Claudia Sangalli
European Institute of Oncology
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Annals of Oncology | 2012
Alessandro Gronchi; Rosalba Miceli; C. Colombo; Silvia Stacchiotti; Paola Collini; L. Mariani; Claudia Sangalli; S. Radaelli; Roberta Sanfilippo; Marco Fiore; Paolo G. Casali
BACKGROUND The purpose of the study was to retrospectively reassess in our institutional series at a longer follow-up the value of a systematic attempt to carry out wide resections in retroperitoneal soft tissue sarcoma. PATIENTS AND METHODS Three hundred and thirty-one consecutive patients surgically treated were analyzed. Since a shift toward a systematic more extended surgical approach took place starting from 2002, patients were divided in two groups according to the time of surgery. Overall survival (OS), crude cumulative incidence of local recurrence (LR) and distant metastases (DMs) were estimated. Cox model multivariate analysis was carried out. RESULTS Five-year OS of patients operated in the recent period was 66%, compared with 48% for those operated in the previous period. This was associated with less LR (28% versus 49%), while the number of DMs was higher in the recent group (25% versus 12%). Beside the treatment period, the only independent determinant for survival was histological grade. CONCLUSIONS The adoption of a policy of more liberal visceral en bloc resections was associated with a higher local control and OS. This benefit was evident in patients with grade I-II tumors, while DMs were a limiting factor in high-grade ones. New therapies are needed to control systemic disease as local surgery may improve local control.
European Journal of Cancer | 2009
Umberto Veronesi; Viviana Galimberti; Giovanni Paganelli; Patrick Maisonneuve; Giuseppe Viale; Roberto Orecchia; Alberto Luini; Mattia Intra; Paolo Veronesi; Pietro Caldarella; Giuseppe Renne; Nicole Rotmensz; Claudia Sangalli; Luciana N. De Brito Lima; Marco Tullii; S. Zurrida
UNLABELLED PREMISES: Sentinel node biopsy (SNB) in patients with breast carcinoma accurately predicts the axillary node status. However, in some 4-7% of patients with negative sentinel nodes, the remaining axillary nodes harbour cancer cells. OBJECTIVE Our purpose was the long-term observation of a large number of patients who did not receive axillary dissection after a negative sentinel node biopsy, in order to evaluate the incidence of overt axillary metastases. METHODS Patients (3548) treated from 1996 to 2004, with negative sentinel nodes not submitted to axillary dissection, were followed up to 11 years with a median follow-up of 48 months. RESULTS Three hundred and sixteen unfavourable events occurred among the 3548 patients, 196 of which (5.5%) related to primary breast carcinoma. Thirty one cases of overt axillary metastases were found (0.9%): they received total axillary dissection and 27 of them are at present alive and well. The 5-year overall survival rate of the whole series was 98%. CONCLUSIONS Patients with negative sentinel node biopsy not submitted to axillary dissection show, at follow-up, a rate of overt axillary metastases lower than expected.
International Journal of Radiation Oncology Biology Physics | 2012
Maria Cristina Leonardi; Patrick Maisonneuve; Mauro G. Mastropasqua; Anna Morra; Roberta Lazzari; Nicole Rotmensz; Claudia Sangalli; Alberto Luini; Umberto Veronesi; Roberto Orecchia
PURPOSE To verify how the classification according to the American Society for Therapeutic Radiation Oncology (ASTRO) consensus statement (CS) for the application of accelerated partial breast irradiation (APBI) fits patients treated with intraoperative radiotherapy with electrons (ELIOT) at a single institution. METHODS AND MATERIALS The study included 1,822 patients treated with ELIOT as the sole radiation modality outside of a clinical trial at the European Institute of Oncology after breast-conserving surgery for invasive breast cancer, who were classified into CS groups of suitable, cautionary, and unsuitable. The outcome in terms of ipsilateral breast recurrence, regional node relapse, distant metastases, progression free-survival, cause-specific survival, and overall survival were assessed. RESULTS All the 1,822 cases except for 25 could be classified according to ASTRO CS: 294 patients met the criteria for inclusion into the suitable group, 691 patients into the cautionary group, and 812 patients into the unsuitable group. The 5-year rate of ipsilateral breast recurrence for suitable, cautionary, and unsuitable groups were 1.5%, 4.4%, and 8.8%, respectively (p = 0.0003). Whereas the regional node relapse showed no difference, the rate of distant metastases was significantly different in the unsuitable group compared with the suitable and cautionary groups, having a significant impact on survival. CONCLUSION In the context of patients treated with ELIOT, the ASTRO guidelines identify well the groups for whom APBI might be considered as an effective alternative to whole breast radiotherapy and also identify groups for whom APBI is not indicated.
