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Featured researches published by Patrizia Boracchi.


European Journal of Cancer and Clinical Oncology | 1990

Breast conservation is the treatment of choice in small breast cancer: Long-term results of a randomized trial

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.


Journal of Clinical Oncology | 1994

Tumor microvessel density, p53 expression, tumor size, and peritumoral lymphatic vessel invasion are relevant prognostic markers in node-negative breast carcinoma.

Giampietro Gasparini; Noel Weidner; Pierantonio Bevilacqua; S. Maluta; P. Dalla Palma; Orazio Caffo; Mattia Barbareschi; Patrizia Boracchi; E Marubini; F Pozza

PURPOSE To determine the absolute and relative value of microvessel density (MVD), p53 and c-erbB-2 protein expression, peritumoral lymphatic vessel invasion (PLVI), and conventional prognosticators in predicting relapse-free (RFS) and overall survival (OS) rates in patients with node-negative breast carcinoma (NNBC). PATIENTS AND METHODS We monitored 254 consecutive patients with NNBC for a median of 62 months. Intratumoral MVD was measured after microvessels were immunostained using anti-CD31 antibody. p53 and c-erbB-2 protein and hormone receptors were also determined immunocytochemically. Results were analyzed by both univariate and multivariate statistical analysis. RESULTS Univariate analysis showed that MVD was significantly predictive of both RFS (odds ratio [OR], 8.30; P = .0001) and OS (OR, 4.50; P = .012) when tested as a continuous or dichotomous variable. Likewise, tumor size (OR, 3.16; P = .0012), PLVI (OR, 4.36; P = .0009), estrogen receptor (ER) status (OR, 2.35; P = .016), progesterone receptor (PR) status (OR, 2.00; P = .017), and expression of p53 protein (OR, 2.82; P = .004) were significantly associated with RFS. Tumor size (OR, 3.80; P = .0038) and expression of p53 protein (OR, 2.58; P = .024) were significantly associated with OS by univariate analysis. Multivariate analysis showed that MVD (P = .0004), p53 protein expression (P = .0063), tumor size (P = .0144), and PLVI (P = .0033) were all significant and independent prognostic factors for RFS. However, only tumor size (P = .004) and MVD (P = .047) were independent predictors for OS. c-erbB2 expression was not associated with outcome by either univariate or multivariate analysis. CONCLUSION MVD, p53 expression, PLVI, and tumor size are independent prognostic indicators of recurrence, which are useful in selection of high-risk NNBC patients who may be eligible to receive adjuvant therapies.


Journal of Clinical Oncology | 1988

Adjuvant chemotherapy with vincristine, cyclophosphamide, and doxorubicin after radiotherapy in local-regional nasopharyngeal cancer: results of a 4-year multicenter randomized study.

Anna Maria Rossi; R Molinari; Patrizia Boracchi; M. T. Del Vecchio; Ettore Marubini; Maurizio Nava; L Morandi; Roberto Zucali; Silvana Pilotti; C Grandi

To evaluate the effect of adjuvant chemotherapy in patients with local-regional nasopharyngeal carcinoma (NPC) (squamous or undifferentiated) in complete remission at the end of curative radiotherapy (RT) 229 patients were randomized from 1979 to 1983 in a multicenter study to no further therapy (116 patients) or a combination of vincristine, cyclophosphamide, and Adriamycin (doxorubicin; Adria Laboratories, Columbus, OH) (VCA) for six monthly cycles (113 patients). The RT and RT + VCA groups were well balanced for median age (50 v 49 years), histology (undifferentiated carcinoma, 73% v 70%), tumor extent (tumor limited to nasopharynx, 57% v 57%), and nodal extent (negative nodes 26% v 24%, nodes in the lower cervical levels, 17% v 16%). RT was delivered to the nasopharynx, the base of the skull, and bilateral cervical nodes using a split course technique over 10 weeks up to the dose of 60 to 70 Gy in involved sites and 50 Gy to negative nodes. Response to RT was evaluated within 65 days post-RT treatment. Analysis at 48 months did not show significant difference between the two treatment groups in terms of relapse-free survival (RT, 55.8%, RT + VCA, 57.7%, P = .45) and overall survival (RT, 67.3%, RT + VCA, 58.5%, P = .13). The pattern of relapse was similar in the two treatment arms. Distant metastases were the cause of treatment failure in about 50% of relapsing patients. Although the results of the present study did not show any benefit from VCA administered after curative RT, combined systemic chemotherapy should be further explored due to the high incidence of local and distant failure after intensive RT.


