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Dive into the research topics where Elena De Ponti is active.

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Featured researches published by Elena De Ponti.


Gynecologic Oncology | 2012

18F-FDG PET/CT can predict nodal metastases but not recurrence in early stage uterine cervical cancer

Cinzia Crivellaro; Mauro Signorelli; Luca Guerra; Elena De Ponti; Alessandro Buda; Carlotta Dolci; Cecilia Pirovano; Sergio Todde; Robert Fruscio; Cristina Messa

OBJECTIVES To evaluate the role of the metabolic characteristics of cervical tumor uptake as predictors of a) lymph node (LN) metastases, b) recurrence, in the preoperative staging of early-stage cervical cancer. METHODS 89 patients with FIGO stage IB1 and IIA<4 cm cervical cancer were imaged with FDG-PET/CT before radical hysterectomy and pelvic lymphadenectomy. PET/CT images were analyzed and correlated to histological findings. Maximum and mean standardized uptake value (SUVmax, SUVmean), metabolic tumor volume (MTV), total lesion glycolysis (TLG) of cervical lesions were calculated by an iterative adaptive algorithm. These parameters were correlated to the presence of: a) LN metastases, b) relapse after primary treatment. RESULTS Out of the 89 patients who underwent preoperative PET/CT scan for staging purpose, 16 were negative at cervical level: they were all pN0 and without recurrence during follow-up (mean 34.1±14.5 months). In 69 patients MTV and TLG were significantly higher (p=0.0006 and p=0.03) in pN1 patients in comparison to pN0 patients, while SUV values did not show significant differences between the two groups. No significant correlations were found between SUVmax, SUVmean, MTV, TLG and the evidence of relapse (mean follow-up 29.2±15.5 months). CONCLUSIONS In early-stage cervical cancer MTV and TLG correlate with the presence of nodal metastases, but their clinical impact on patients management has to be clarified. The absence of pathological cervical uptake could be a good prognostic factor, while SUVmax, SUVmean, MTV, TLG of the cervical uptake have not been found predictors of recurrence.


Gynecologic Oncology | 2013

Tailoring systematic lymphadenectomy in high-risk clinical early stage endometrial cancer: The role of 18F-FDG PET/CT

Cinzia Crivellaro; Mauro Signorelli; Luca Guerra; Elena De Ponti; Cecilia Pirovano; Robert Fruscio; Federica Elisei; Luca Montanelli; Alessandro Buda; Cristina Messa

OBJECTIVES To evaluate the role of FDG PET/CT in the preoperative N-staging of high-risk clinical stage I endometrial cancer. The correlation between the metabolic characteristics of endometrial tumor uptake as predictors of a) lymph-node (LN) metastases and b) recurrence, was also evaluated. METHODS Seventy-six high-risk (G2 with deep myometrial invasion, G3, serous/clear-cell carcinoma) clinical stage I endometrial cancer patients underwent preoperative PET/CT scan followed by total hysterectomy, bilateral salpingo-oophorectomy and lymphadenectomy. PET/CT images were analyzed and correlated to histological findings. Maximal and mean standardized uptake value (SUVmax, SUVmean), metabolic tumor volume (MTV), total lesion glycolysis (TLG, defined as the product between SUVmean and MTV) of endometrial lesions were calculated and correlated to: a) presence of LN metastases, b) recurrences. RESULTS PET/CT resulted positive at LNs in 12/76 patients: 11/12 truly positive, 1/12 falsely positive. Conversely PET/CT was negative in 64/76 patients: 61/64 truly negative and 3/64 falsely negative. On pt-based analysis, sensitivity, specificity, accuracy, positive and negative predictive value of PET/CT in detecting LN metastases were 78.6%, 98.4%, 94.7%, 91.7%, 95.3%, respectively. A significant association was found between the presence of LN metastases and SUVmax (p=0.038), MTV (p=0.007), TLG (p=0.003) of the primary tumor. No correlations were found between the metabolic parameters and relapse (median follow-up 25.4months). CONCLUSIONS In high-risk clinical stage I endometrial cancer FDG PET/CT demonstrated moderate sensitivity, high specificity and accuracy for the nodal status assessment. SUVmax, MTV and TLG of the primary tumor are significantly correlated to LN metastases, while none of these parameters is predictor of recurrence.


