Eric Steiner

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Eric Steiner (born June 28, 1965 in Offenbach am Main ) is a German gynecologist and obstetrician .

Live and act

Steiner studied from 1987 to 1993 at the Johannes Gutenberg University in Mainz . In 1995 he was awarded a doctorate there with the work "Metaphyseal and Epiphyseal Fractures in Childhood" (cum laude), which he had written with Siegfried Hofmann von Kap-herr at the Clinic and Polyclinic for Pediatric Surgery. med. PhD. In 2008 he completed his habilitation at the University of Mainz with the thesis “Prognosis Factors in Endometrial Cancer” with Heinz Kölbl. In 2016 he was appointed associate professor there.

Eric Steiner began his medical practice in 1993 at the Institute for Child and Developmental Pathology at the University of Mainz under the direction of Horst Müntefering. He then worked at the Institute for Pathology at the Mainz University Clinic under the direction of James D. Kirkpatrick. From 1995 to 2000 Eric Steiner completed his specialist training as a gynecologist and obstetrician. In 2002 he completed further training in special obstetrics and perinatal medicine, from 2002 to 2004 the optional further training in special surgical gynecology and from 2004 to 2007 further training in gynecological oncology. From 2003 he was senior physician at the University Women's Clinic in Mainz under the direction of Heinz Kölbl.

Since June 1, 2007, Eric Steiner has been the successor of Lothar Heilmann, Hermann Breinl, and Paul Wardrobe as the fourth chief physician of the gynecological clinic at the GPR Klinikum Rüsselsheim.

Eric Steiner is married and has one child.

Research topics and clinical focus

Eric Steiner has been a member of the Uterus Expert Commission of the Gynecological Oncology Working Group since 1999 and was the deputy spokesman for this group between 2004 and 2006. In 2004 he received the President's Price of the Japan Society for Obstetrics and Gynecology (JSOG). In 2007, Eric Steiner discovered the EDI3 gene together with Jan Hengstler and Jens Sagemüller. This patented key enzyme in the Kennedy cycle is relevant for the prognosis of endometrial cancer diseases and, among other things, regulates the ability of a tumor cell to migrate. Since 2014 he has been deputy head of the S3 guideline on endometrial cancer in the national guideline program . Eric Steiner's clinical focus is on operative gynecology, minimally invasive surgery ( laparoscopy ) and obstetrics. The main focus of research is the understanding of treatment-relevant molecular biological changes in cancer cells, especially in the case of gynecological tumors, health services research in endometrial cancer and modern methods in obstetrics.

Fonts

Eric Steiner is the author of Obstetrics acute with Thomas Hitschold and Heinz Kölbl .

Individual evidence

  1. ^ AGO-Online - Commission uterus
  2. Publication number WO2007068449 A2 PCT / EP2006 / 011953 June 21, 2007
  3. Choline-releasing glycerophosphodiesterase EDI3 drives tumor cell migration and metastasis. Stewart JD, Marchan R, Lesjak MS, Lambert J, Hergenroeder R, Ellis JK, Lau CH, Keun HC, Schmitz G, Schiller J, Eibisch M, Hedberg C, Waldmann H, Lausch E, Tanner B, Sehouli J, Sagemueller J. , Staude H, Steiner E, Hengstler JG. Proc Natl Acad Sci US A. 2012 May 22; 109 (21): 8155-60. doi : 10.1073 / pnas.1117654109 .