Journal of Clinical Oncology | 2001

Interferon Adjuvant to Radical Nephrectomy in Robson Stages II and III Renal Cell Carcinoma: A Multicentric Randomized Study

Giorgio Pizzocaro; Luigi Piva; Maria Colavita; Sonia Ferri; Raffaella Artusi; Patrizia Boracchi; Giorgio Parmiani; Ettore Marubini

PURPOSE Because interferon gave promising results in the management of metastatic renal cell carcinoma in the 1980s, a multicentric randomized controlled trial was planned to compare adjuvant recombinant interferon alfa-2b (rIFNalpha2b) with observation after radical nephrectomy in patients with Robson stages II and III renal cell carcinoma. Overall and event-free survival were to be evaluated together with prognostic factors. PATIENTS AND METHODS Overall and event-free survival curves for 247 patients (124 controls and 123 treated) were estimated by the Kaplan-Meier method and compared using the log-rank test. Coxs multiple regression models were adopted to perform a joint analysis of treatment and prognostic factors. RESULTS The 5-year overall and event-free survival probabilities were 0.665 and 0.671, respectively, for controls and 0.660 and 0.567, respectively, for the treated group; the differences were not statistically significant (2P = .861 for overall and 2P = .107 for event-free survival with the log-rank test). Regarding prognostic factors, only grade, pT, and pN demonstrated a significant prognostic role. First-order interactions of treatment with pT and pN category were investigated; a significant interaction was found between pN and treatment. A harmful effect of rIFNalpha2b in the 97 treated pN0 patients and a protective effect in the 13 treated pN2/pN3 patients were statistically significant. CONCLUSION Adjuvant rIFNalpha2b is not indicated after radical nephrectomy for renal cell carcinoma. The protective effect in the small group of pN2/pN3 patients requires further investigation.


Statistics in Medicine | 1998

Feed forward neural networks for the analysis of censored survival data: A partial logistic regression approach

Elia Biganzoli; Patrizia Boracchi; Luigi Mariani; Ettore Marubini

Flexible modelling in survival analysis can be useful both for exploratory and predictive purposes. Feed forward neural networks were recently considered for flexible non-linear modelling of censored survival data through the generalization of both discrete and continuous time models. We show that by treating the time interval as an input variable in a standard feed forward network with logistic activation and entropy error function, it is possible to estimate smoothed discrete hazards as conditional probabilities of failure. We considered an easily implementable approach with a fast selection criteria of the best configurations. Examples on data sets from two clinical trials are provided. The proposed artificial neural network (ANN) approach can be applied for the estimation of the functional relationships between covariates and time in survival data to improve model predictivity in the presence of complex prognostic relationships.


Annals of Surgery | 2005

A Randomized Trial Comparing Axillary Dissection to No Axillary Dissection in Older Patients With T1N0 Breast Cancer: Results After 5 Years of Follow-up

Gabriele Martelli; Patrizia Boracchi; Michaela De Palo; Silvana Pilotti; Saro Oriana; Roberto Zucali; Maria Grazia Daidone; Giuseppe De Palo