Annals of Surgical Oncology | 2016

From Conventional Radiotracer Tc-99 m with Blue Dye to Indocyanine Green Fluorescence: A Comparison of Methods Towards Optimization of Sentinel Lymph Node Mapping in Early Stage Cervical Cancer for a Laparoscopic Approach

Alessandro Buda; Andrea Papadia; Ignacio Zapardiel; Enrico Vizza; Fabio Ghezzi; Elena De Ponti; A. Lissoni; Sara Imboden; Maria Dolores Diestro; Debora Verri; Maria Luisa Gasparri; Beatrice Bussi; Giampaolo Di Martino; Begoña Diaz de la Noval; Michael D. Mueller; Cinzia Crivellaro

AbstractBackground The credibility of sentinel lymph node (SLN) mapping is becoming increasingly more established in cervical cancer. We aimed to assess the sensitivity of SLN biopsy in terms of detection rate and bilateral mapping in women with cervical cancer by comparing technetium-99 radiocolloid (Tc-99m) and blue dye (BD) versus fluorescence mapping with indocyanine green (ICG).MethodsData of patients with cervical cancer stage 1A2 to 1B1 from 5 European institutions were retrospectively reviewed. All centers used a laparoscopic approach with the same intracervical dye injection. Detection rate and bilateral mapping of ICG were compared, respectively, with results obtained by standard Tc-99m with BD.ResultsOverall, 76 (53 %) of 144 of women underwent preoperative SLN mapping with radiotracer and intraoperative BD, whereas 68 of (47 %) 144 patients underwent mapping using intraoperative ICG. The detection rate of SLN mapping was 96 % and 100 % for Tc-99m with BD and ICG, respectively. Bilateral mapping was achieved in 98.5 % for ICG and 76.3 % for Tc-99m with BD; this difference was statistically significant (p < 0.0001).ConclusionsThe fluorescence SLN mapping with ICG achieved a significantly higher detection rate and bilateral mapping compared to standard radiocolloid and BD technique in women with early stage cervical cancer. Nodal staging with an intracervical injection of ICG is accurate, safe, and reproducible in patients with cervical cancer. Before replacing lymphadenectomy completely, the additional value of fluorescence SLN mapping on both perioperative morbidity and survival should be explored and confirmed by ongoing controlled trials.


Gynecologic Oncology | 2014

Adjuvant chemotherapy in stage I–II uterine leiomyosarcoma: A multicentric retrospective study of 140 patients

Rosanna Mancari; Mauro Signorelli; Angiolo Gadducci; Silvestro Carinelli; Elena De Ponti; Silvia Sesana; Silvia Corso; Valentina Chiappa; Nicoletta Colombo; Andrea Lissoni

OBJECTIVE About 50-60% of patients with stage I-II uterine leiomyosarcoma (ULMS), primarily treated with surgery, relapse and die from progressive disease. In this retrospective study we describe the impact of adjuvant chemotherapy in this subset of patients. METHODS 140 women treated from 1976 to 2011 were included in the study. Univariate and multivariate analysis were used to test the association of clinical features and adjuvant treatments with overall survival (OS) and disease-free survival (DFS). RESULTS 62 women did not receive any further treatment after hysterectomy, 14 had radiotherapy (RT), 52 chemotherapy and 12 chemo-radiotherapy. Chemotherapy based on doxorubicin and ifosfamide combination was used in 54 cases. After a median follow-up of 63months, 87 women (62%) have relapsed, and 62 (44%) have died. The vast majority of patients who relapsed had distant recurrences (72%). The 5year median DFS and OS were 43% and 64% respectively. After 5years of follow up 68.7% of women treated with chemotherapy (±RT) vs 65.6% of patients only observed were alive (p=0.521). In the univariate analysis no factors had a statistical impact on DFS, while number of mitosis (>20×10HPF), age (>60years) and adjuvant radiotherapy were found as negative prognostic factors for OS. In the multivariate analysis only mitosis and age remained significant for OS. CONCLUSION Adjuvant chemotherapy was not associated with a significant survival benefit and should not be considered as standard of care for patients with stage I-II ULMS until randomized clinical studies will give further information.


