Bruno Salvadori
University of Milan
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Featured researches published by Bruno Salvadori.
The New England Journal of Medicine | 1993
Umberto Veronesi; Alberto Luini; M. Del Vecchio; Marco Greco; Viviana Galimberti; M. Merson; Franco Rilke; Virgilio Sacchini; Roberto Saccozzi; T. Savio; Roberto Zucali; S. Zurrida; Bruno Salvadori
BACKGROUND AND METHODS Conservative surgery and radiotherapy have become well-established treatments for breast cancer, and many trials in progress are attempting to define the most acceptable type of procedure. Between 1987 and 1989 we randomly assigned 567 women with small breast cancers (< 2.5 cm in diameter) to quadrantectomy followed by radiotherapy or to quadrantectomy without radiotherapy. All patients underwent total axillary dissection. The median follow-up period was 39 months (range, 28 to 54). RESULTS The incidence of local recurrence was 8.8 percent among the patients treated with quadrantectomy without radiotherapy, as compared with 0.3 percent among those treated with postsurgical radiotherapy (P = 0.001). However, there was a substantial effect of age: patients more than 55 years old who did not receive radiotherapy had a low rate of local recurrence (3.8 percent). The four-year overall survival was similar in the two treatment groups. CONCLUSIONS Administering radiotherapy after quadrantectomy reduces the risk of local recurrence in women with small cancers of the breast, but radiotherapy may not be necessary in elderly women.
European Journal of Cancer and Clinical Oncology | 1990
Umberto Veronesi; Alberto Banfi; Bruno Salvadori; Alberto Luini; Roberto Saccozzi; Roberto Zucali; Ettore Marubini; Marcella Del Vecchio; Patrizia Boracchi; Silvana Marchini; M. Merson; Virgilio Sacchini; Gianluca Riboldi; Giuseppe Santoro
From 1973 to 1980, 701 women with small breast cancer (less than 2 cm in diameter) were randomized into two different treatments. 349 patients received classic Halsted mastectomy and 352 patients received quadrantectomy, axillary dissection and radiotherapy on the ipsilateral breast. 24.6% of the patients in the mastectomy group and 27.0% of the patients in the conservation group had axillary metastases. Overall 10 year survival was 76% in the Halsted patients and 79% in the quadrantectomy patients; 13 year survival was 69% and 71%, respectively. No differences were observed after analysis by site and size of the primary tumour and age of the patients. Patients with positive axillary nodes had consistently better survival curves in the quadrantectomy group compared with the Halsted group (not significant). Among the quadrantectomy patients there were 11 local recurrences (with 4 deaths) while among the Halsted patients, 7 had local recurrences (5 deaths). There were 19 cases of contralateral breast carcinomas in the quadrantectomy group and 20 in the Halsted group. At 16 years from the beginning of the trial no evidence of oncogenic radiation risk was observed. In patients with small size carcinomas total mastectomy should have no role.
European Journal of Cancer | 1995
U. Veronesi; Bruno Salvadori; Alberto Luini; Marco Greco; Roberto Saccozzi; M. Del Vecchio; Luigi Mariani; S. Zurrida; Franco Rilke
Breast conservation has become well-established in the treatment of early mammary carcinoma. However, a standardised treatment modality has not emerged. We have analysed the data from 1,973 patients treated in three consecutive randomised trials by four different radiosurgical procedures: Halsted mastectomy, quadrantectomy plus radiotherapy, lumpectomy plus radiotherapy, and quadrantectomy without radiotherapy, to compare the outcomes of these procedures in terms of local recurrence rate and overall survival. Eligibility criteria were similar in the three trials, and comparability between the four subgroups was excellent. Median follow-up for all patients was 82 months. The annual rates of local recurrence varied markedly according to the treatment. Patients treated with Halsted mastectomy and quadrantectomy plus radiotherapy had low annual rates of local recurrence (0.20 and 0.46, respectively) while both lumpectomy plus radiotherapy and quadrantectomy without radiotherapy had significantly higher rates (2.45 and 3.28, respectively). Patients under 45 years of age had a much higher incidence of local recurrences, while in women over 55 years local recurrences were much less frequent. Overall survival curves were identical in the four groups of patients, so that the three breast conserving radiosurgical procedures had the same survival rates as Halsted mastectomy. However, local recurrence rates were markedly influenced by the treatment method, patient age and specific histological features.