Summary Background Data:Axillary dissection, an invasive procedure that may adversely affect quality of life, used to obtain prognostic information in breast cancer, is being supplanted by sentinel node biopsy. In older women with early breast cancer and no palpable axillary nodes, it may be safe to give no axillary treatment. We addressed this issue in a randomized trial comparing axillary dissection with no axillary dissection in older patients with T1N0 breast cancer. Methods:From 1996 to 2000, 219 women, 65 to 80 years of age, with early breast cancer and clinically negative axillary nodes were randomized to conservative breast surgery with or without axillary dissection. Tamoxifen was prescribed to all patients for 5 years. The primary endpoints were axillary events in the no axillary dissection arm, comparison of overall mortality (by log rank test), breast cancer mortality, and breast events (by Gray test). Results:Considering a follow-up of 60 months, there were no significant differences in overall or breast cancer mortality, or crude cumulative incidence of breast events, between the 2 groups. Only 2 patients in the no axillary dissection arm (8 and 40 months after surgery) developed overt axillary involvement during follow-up. Conclusions:Older patients with T1N0 breast cancer can be treated by conservative breast surgery and no axillary dissection without adversely affecting breast cancer mortality or overall survival. The very low cumulative incidence of axillary events suggests that even sentinel node biopsy is unnecessary in these patients. Axillary dissection should be reserved for the small proportion of patients who later develop overt axillary disease.


Journal of Clinical Oncology | 2001

Response to Cyclophosphamide, Methotrexate, and Fluorouracil in Lymph Node–Positive Breast Cancer According to HER2 Overexpression and Other Tumor Biologic Variables

Sylvie Ménard; Pinuccia Valagussa; Silvana Pilotti; Luca Gianni; Elia Biganzoli; Patrizia Boracchi; Gorana Tomasic; Patrizia Casalini; Ettore Marubini; Maria I. Colnaghi; Natale Cascinelli; Gianni Bonadonna

PURPOSE There is considerable interest in biologic markers able to predict the response of cancer patients to therapy. HER2 overexpression is a potential indicator of responsiveness to doxorubicin and paclitaxel and of unresponsiveness to tamoxifen in breast carcinoma patients. However, the significance of HER2 overexpression in responsiveness to cyclophosphamide, methotrexate, and fluorouracil (CMF) has remained unclear. In this study, we investigated this issue in the 386 breast cancer patients in the first CMF controlled clinical trial with a 20-year follow-up. PATIENTS AND METHODS Node-positive breast carcinoma patients were randomly assigned to receive either no further treatment after radical mastectomy (179 women) or 12 monthly cycles of adjuvant CMF chemotherapy (207 women). Overexpression of HER2 and the status of other tumor variables was assessed by immunohistochemistry in at least 324 (84%) of the 386 patients. Statistical analyses were performed to assess the efficacy of CMF treatment for the subgroups defined by HER2 and the status of other variables using a Bayesian approach. The end points considered were relapse-free survival (RFS) and cause-specific survival (CSS). RESULTS Bayesian analysis of the treatment effect for HER2 and other variables indicated a clinical benefit from CMF treatment in all subgroups defined according to variables status. In particular regarding HER2 status, Bayesian estimates of RFS hazard ratios were equal to 0.484 and 0.641 and estimates of CSS hazard ratios were equal to 0.495 and 0.730 for HER2-positive and -negative tumors, respectively. CONCLUSION CMF treatment showed a clinical benefit in the considered subgroups, defined according to HER2 and other tumor variables status. Patients with HER2-positive or HER2-negative tumors benefit from CMF treatment, and the poor prognosis associated with the HER2 overexpression in the untreated group could be completely overcome by the chemotherapy treatment.


International Journal of Cancer | 1996

Prognostic and predictive value of tumour angiogenesis in ovarian carcinomas

Giampietro Gasparini; Emanuela Bonoldi; Giuseppe Viale; Paolo Verderio; Patrizia Boracchi; G. A. Panizzoni; Umberto Radaelli; Alessandra Di Bacco; Rosa Bianca Guglielmi; Pierantonio Bevilacoua

Experimental studies suggest that angiogenesis plays an important role in the pathogenesis of ascites and progression of ovarian cancer. To evaluate the association of intratumoral microvessel density (IMD) with the conventional clinicopathologic features and to determine the capability of these factors in predicting responsiveness to platinum‐based chemotherapy and overall survival (OS) we studied 112 ovarian carcinomas. IMD was determined using the anti‐CD31 antibody and immunocytochemistry. In the entire series, we correlated IMD with the other features. In the subgroup of patients with FIGO stage III‐IV (60 cases), we correlated the factors studied, determined prior of treatment, with response to therapy and prognosis.


