Bettina Ballardini
European Institute of Oncology
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Featured researches published by Bettina Ballardini.
Annals of Surgical Oncology | 2000
Stefano Zurrida; Viviana Galimberti; Enrico Orvieto; Chris Robertson; Bettina Ballardini; Marta Cremonesi; Concetta De Cicco; Alberto Luini
Background: Sentinel node (SN) biopsy may predict axillary status in breast cancer. We retrospectively analyzed more than 500 SN cases, to suggest more precise indications for the technique.Methods99mTc-labeled colloid was injected close to the tumor; lymphoscintigraphy was then performed to reveal the SN. The next day, during surgery, the SN was removed by using a gamma probe. Complete axillary dissection followed, except in later cases recruited to a randomized trial. The SN was examined intraoperatively by conventional frozen section, in later cases by sampling the entire node and using immunocytochemistry.Results: In the first series, the SN was identified in 98.7% of cases; in 6.7%, the SN was negative but other axillary nodes were positive; in 32.1%, the SN was negative by intraoperative frozen section but metastatic by definitive histology, prompting introduction of the exhaustive method. In the randomized trial, the SN was identified in all cases so far, the false-negative rate is approximately 6.5%, and in 15 cases, internal mammary chain nodes were biopsied.Conclusions: SN biopsy can reliably assess axillary status in selected patients. The problems are the SN detection rate, false negatives, and the intraoperative examination, which can miss 30% of SN metastases. Our exhaustive method overcomes the latter problem, but it is time consuming.
Annals of Surgical Oncology | 2002
Stefano Zurrida; Roberto Orecchia; Viviana Galimberti; Alberto Luini; Irene Giannetti; Bettina Ballardini; Andrea Amadori; Giulia Veronesi; Umberto Veronesi
BackgroundSurgical dissection of the axilla is a standard part of the treatment of breast cancer but, by itself, does not improve prognosis; furthermore, most patients with small-sized breast cancer and a clinically uninvolved axilla never develop axillary metastases. We evaluated disease-free and overall survival in patients with early breast cancer treated by breast-conservation surgery without dissection of acillary lymph nodes, receiving or not receiving axillary radiotherapy (RT).MethodsFrom 1995 to 1998, 435 patients older than 45 years with breast cancer up to 1.2 cm were randomized, 214 to breast conservation without axillary treatment and 221 to breast conservation plus axillary RT.ResultsAfter a follow-up of 28 to 68 months (median, 42 months), two women (1%) in the no axillary treatment group and one (.5%) in the axillary RT group developed axillary metastases. Rates of distant metastases and local treatment failure were also very low, and 5-year overall survival was 99%.ConclusionsAfter a mean of 46 months of follow-up, our results indicate that axillary dissection can be safely avoided in patients with very small invasive carcinomas and a clinically negative axilla. Whether axillary RT should be added can be assessed only by longer follow-up.
Ejso | 2013
Bettina Ballardini; L. Santoro; Claudia Sangalli; Oreste Gentilini; Giuseppe Renne; Germana Lissidini; G Pagani; Antonio Toesca; C. Blundo; A. del Castillo; N. Peradze; Pietro Caldarella; Paolo Veronesi
AIMS The aim of this study was to assess concordance between the indocyanine green (ICG) method and (99m)Tc-radiotracer method to identify the sentinel node (SN) in breast cancer. Evidence supports the feasibility and efficacy of the ICG to identify the SN, however this method has not been prospectively compared with the gold-standard radiotracer method in terms of SN detection rate. METHODS Between June 2011 and January 2013, 134 women with clinically node-negative early breast cancer received subdermal/peritumoral injection of (99m)Tc-labeled tracer for lymphoscintigraphy, followed by intraoperative injection of ICG for fluorescence detection of SNs using an exciting light source combined with a camera. In all patients, SNs were first identified by the fluorescence method (ICG-positive) and removed. A gamma ray-detecting probe was then used to determine whether ICG-positive SNs were hot ((99m)Tc-positive) and to identify and remove any (99m)Tc-positive (ICG-negative) SNs remaining in the axilla. The study was powered to perform an equivalence analysis. RESULTS The 134 patients provided 246 SNs, detected by one or both methods. 1, 2 and 3 SNs, respectively, were detected, removed and examined in 70 (52.2%), 39 (29.1%) and 17 (12.7%) patients; 4-10 SNs were detected and examined in the remaining 8 patients. The two methods were concordant for 230/246 (93.5%) SNs and discordant for 16 (6.5%) SNs. The ICG method detected 99.6% of all SNs. CONCLUSIONS Fluorescent lymphangiography with ICG allows easy identification of axillary SNs, at a frequency not inferior to that of radiotracer, and can be used alone to reliably identify SNs.