International Journal of Radiation Oncology Biology Physics | 2008
Giovanni Battista Ivaldi; Maria Cristina Leonardi; Roberto Orecchia; Dario Zerini; Anna Morra; Viviana Galimberti; Giovanna Gatti; Alberto Luini; Paolo Veronesi; Mario Ciocca; Claudia Sangalli; C. Fodor; Umberto Veronesi
PURPOSE To report the acute and preliminary data on late toxicity of a pilot study of boost with electron intraoperative therapy followed by hypofractionated external beam radiotherapy (HEBRT) of the whole breast. METHODS AND MATERIALS Between June 2004 and March 2007, 211 women with a diagnosis of early-stage breast cancer were treated with breast-conserving surgery. During surgery, an electron intraoperative therapy boost of 12 Gy was administered to the tumor bed. Adjuvant local treatment was completed with HEBRT, consisting of a course of 13 daily fractions of 2.85 Gy to the whole breast to a total dose of 37.05 Gy. Acute toxicity of the breast was evaluated at the end of HEBRT and at 1 month of follow-up. Late toxicity was recorded at 6 and 12 months of follow-up. RESULTS We report the data from 204 patients. The maximal acute skin toxicity was observed at the end of HEBRT (182 patients evaluable) with 7 (3.8%) Grade 3, 52 (28.6%) Grade 2, 123 (67.6%) Grade 1, and no Grade 0 or Grade 4 cases. A total of 108 patients were evaluated for late toxicity. The recorded late skin toxicity was Grade 4 in 1 patient (0.9%), Grade 3 in 1 patient, and Grade 2 or less in 106 patients (98.2%). CONCLUSIONS The results of this study have shown that electron intraoperative therapy followed by HEBRT allows for the delivery of a high dose to the tumor bed and an adequate dose to the whole breast. This treatment is feasible, compliance is high, and the rate of acute toxicity and the preliminary data on chronic toxicity seem acceptable.
Critical Reviews in Oncology Hematology | 2013
Gianluca Spitaleri; Antonio Toesca; Edoardo Botteri; Luca Bottiglieri; Nicole Rotmensz; Sabrina Boselli; Claudia Sangalli; Chiara Catania; Francesca Toffalorio; Cristina Noberasco; Angelo Delmonte; Alberto Luini; Paolo Veronesi; Marco Colleoni; Giuseppe Viale; S. Zurrida; Aron Goldhirsch; Umberto Veronesi; Tommaso De Pas
PURPOSE Complete surgical resection is the standard treatment for localized breast phyllodes tumors. Post-surgical treatments are still a matter of debate. We carried out an overview of the literature to investigate the clinical outcome of patients with phyllodes tumor. A retrospective analysis of mono-institutional series has been included as well. METHODS We reviewed all the retrospective series reported from 1951 until April 2012. We analyzed cases treated at our institution from 1999 to 2010. RESULTS Eighty-three articles (5530 patients; 1956 malignant tumors) were reviewed. Local recurrences were independent of histology. Distant recurrences were more frequent in the malignant tumors (22%). A total of 172 phyllodes tumors were included in the retrospective analysis. DISCUSSION Prognosis of phyllodes tumors is excellent. There are no convincing data to recommend any adjuvant treatment after surgery. Molecular characterization may well provide new clues to permit identification of active treatments for the rare poor prognosis cases.
