-three questions regarding preoperative localization, surgical management of RHPT, intraoperative PTH monitoring, immediate/delayed autotransplantation (AT), and parathyroid cryopreservation were sent to members of various societies of endocrine surgeons. RESULTS: The data from 86 responses were analyzed, 61.6 % reported more than 50 parathyroid surgeries per year, and 62.7 % operated on less than 16 patients with RHPT per year. Subtotal or total parathyroidectomy (with/without AT) was the standard procedure in 98.8 % of the cases. Immediate AT was performed in 40.7 % (72.7 % in the forearm). In most patients, the onset of graft function was documented later than 1 week after AT. Cryopreservation was routinely performed in 27.4 %. In 10.7 %, replantation was performed in more than five patients (hypo- or aparathyroidism: n = 41; fresh graft failure: n = 13; reoperations: n = 9). Intraoperative PTH monitoring (in RHPT) was routinely used in 46.2 %. Its influence on surgical strategy was confirmed in 40 %. CONCLUSIONS: The survey reflects the divergent strategies applied for AT, cryopreservation, and PTH monitoring in RHPT.Langenbeck s Archives of Surgery 11/2012; · 1.81 Impact Factor -
Article: High-resolution analysis of alterations in medullary thyroid carcinoma genomes.
Karin Flicker, Peter Ulz, Harald Höger, Petra Zeitlhofer, Oskar A Haas, Annemarie Behmel, Wolfgang Buchinger, Christian Scheuba, Bruno Niederle, Roswitha Pfragner, Michael R Speicher[show abstract] [hide abstract]
ABSTRACT: Hereditary and sporadic medullary thyroid carcinoma (MTC) are closely associated with RET proto-oncogene mutations. However, the role of additional changes in the tumor genomes remains unclear. Our objective was the identification of chromosomal regions involved in MTC tumorigenesis and to assess their significance by using MTC-derived cell lines. We used array-CGH (comparative genomic hybridization) to map chromosomal imbalances in 52 primary tumors and ten metastases. Eleven tumors (11/52, 21%) were hereditary and 41 (41/52, 79%) were sporadic. Among the latter, 15 tumors (15/41, 37%) harbored RET mutations. Furthermore, we characterized five MTC cell lines in detail and evaluated the tumorigenicity by severe combined immunodeficiency (SCID)-mouse experiments. Most MTCs had only few copy number changes, and losses of chromosomes 1p, 4q, 19p and 22q were observed most frequently. The number of chromosomal aberrations increased in metastases. Twenty-three percent (12/52) of the primary tumors did not even show any chromosomal gains and losses. We injected three cell lines (two of these were without chromosomal changes and pathogenic RET mutations) into immune deficient SCID mice, and in each case, we observed rapid tumor growth at the injection sites. Our data suggest that MTCs--in contrast to most other tumor entities--do not acquire a multitude of genomic imbalances. SCID mouse experiments performed with chromosomally normal cell lines and without RET mutations suggest that presently unknown submicroscopic genomic changes are sufficient in MTC tumorigenesis.International Journal of Cancer 10/2011; 131(2):E66-73. · 5.44 Impact Factor -
Article: German Association of Endocrine Surgeons practice guidelines for the surgical treatment of benign thyroid disease.
Thomas J Musholt, Thomas Clerici, Henning Dralle, Andreja Frilling, Peter E Goretzki, Michael M Hermann, Jochen Kussmann, Kerstin Lorenz, Christoph Nies, Jochen Schabram, [......], Christian Scheuba, Dietmar Simon, Thomas Steinmüller, Arnold W Trupka, Robert A Wahl, Andreas Zielke, Andreas Bockisch, Wolfram Karges, Markus Luster, Kurt W Schmid[show abstract] [hide abstract]
ABSTRACT: Benign thyroid disorders are among the most common diseases in Germany, affecting around 15 million people and leading to more than 100,000 thyroid surgeries per year. Since the first German guidelines for the surgical treatment of benign goiter were published in 1998, abundant new information has become available, significantly shifting surgical strategy towards more radical interventions. Additionally, minimally invasive techniques have been developed and gained wide usage. These circumstances demanded a revision of the guidelines. Based on a review of relevant recent guidelines from other groups and additional literature, unpublished data, and clinical experience, the German Association of Endocrine Surgeons formulated new recommendations on the surgical treatment of benign thyroid diseases. These guidelines were developed through a formal expert consensus process and in collaboration with the German societies of Nuclear Medicine, Endocrinology, Pathology, and Phoniatrics & Pedaudiology as well as two patient organizations. Consensus was achieved through several moderated conferences of surgical experts and representatives of the collaborating medical societies and patient organizations. The revised guidelines for the surgical treatment of benign thyroid diseases include recommendations regarding the preoperative assessment necessary to determine when surgery is indicated. Recommendations regarding the extent of resection, surgical techniques, and perioperative management are also given in order to optimize patient outcomes. Evidence-based recommendations for the surgical treatment of benign thyroid diseases have been created to aid the surgeon and to support optimal patient care, based on current knowledge. These recommendations comply with the Association of the Scientific Medical Societies in Germany requirements for S2k guidelines.Langenbeck s Archives of Surgery 03/2011; 396(5):639-49. · 1.81 Impact Factor