Gynecologic Oncology | 2017

The impact on survival of two different staging strategies in apparent early stage endometrial cancer comparing sentinel lymph nodes mapping algorithm and selective lymphadenectomy: An Italian retrospective analysis of two reference centers

Alessandro Buda; Giampaolo Di Martino; Stefano Restaino; Elena De Ponti; Giorgia Monterossi; Daniela Giuliani; Alfredo Ercoli; Federica Dell'Orto; Giorgia Dinoi; Tommaso Grassi; Giovanni Scambia; Francesco Fanfani

OBJECTIVE The role of lymphadenectomy in endometrial cancer is still uncertain. We aimed to evaluate the survival outcomes of two different strategies in apparent uterine confined disease by comparing sentinel lymph node (SLN) mapping and selective lymphadenectomy (LD). METHODS We retrospectively reviewed women with preoperative stage I endometrial cancer underwent surgical staging with either SLN mapping, or LD in two Italian centers. RESULTS Eight hundred and two women underwent surgical staging for preoperative stage I endometrial cancer were revised (145 Monza; 657 Rome). All patients underwent peritoneal washing, simple hysterectomy with bilateral salpingo-oophorectomy and nodal staging including SLN mapping, or LD. Overall 8229 lymph nodes were removed (1595 in Monza, 6634 in Rome). Pelvic lymphadenectomy was performed in 33.1% and 52.4% in Monza and Rome, respectively (p<0.001). Patients with positive pelvic LN were 16.7% and 7.3%, in SLN and LD groups, respectively (p=0.002). Disease-free survival (DFS) curves did not showed a statistically significant difference between centers and strategies adopted (SLN mapping, LD, SLN+LD) with a HR of 0.87 (95% CI 0.63-2.16; p=0.475). CONCLUSIONS Survival outcomes were similar for both strategies. The SLN strategy allowed to identify a higher rate of stage IIIC1 disease even with a lower median number of lymph node removed in SLN group. Applying a SLN algorithm does not impair the prognosis of endometrial cancer patients. The clinical impact and management of low volume metastasis in high-risk patients should be further clarify.


World Journal of Radiology | 2015

Combined value of apparent diffusion coefficient-standardized uptake value max in evaluation of post-treated locally advanced rectal cancer

Davide Ippolito; Davide Fior; Chiara Trattenero; Elena De Ponti; Silvia Girolama Drago; Luca Guerra; Cammillo Talei Franzesi; Sandro Sironi