European Journal of Cancer. Part B: Oral Oncology | 1992

Prevention of local relapses and new localisations of oral leukoplakias with the synthetic retinoid fenretinide (4-HPR). Preliminary results.

Fausto Chiesa; Nicoletta Tradati; Marino Marazza; Nicoletta Rossi; Patrizia Boracchi; Luigi Mariani; Mario Clerici; Franca Formelli; L. Barzan; A. Carrassi; A. Pastorini; Tiziana Camerini; Roberto Giardini; Stefano Zurrida; F.L. Minn; Alberto Costa; G. De Palo; Umberto Veronesi

This paper analyses preliminary results of a randomised chemoprevention trial in patients surgically treated for oral leukoplakia started in 1988 at the Istituto Nazionale Tumori of Milan with the synthetic retinoid N-(4-hydroxyphenyl)-retinamide (4-HPR). To date 115 patients have been randomised, after surgical excision of oral leukoplakia, to receive 200 mg 4-HPR daily for 52 weeks versus no intervention. 80 patients completed the 1-year intervention, 41 in the control group and 39 in the 4-HPR group. During this period 12 local relapses or new lesions occurred in the control group and three in the 4-HPR group. Only 5 patients interrupted the intervention because of toxicity. No impaired dark adaptation was observed. It is concluded that 4-HPR is well tolerated and seems efficacious in preventing relapses and new localisations during the treatment period. This promising trend needs further confirmation.


Breast Cancer Research and Treatment | 1995

Prognostic value of intratumoral microvessel density, a measure of tumor angiogenesis, in node-negative breast carcinoma — results of a multiparametric study

Pierantonio Bevilacqua; Mattia Barbareschi; Paolo Verderio; Patrizia Boracchi; Orazio Caffo; Paolo Palma; Salvatore Meli; Noel Weidner; Giampietro Gasparini

SummaryIn the present study we update previous results on the prognostic value of intratumoral microvessel density (IMD), determined immunocytochemically using the monoclonal antibody CD-31 and a standard streptavidin-immunoperoxidase technique, published in theJ Clin Oncol 12:454–466, 1994. This study was undertaken in those 211 node-negative breast cancer (NNBC) cases of that series of which we had pathological material available to determine all the prognostic indicators. The median period of follow-up has been extended to 78 and 80 months for relapse-free survival (RFS) and overall survival (OS), respectively, and new biological indicators (i.e. Ki-67 labeling and 67 kDa laminin receptor expression) were included in the analysis.The main results obtained are:i) a confirmation that IMD is not associated with the other biological markers studied, i.e. expression of p53 protein, c-erbB-2 protein, 67 kDa laminin receptor, and cell kinetics; IMD was weakly associated only with histological grade (p=0.053);ii) IMD remains a highly significant prognostic factor for RFS and OS (p<0.0001 and p=0.018, respectively) in univariate analysis;iii) in multivariate analysis on RFS, IMD (likelihood ratio test (LRT)=30.16; p<0.0001), 67 kDa laminin receptor (LRT=9.80; p=0.0017), the IMD/67 kDa laminin receptor interaction (LRT=8.62; p=0.0033), tumor size (LRT=8.56; p=0.0034), and p53 protein (LRT=4.96; p=0.025) are significant and independent prognostic indicators. For OS, only tumor size (LRT=8.34; p=0.0038), menopausal status (LRT=5.16; p=0.023), p53 protein (LRT=4.37; p=0.036), and IMD (LRT=4.05; p=0.044) retain a significant and independent prognostic value.The results of this study confirm the prognostic importance on RFS of the variables previously tested, but not of peritumoral lymphatic vessel invasion. A novel finding is that 67 kDa laminin receptor and the IMD/67 kDa laminin receptor interaction are also significant and independent variables. For OS, the results confirm that both IMD and tumor size are significant and independent variables. With prolonged follow-up the novel finding that emerges is the prognostic importance of menopausal status and p53 protein.This new information could be useful for a more accurate selection of high-risk NNBC patients who require careful follow-up and may benefit from adjuvant therapy.

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