European Journal of Cancer and Clinical Oncology | 1990
Umberto Veronesi; Fabio Volterrani; Alberto Luini; Roberto Saccozzi; Marcella Del Vecchio; Roberto Zucali; Viviana Galimberti; Alessandro Rasponi; Emanuela Di Re; Paolo Squicciarini; Bruno Salvadori
Between 1985 and 1987 quadrantectomy plus external radiotherapy and lumpectomy plus external and interstitial radiotherapy were compared in a randomized trial of patients with small carcinomas of the breast. Quadrantectomy involves excision of 2-3 cm of normal tissue around the tumour plus the removal of a sufficiently large portion of overlying skin and underlying fascia whilst lumpectomy removes only the tumour mass with a narrow margin of normal tissue. Patients in both groups also received total axillary dissection. 705 cases were evaluable, 360 quadrantectomies and 345 lumpectomies. No differences in distant metastases and survival were observed in the two groups. However, lumpectomy patients had a much higher frequency of local recurrences (7.0 vs. 2.2%). Since a local recurrence needs a second operation and creates severe psychological distress to the patient, conservative surgical procedures should include generous excision of normal tissue around the primary carcinoma plus intensive postoperative radiotherapy.
Cancer | 1989
Bruno Salvadori; Fabio Cusumano; Romualdo Del Bo; Vincenzo Delledonne; Massimo Grassi; Dario Rovini; Roberto Saccozzi; Salvatore Andreola; Claudio Clemente
Eighty‐one female patients with phyllodes tumors of the breast, surgically treated from 1974 to 1983, were studied. Their age ranged from 9 to 88 years. According to histology, the series was divided into three groups, of 28 (34.5%) benign tumors, 32 (39.5%) border‐line tumors, and 21 (25.9%) malignant tumors. Because ten patients were lost to follow‐up, only 71 women could be evaluated. All the patients had received surgical treatment: 51 women had been treated conservatively (11 enucleations, 40 wide resections), and 20 had undergone radical operations (13 underwent total and five underwent subcutaneous mastectomies, whereas one underwent modified and one underwent radical mastectomy). The mean follow‐up, for the three groups, was 106 months for benign, 84 months for borderline, and 82 months for malignant tumors; in no case was radical surgery followed by local recurrence: of 51 women conservatively treated, 14 experienced local relapse, i.e., one of 24 women with benign, ten of 22 with borderline, and three of 8 with malignant lesions. Only two of 47 patients (4.2%) with borderline or malignant tumors developed distant metastasis and died from disease. No relationship between tumor size and risk of local recurrence could be demonstrated, and no difference could be identified between borderline and malignant lesions, in terms both of local and distant relapse. Local recurrences do not appear to affect survival: as a consequence, wide resection should be the primary treatment. Enucleation is to be proscribed. Total mastectomy has been indicated for very large tumors and for local recurrences of borderline and malignant lesions. Axillary dissection is not worthwhile.
Journal of Clinical Oncology | 1996
Rosella Silvestrini; E Benini; Silvia Veneroni; Maria Grazia Daidone; Gorana Tomasic; P Squicciarini; Bruno Salvadori
BACKGROUND AND PURPOSE The tumor-suppressor gene TP53 and the proto-oncogene bcl-2 encode, respectively, for a nuclear phosphoprotein and for a mitochondrial protein involved in multiple cellular functions. The proteins provide prognostic information in node-negative breast cancer and are supposed to influence treatment responsiveness. We analyzed the predictive role of p53 and bcl-2 expression, alone and in association with other variables, in postmenopausal women with node-positive, estrogen receptor-positive (ER+) breast cancers treated with radical or conservative surgery plus radiotherapy and adjuvant tamoxifen for at least 1 year. PATIENTS AND METHODS On 240 resectable cancers, we determined the expression of p53 and bcl-2, using immunohistochemistry, cell proliferation (3H-thymidine labeling index [3H-dT LI]), and ER and progesterone receptors (PgR). RESULTS p53 expression and 3H-dT LI were weakly related to one another and both were unrelated to bcl-2. Relapse-free and distant metastasis-free survival at 5 years were significantly lower for patients with tumors that highly expressed p53 (P = .0001) and for those that weakly expressed or did not express bcl-2 (P = .02). However, p53, but not bcl-2, provided prognostic information independent of tumor size, axillary node involvement, steroid receptors, and 3H-dT LI. Moreover, the simultaneous p53 overexpression and lack of PgR identified patients at maximum risk of relapse, whereas bcl-2 overexpression, associated with a low 3H-dT LI or the presence of PgR, improved the prognostic resolution for low-risk patients. CONCLUSION p53 expression appears to be indicative of clinical outcome in postmenopausal patients treated with tamoxifen. Whether p53 overexpression and weak bcl-2 expression are indicators of biologic aggressiveness, regardless of treatment, or of hormone resistance remains to be defined.