AIM To assess the clinical diagnostic value of functional imaging, combining quantitative parameters of apparent diffusion coefficient (ADC) and standardized uptake value (SUV)max, before and after chemo-radiation therapy, in prediction of tumor response of patients with rectal cancer, related to tumor regression grade at histology. METHODS A total of 31 patients with biopsy proven diagnosis of rectal carcinoma were enrolled in our study. All patients underwent a whole body (18)FDG positron emission tomography (PET)/computed tomography (CT) scan and a pelvic magnetic resonance (MR) examination including diffusion weighted (DW) imaging for staging (PET1, RM1) and after completion (6.6 wk) of neoadjuvant treatment (PET2, RM2). Subsequently all patients underwent total mesorectal excision and the histological results were compared with imaging findings. The MR scanning, performed on 1.5 T magnet (Philips, Achieva), included T2-weighted multiplanar imaging and in addition DW images with b-value of 0 and 1000 mm²/s. On PET/CT the SUVmax of the rectal lesion were calculated in PET1 and PET2. The percentage decrease of SUVmax (ΔSUV) and ADC (ΔADC) values from baseline to presurgical scan were assessed and correlated with pathologic response classified as tumor regression grade (Mandards criteria; TRG1 = complete regression, TRG5 = no regression). RESULTS After completion of therapy, all the patients were submitted to surgery. According to the Mandards criteria, 22 tumors showed complete (TRG1) or subtotal regression (TRG2) and were classified as responders; 9 tumors were classified as non responders (TRG3, 4 and 5). Considering all patients the mean values of SUVmax in PET 1 was higher than the mean value of SUVmax in PET 2 (P < 0.001), whereas the mean ADC values was lower in RM1 than RM2 (P < 0.001), with a ΔSUV and ΔADC respectively of 60.2% and 66.8%. The best predictors for TRG response were SUV2 (threshold of 4.4) and ADC2 (1.29 × 10(-3) mm(2)/s) with high sensitivity and specificity. Combining in a single analysis both the obtained median value, the positive predictive value, in predicting the different group category response in related to TRG system, presented R(2) of 0.95. CONCLUSION The functional imaging combining ADC and SUVmax in a single analysis permits to detect changes in cellular tissue structures useful for the assessment of tumour response after the neoadjuvant therapy in rectal cancer, increasing the sensitivity in correct depiction of treatment response than either method alone.


Journal of Minimally Invasive Gynecology | 2018

Laparoscopic Sentinel Node Mapping in Cervical and Endometrial Malignancies: A Case-Control Study Comparing Two Near-Infrared Fluorescence Systems

Alessandro Buda; Giampaolo Di Martino; Elena De Ponti; Paolo Passoni; Federica Sina; Claudio Reato; Francesca Vecchione; Daniela Giuliani

STUDY OBJECTIVE The goal of this study was to evaluate the intraoperative and perioperative surgical outcomes of 2 different florescence systems commonly used for sentinel lymph node (SLN) mapping in women with early-stage cervical cancer or endometrial cancer. DESIGN Case-control study (Canadian Task Force classification II-2). SETTING The Gynecology Oncology Surgical Unit of the San Gerardo Hospital, Italy. PATIENTS Thirty-four consecutive women with early stage-cervical cancer (stage IA-1B1) or apparent confined stage I endometrial cancer were included in the study. INTERVENTIONS Between October 2016 and May 2017, 34 patients underwent laparoscopic surgery with SLN mapping using indocyanine green dye: 22 women were mapped with the Storz 1S system (Karl Storz Endoscopy, Tuttlingen, Germany; Group A), whereas 12 women underwent planned surgery with the Novadaq PinPoint system (Novadaq, Mississauga, Ontario, Canada; Group B). MEASUREMENT AND MAIN RESULTS We compared the surgical and perioperative outcomes of Group A and Group B. Patients in Group B had a shorter duration of the SLN mapping time than those in Group A (p = .0003). The median number of SLNs removed was 2 (range, 0-5) in Group A and 2 (range, 1-3) in Group B (p = .501). Bilateral mapping was 77.3% in Group A and 83.3% in Group B (p = .334), respectively. No differences were recorded in terms of body mass index, length of hospital stay, type of tumor, bilateral mapping, or number of lymph nodes removed. Body mass index was found to have no impact on the duration of the mapping (p = .353). CONCLUSION From our preliminary experience we can conclude that both fluorescence systems are valid and applicable for SLN detection in the case of early-stage cervical or endometrial cancer. The PinPoint system seems to allow surgeons easier and faster identification of the SLNs, particularly in endometrial cancer patients.