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.
European Journal of Cancer | 2014
Alessandro Gronchi; Antonino De Paoli; Carla Dani; Domenico Franco Merlo; Vittorio Quagliuolo; Giovanni Grignani; G. Bertola; Piera Navarria; Claudia Sangalli; Angela Buonadonna; Rita De Sanctis; Roberta Sanfilippo; Angelo Paolo Dei Tos; Silvia Stacchiotti; Laura Giorello; Marco Fiore; Paolo Bruzzi; Paolo G. Casali
BACKGROUND To study feasibility, safety and activity of the combination of high-dose long-infusion ifosfamide (HLI) and radiotherapy (RT) as preoperative treatment for resectable localised retroperitoneal sarcoma (RPS). METHODS Patients received three cycles of HLI (14 g/m2). RT was started in combination with second cycle and administered up to a total dose of 50.4 Gy. Surgery was scheduled 4-6 weeks after the end of RT. Primary end-point was 3-year relapse free survival (RFS). The trial is registered with ITASARC_∗II_2004_003. FINDINGS Between December 2003 and 2010, 83 patients were recruited. Main histological subtypes were well differentiated liposarcoma (19/83, 23%), dedifferentiated liposarcoma (26/83, 31%), leiomyosarcoma (14/83, 17%). Median tumour size was 120 mm (interquartile (IQ) range=82-160). The overall preoperative treatment was completed in 60 patients. Chemotherapy (CT) was completed in 65, while RT in 73. Four patients progressed before surgery and were not operated. 79 patients underwent surgery. At a median follow-up of 4.8 years (IQ range = 3-6.1), 23 and 15 patients developed local recurrence (LR) and distant metastases (DM); 30 patients died of disease. 3 and 5-year RFS and overall survival were 0.56 (90% confidence interval (CI): 0.45, 0.65) and 0.44 (90% CI: 0.27, 0.48), and 0.74 (90% CI: 0.62, 0.81) and 0.59 (90% CI: 0.33, 0.58). Crude cumulative incidence of LR and DM at 5 years were 0.37 (standard error (SE): 0.06) and 0.26 (SE: 0.06). INTERPRETATION The combination of preoperative HLI and RT was feasible in two thirds of patients, while preoperative RT could be completed in most (73/83). Although a systemic coverage can be added to RT when this is felt to be appropriate, the ongoing international phase III trial is exploring the role of RT alone. FUNDING This is a pure academic trial. No funding sources contributed to it.
Acta Oncologica | 2012
Hatem A. Azim; Edoardo Botteri; Giuseppe Renne; Patrizia Dell'Orto; Nicole Rotmensz; Oreste Gentilini; Claudia Sangalli; Giancarlo Pruneri; Brunella Di Nubila; Marzia Locatelli; Christos Sotiriou; Martine Piccart; Aron Goldhirsch; Giuseppe Viale; Fedro Peccatori
Abstract Background. Breast cancer during pregnancy (BCP) is relatively rare and is associated with controversies about its biology and prognosis. Hence, we designed a case-control study to examine tumor features and outcome in a series of BCP patients diagnosed and treated in a single institution. Material and methods. We identified 65 patients diagnosed with BCP and for each; we selected two non-pregnant breast cancer patients, who were matched for age, year of surgery, stage, and neoadjuvant chemotherapy. We then compared the differences in pathology, immunohistochemical features (ER, PR, HER2 and ki-67), disease-free (DFS) and overall survival (OS). Results. We did not find any significant differences in tumor characteristics between the two groups. However, at a median follow-up of four years, BCP patients had an inferior DFS (HR 2.3; 95% CI 1.3–4.2), after adjustment for possible confounding covariates. No difference in OS was observed. However, upon restricting the analysis to patients who did not receive neoadjuvant chemotherapy, patients with BCP had inferior OS as well (HR 2.6; 95% CI 1.0–6.5). No association between induction of abortion and prognosis was observed. Conclusions. While we did not observe any differences in tumor features, BCP patients have poorer prognosis compared to age and stage-matched control. Further studies should try to elucidate reasons for such poor outcome.