European Journal of Cancer | 1994
Bruno Salvadori; R. Saccozzi; A. Manzari; S. Andreola; R.A. Conti; Fabio Cusumano; Massimo Grassi
A statistical analysis was performed on a series of 170 consecutive cases of operable (M0) breast cancer in males. All the patients underwent surgery. The end-points considered were: (i) overall mortality, (ii) all neoplastic events and deaths without evidence of breast disease (first event). Five- and ten-year overall mortalities were 26.9 and 54.3%, respectively. A multiple regression analysis showed that tumour size and nodal status (pT and pN) were statistically significant as prognostic factors. With regard to first events, 12 local recurrences (thoracic wall), one nodal relapse in the axilla and one contralateral tumour were observed. Primary tumours, other than breast cancer, occurred in 11 patients. The observed probability of surviving at 10 years from the treatment was definitely lower than that of the general population. For the follow-up periods of 0-5 and 6-10 years, the excess death rate per 100 man-years was 9.98 and 13.43, respectively. It appears from the analysis that prognosis of breast cancer is worse in men than in women.
Cancer | 1988
Giuliana Porro; Sylvie Ménard; Elda Tagliabue; Sergio Orefice; Bruno Salvadori; Paolo Squicciarini; Salvatore Andreola; Franco Rilke; Maria I. Colnaghi
The possibility of using immunologic methods for detecting metastatic cells in bone marrow samples from breast cancer patients was investigated. The MBr1 monoclonal antibody, which recognizes a membrane antigen on breast carcinoma cells and is unreactive on normal bone marrow cells, seemed to be an adequate reagent for this kind of approach. When human leukocyte suspensions artificially contaminated with mammary tumor cells were tested by MBr1 immunofluorescence, it was demonstrated that the added tumor cells could be specifically discriminated from normal cells and that as little as one tumor cell in 200,000 could be detected. With the same methodology we screened bone marrow biopsies from breast cancer patients with apparently uninvolved lymph nodes at the moment of surgery. Immunoreactive tumor cells were detected by the MBr1 antibody in 17% of N‐ patients. None of the bone marrow samples showed any evidence of tumor involvement by conventional histologic analysis.
Journal of Clinical Oncology | 1995
Rosella Silvestrini; Maria Grazia Daidone; A. Luisi; Patrizia Boracchi; Maura Mezzetti; G Di Fronzo; Salvatore Andreola; Bruno Salvadori; Umberto Veronesi
PURPOSE AND METHODS We evaluated, in 1,800 patients with node-negative tumors treated with locoregional therapy until relapse, the competitive risks for different types of metastasis by cell proliferation (3H-thymidine labeling index [3H-dT LI]), estrogen receptors (ERs), and progesterone receptors (PgRs), and by the integration of biologic and clinicopathologic information. RESULTS Hormone receptor status and proliferative activity of the primary tumor were not indicative of contralateral failures. Hormone receptors failed to predict the 8-year incidence of locoregional recurrence, but they were significant indicators of distant metastasis and overall survival. The latter finding was confirmed even in multivariate analysis. Conversely, cell proliferation predicted both locoregional and distant metastases and survival, regardless of patient age, tumor size, and ER and PgR status. Recursive partitioning and amalgamation analysis ascribed to cell proliferation an important prognostic role for locoregional recurrence together with patient age and tumor size. CONCLUSION Biologic markers, in particular cell proliferation, provide information for the different types of relapse and could complement the predictive role of pathologic staging.
European Journal of Cancer and Clinical Oncology | 1990
Bruno Salvadori; Paolo Squicciarini; Dario Rovini; Sergio Orefice; Salvatore Andreola; Franco Rilke; Lucilla Barletta; Sylvie Ménard; Maria I. Colnaghi
Bone marrow specimens obtained from 121 breast cancer patients immediately after surgery were examined by an immunofluorescence method with monoclonal antibody MBr1 to detect tumour cells undetectable by other diagnostic procedures. 80 women were node-negative and 41 node-positive. In no case could conventional histology demonstrate tumour cells, whereas MBr1 was positive in 20 (16.5%) of the 121 cases. No difference was observed in MBr1 positivity between node-negative and node-positive cases (17% vs. 15%). With regard to clinical outcome (median follow-up 48 months) 27 women relapsed, including 6 of 20 MBr1-positive and 24 of 101 MBr1-negative patients. First distant metastases or death from progression of disease were taken as end-points. Multivariate analysis showed that the additional contribution of MBr1 positivity, after making allowance for other prognostic factors, was negligible.
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