Journal of Minimally Invasive Gynecology | 2017

Real-Time Fluorescent Sentinel Lymph Node Mapping with Indocyanine Green in Women with Previous Conization Undergoing Laparoscopic Surgery for Early Invasive Cervical Cancer: Comparison with Radiotracer ± Blue Dye

Alessandro Buda; Andrea Papadia; Giampaolo Di Martino; Sara Imboden; Beatrice Bussi; Luca Guerra; Elena De Ponti; Claudio Reato; Maria Luisa Gasparri; Cinzia Crivellaro; Michael D. Mueller

STUDY OBJECTIVE To evaluate the added value of the fluorescence dye indocyanine green (ICG) for sentinel lymph node (SLN) mapping in women with cervical cancer who had undergone previous conization (stage 1A-1B1) by comparing ICG versus Tc99m radiotracer + blue dye (BD). DESIGN Retrospective study (Canadian Task Force classification II-2). SETTING Two European academic medical centers, San Gerardo Hospital, Italy and University of Berne, Switzerland. PATIENTS Sixty-five women with early stage (IA-IB1) cervical cancer who had undergone previous conization and who underwent SLN mapping with Tc99m ± BD (n = 23) or ICG (n = 42) followed by pelvic lymphadenectomy and fertility-sparing surgery or hysterectomy were included in this analysis. INTERVENTION Overall detection rate and bilateral SLN mapping rates of ICG were compared with those obtained using the standard Tc99m radiocolloid and BD. MEASUREMENT AND MAIN RESULTS Overall, 220 SLNs were detected. The median number of SLNs per patient in the Tc99m ± BD group was 2 (range, 1-5) and in the ICG group, 3 (range, 2-15). The detection rate of SLNs was 95.7% in Tc99m ± BD group and 100% in the ICG group (p = .354). The women injected with ICG had a higher rate of bilateral mapping of the SLNs as compared with the Tc99m ± BD group (95.2% vs 69.6%, p = .016%). Only 12% of the patients (8/65) presented metastatic nodes, 2 in the Tc99m ± BD group and 6 in the ICG group. CONCLUSION In early-stage cervical cancer patients conization had no significant impact on the SLN detection rate using both techniques (ICG and radiotracer ± BD). In this scenario a higher bilateral mapping rate was confirmed using the fluorescent dye ICG rather than the standard techniques.


Physica Medica | 2018

[OA143] Application of new algorithms in PET image reconstruction: Preliminary results

Roberta Matheoud; Fabrizio Bergesio; Elena De Ponti; Sabrina Morzenti; Carlo Chiesa; Matteo Ragazzoni; Stephane Chauvie