Annals of Surgical Oncology | 2008
Mattia Intra; Carlos A. Garcia-Etienne; Giuseppe Renne; Giuseppe Trifirò; Nicole Rotmensz; Oreste Gentilini; Viviana Galimberti; Andrea Sagona; Denise Mattar; Claudia Sangalli; Giovanna Gatti; Alberto Luini; Umberto Veronesi
IntroductionSentinel lymph node biopsy is an accepted standard of care for staging the axilla in patients with early-stage breast cancer. Little attention has been placed to the presence of intramammary sentinel lymph nodes (intraMSLNs) on preoperative lymphoscintigraphy.MethodsBetween December 2001 and September 2006, in 9632 breast cancer patients with clinically uninvolved axillary nodes, lymphoscintigraphy was performed at the European Institute of Oncology (EIO). An axillary SLN (axSLN) was identified in 99.4% of cases. An intraMSLN was identified in association with the axillary sentinel lymph node in 22 patients (0.2%). In 15 cases both the axSLN and the intraMSLN were excised.ResultsThe intraMSLN was positive in six patients (micrometastatic in three cases). The axSLNs were negative in all 15 cases. Two patients with positive intraMSLNs and one patient with a negative intraMSLN underwent axillary dissection; all three cases had negative axillary nodes. At a median follow-up of 24 months, no locoregional or systemic recurrences were observed.ConclusionsPositive intraMSLNs can improve disease staging but do not necessarily portend axillary lymph node metastasis. When intraMSLNs and axSLNs are present, we advocate biopsy of both sites and that management of the axilla should rely on axSLN status. In cases with intraMSLNs as the only draining site on lymphoscintigraphy, decisions on axillary management should be made on individualized basis.
Ejso | 2014
Viviana Galimberti; A. Manika; Patrick Maisonneuve; Giovanni Corso; L. Salazar Moltrasio; Mattia Intra; Oreste Gentilini; Paolo Veronesi; Gianmatteo Pagani; E. Rossi; L. Bottiglieri; Giuseppe Viale; Nicole Rotmensz; C. De Cicco; Chiara Grana; Claudia Sangalli; Alberto Luini
AIM It is established that axillary dissection (AD) can be safely avoided in breast cancer patients with a negative sentinel node (SN). In the present study we assessed whether the rate of axillary disease was sufficiently low on long term follow-up to consolidate the policy of AD avoidance. METHODS We retrospectively analysed data on 5262 consecutive primary breast cancer patients with clinically negative axilla and negative SN, treated from 1996 to 2006, who did not receive AD. We used univariate and multivariate analyses to assess the influence of patient and tumour characteristics on first events and survival. The primary endpoint was the development of axillary disease as first event. RESULTS After a median follow-up of 7.0 years (interquartile range 5.4-8.9 years) survival for the series was high (91.3%; 95% CI 90.3-92.3 at 10 years) and only 91 (1.7%) patients developed axillary disease as first event. Axillary disease was significantly more frequent in patients with the following characteristics: <35 years at diagnosis, tumour >1 cm, multifocality/multicentricity, G3, ductal histotype, Ki67 ≥ 30%, peritumoral vascular invasion, luminal B-like subtype, HER2 positivity, mastectomy, and not receiving radiotherapy. CONCLUSION Long-term follow-up of our large series confirms that axillary metastasis is infrequent when AD is omitted in SN-negative breast cancer patients, and has low impact on overall survival.