The Breast | 2011
Paolo Veronesi; Francesca De Lorenzi; Bettina Ballardini; Francesca Magnoni; Germana Lissidini; Pietro Caldarella; Viviana Galimberti
AIMS There is a general agreement for immediate breast reconstruction in case of in situ tumors, while the reconstruction is often still delayed in cases of invasive cancers or not performed in the elderly cohort. Aim of this review is to investigate the safety of immediate postmastectomy reconstruction for invasive cancers and in the elderly population. METHODS AND RESULTS We reviewed our series and the recent literature on this topic. While there is a general consensus that advanced age is not a contraindication to immediate reconstruction and breast reconstruction can be successfully performed on well-selected elderly patients, many oncologists in Europe do not prefer immediate reconstruction for invasive carcinoma, advocating the risk of delay of the medical adjuvant treatment in case of complications due to the reconstructive procedure. Our experience and a lot of studies suggest that immediate breast reconstruction is a safe and reliable treatment option in case of invasive cancers. However, if postmastectomy irradiation is necessary on the basis of the final pathological finding, this is associated with a high rate of surgical complications and implant loss among patients who underwent immediate reconstruction with prostheses. Moreover, current evidence suggests that postmastectomy radiation therapy also adversely affects autologous tissue reconstruction. CONCLUSIONS Immediate breast reconstruction after mastectomy is an integral part of the complete management of breast cancer. Determining the risk of postmastectomy irradiation prior to definitive resection and reconstructive operations may reduce complications and improve aesthetic outcomes by guiding surgical decision making.
The Breast | 2014
Antonio Toesca; Edoardo Botteri; Matteo Lazzeroni; Jose Vila; Aikaterini Manika; Bettina Ballardini; Francesca Bettarini; Aliana Guerrieri-Gonzaga; Bernardo Bonanni; Nicole Rotmensz; Giuseppe Viale; Paolo Veronesi; Alberto Luini; Umberto Veronesi; Oreste Gentilini
RATIONAL We retrospectively analyzed 232 patients affected by well differentiated ductal intraepithelial neoplasia (DIN1c or DCIS G1) treated with conservative surgery without adjuvant radiotherapy. RESULTS 25 invasive and 18 non-invasive local recurrences were observed (median follow-up 80 months; 5-year cumulative incidence: 12.2%). Seven of the 15 young patients (<40 y) developed local recurrence (2 in situ, 5 invasive). Age <50 (HR 1.89, 95% C.I. 1.01-3.45), multifocality (HR 3.21, 95% C.I. 1.46-7.06), Ki-67 > 7% (HR 2.33, 95% C.I. 1.20-4.55) and surgical margins <10 mm (HR 2.00, 95% C.I. 1.06-3.76) were significantly associated with an increased risk of local recurrence. CONCLUSIONS Young age, multifocality and small margins appeared as clear risk factors of local recurrence in DIN1c (DCIS G1) population. The presence of multiple poor prognostic features warrant a thorough discussion regarding local treatment.
The Breast | 2016
Bettina Ballardini; Marta Cavalli; Giovanni Francesco Manfredi; Claudia Sangalli; Viviana Galimberti; Mattia Intra; Elisabetta Maria Cristina Rossi; Javiera Seco; Giampiero Campanelli; Paolo Veronesi
Breast cancer is the commonest malignancy in women worldwide. The reduced aggressiveness of breast cancer surgery has made it possible treat patients in the day surgery setting. The European Institute of Oncology, Milan, opened its new Day Center in May 2010. From May 2010 to December 2014, 17,087 patients with breast conditions were treated by the Institutes Division of Senology, 4132 (24.2%) of these in the day surgery setting, including malignant and benign conditions; 204 (4.9%) were not discharged on the day of surgery, being converted to inpatients; five (0.1%) patients returned to hospital for persistent hematoma. Our experience of performing breast cancer surgery in the day surgery setting is in line that of the literature. It is safe, but requires a well-organized unit and multidisciplinary medical team to function smoothly, with much attention paid to patient comfort and education, so as to ensure maximum patient acceptance and satisfaction.
Annals of Oncology | 2005
Alberto Luini; Giovanna Gatti; Bettina Ballardini; S. Zurrida; Viviana Galimberti; Paolo Veronesi; Annarita Vento; Simonetta Monti; Giuseppe Viale; Giovanni Paganelli; U. Veronesi
Annals of Surgical Oncology | 2012
Oreste Gentilini; Edoardo Botteri; Paolo Veronesi; Claudia Sangalli; Andres Del Castillo; Bettina Ballardini; Viviana Galimberti; Mario Rietjens; Marco Colleoni; Alberto Luini; Umberto Veronesi
The Breast | 2006
J. Bernier; Giuseppe Viale; Roberto Orecchia; Bettina Ballardini; A. Richetti; L. Bronz; A. Franzetti-Pellanda; Mattia Intra; Umberto Veronesi
Annali Italiani Di Chirurgia | 2017
Giovanni Corso; Chiara Grana; Laura Gilardi; Silvia M. Baio; Daniela De Lorenzo; Patrick Maisonneuve; Nicole Rotmensz; Bettina Ballardini; Germana Lissidini; Silvia Ratini; Fabio Bassi; Paolo Veronesi; Viviana Galimberti