Purpose Important advancements have been made in PET image reconstruction algorithms, among the newest modelling of the point spread function (PSF) and noise statistics modelling (NSM) can be accounted for. Quantitative results of the application of these reconstruction techniques on 3 state-of-the-art PET/CT scanners with and without time-of-flight (TOF) technique are presented. Methods and materials A 68Ge-NEMA phantom based on a standard IQ body phantom (Data Spectrum, Durham, NC) filled with 68Ge in an epoxy resin was used. The activity concentrations in the spheres (internal diameter-ID = 6, 10, 13, 17, 22, 28, 37 mm) and in the background were measured with a radionuclide calibrator tested against a NIST traceable source and were respectively 40.67kBq/ml and 10.58 kBq/ml at reference time (uncertainty ± 3%). Nominal sphere-to-background ratio was 3.84. Total activity in the phantom was 108.4 MBq at calibration. Acquisition time was adjusted according to the age of the phantom to meet 1.5 min per frame at the reference date on each PET scanner and reconstructed with variable reconstruction parameters (iterations: 48, 72; amplitude of Gaussian filter: 5, 6.4, 8 mm) with traditional (OSEM) and by combining advanced modalities, when present: PSF, TOF, TOF+PSF, NSM. For each PET scanner and each reconstruction modality maximum Recovery Coefficient (RCmax) values were evaluated for each visible sphere. RCmax were normalised to 37 mm ID sphere result. Results For each reconstructed modality, RCmax (mean ± sd) were averaged on different reconstruction parameters and PET scanners and for increasing sphere ID respectively 6, 10, 13, 17, 22, 28, 37 mm resulted: - OSEM: (0.31  ±  0.03), (0.51  ±  0.05), (0.63  ±  0.03), (0.82  ±  0.03), (0.89  ±  0.03), (0.95  ±  0.04), (1  ±  0) - OSEM+TOF: (0.32  ±  0.01), (0.56  ±  0.08), (0.64  ±  0.07), (0.84  ±  0.03), (0.91  ±  0.00), (0.97  ±  0.04), (1  ±  0) - OSEM+PSF: (0.30  ±  0.01), (0.50  ±  0.04), (0.65  ±  0.05), (0.88  ±  0.04),(0.93  ±  0.02), (0.95  ±  0.04), (1  ±  0) - OSEM+PSF+TOF: (0.30  ±  0.01), (0.56  ±  0.08), (0.70  ±  0.11), (0.91  ±  0.03), (0.94  ±  0.00), (0.97  ±  0.04), (1  ±  0) - NSM: (0.30  ±  0.02), (0.67  ±  0.19), (0.84  ±  0.14), (0.94  ±  0.05), (0.98  ±  0.03), (0.98  ±  0.06), (1  ±  0) Conclusion The RC obtained with the 3 state-of-the-art non digital PET/CT scanners demonstrate clearly that, independently of the reconstruction method used, modern PET/CT scanner outperforms respect to older one described by EARL curve. Higher differences are recorded for smaller spheres. Moreover, applying more advanced reconstruction techniques progressively enhances RC, NSM reconstruction being the most promising algorithm. Even if RCmax of different scanners converge at larger ( > 22 mm) and smaller (10 mm) spheres, the overestimations observed in the size between 1 and 2 cm are currently under investigation.


Gynecologic Oncology | 2018

Lymph node evaluation in high-risk early stage endometrial cancer: A multi-institutional retrospective analysis comparing the sentinel lymph node (SLN) algorithm and SLN with selective lymphadenectomy

Alessandro Buda; Maria Luisa Gasparri; Andrea Puppo; Liliana Mereu; Elena De Ponti; Giampaolo Di Martino; Antonia Novelli; Saverio Tateo; M. Müller; F Landoni; Andrea Papadia

OBJECTIVE The aim of this study was to determine the impact of the sentinel lymph node mapping algorithm (SLN-A) on the staging in high-risk endometrial cancer (EC) compared to SLN plus selective lymphadenectomy (S-LND). METHODS We retrospectively analyzed the database from a multicenter collaboration that included women with high risk features who underwent primary surgical staging. RESULTS One-hundred and seventy-one women were identified (171), 66 in the SLN-A and 105 in the S-LND group, respectively. Pelvic LD was performed on 115 patients (67.2%) and aortic dissection was performed in 54/105 of the women in the S-LND group (51%). The 5-year comparison did not show a significant difference in the strategy adopted for nodal staging, regarding disease-free survival (DFS) [HR: 0.82; 95% CI 0.53-1.28; p = 0.390]. CONCLUSIONS In this study focusing on women with EC in the HR groups, we did not find a difference in the 5-year DFS when comparing the SLN-A strategy with S-LND. The SLN strategy did not seem to compromise the prognosis of patients with a higher risk of recurrence.

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Cinzia Crivellaro

University of Milano-Bicocca

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Cristina Messa

Vita-Salute San Raffaele University

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Alessandro Buda

University of Milano-Bicocca

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Giampaolo Di Martino

University of Milano-Bicocca

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Claudio Landoni

University of Milano-Bicocca

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Andrea Papadia

University Hospital of Bern

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E. Ferrazzi

Boston Children's Hospital

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