21 research outputs found

    The role of axillary lymph node dissection in breast cancer patients with sentinel lymph node micrometastases

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    AIM: To identify by means of clinical and histopathological features a subset of breast cancer patients with sentinel lymph-node (sN) micrometastases and metastatic disease confined only to the sN in order to spare them an unnecessary axillary lymph node dissection (ALND). MATERIALS AND METHODS: From January 1998 to December 2004, 116 patients with sN micrometastases underwent standard ALND for early-stage (T1-2 N0 M0) invasive breast cancer; clinical and histopathologic parameters were prospectively collected and evaluated by means of univariate and logistic regression analysis in order to identify which patients with sN micrometastases were free of metastasis in axillary non-sN. RESULTS: Sixteen of 116 patients with sN micrometastases had tumour involvement of non-sN, with six and 10 patients having non-sN micrometastases and macrometastases, respectively. None of 19 patients with primary tumour measuring </= 10 mm had tumour-positive non-sN; moreover, none of 15 patients with G1 tumours had non-sN metastases. The mean tumour size in patients with non-sN involvement was 21.3 mm (range, 12-40 mm). Univariate test of association between clinical and histopathologic features and non-sN status showed that the primary tumour size (P=0.005) and the presence of lymphovascular invasion (P=0.000) were the only significant predictors of non-sN involvement. By logistic regression, primary tumour size (P=0.011), lymphovascular invasion (P=0.001), and size of sN micrometastases were the only variables remaining into the model, although the latter parameter was not statistically significant. CONCLUSIONS: In patients with sN micrometastases, primary tumour size and lymphovascular invasion significantly predict non-sN status; notably, no patient with T1a-T1b and/or G1 tumours had non-sN metastases so that they could be spared an unnecessary ALND

    Hormone receptors in breast cancer: a conservative determination of receptors' presence in tumor tissue and ipsilateral normal mammary gland.

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    Chemotherapy with estrogenic recruitment and surgery in locally advanced breast cancer: clinical and cytokinetic results.

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    Thirty-nine patients with locally advanced breast cancer (T3b-4, N1-3 or inflammatory carcinoma) received 3 cycles of induction chemotherapy with estrogenic recruitment before surgery. The therapeutic regimen consisted of diethylstilbestrol (DES) orally on days 1-3, 5-Fluorouracil + Doxorubicin + Cyclophosphamide on day 4 q 21 days (DES-FAC). After surgery 6 additional cycles of chemotherapy (3 DES-FAC alternating with 3 DES-CMF with Methotrexate + F and C as in FAC) were administered. The objective response rate was 71.8\% with 15.4\% CR, and 56.4\% PR; after surgery 36/39 (92.3\%) patients were rendered disease-free. So far, 13 of 26 patients in stage IIIb have relapsed (9 of 13 with inflammatory carcinomas). Three-year survival and progression-free survival are 60\% and 53.5\%, respectively. Twenty-three of the 39 patients were subjected to serial tumor biopsies during the first DES-FAC regimen to allow for tumor-cell kinetic studies during DES and chemotherapy. A significant estrogenic recruitment occurred in 16 patients (69.6\%), irrespective of estrogen-receptor status. At surgery, 3-4 weeks after induction chemotherapy, tumor proliferative activity was significantly depressed in comparison to basal values. These results indicate that breast cancer cells can be recruited in vivo with DES and that chemotherapy following estrogenic stimulation is effective and feasible with acceptable toxicity

    Intraperitoneal infusion of recombinant interleukin-2 in malignant ascites in patients with gastrointestinal and ovarian cancer.

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    In a phase-I-study recombinant interleukin-2 (rIL-2) in a dose from 0.01 to 0.3 mg/m2/day for 7 to 14 days was infused intraperitoneally. Side effects were fever and fluid retention. 2 patients showed a bacterial peritonitis after paracentesis. The investigations showed that the intraperitoneal (i.p.) administration of interleukin-2 activates the whole lymphokine cascade

    Non palpable breast lesions: preoperative sonographic localization

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    From 1987 to 1992 at our Institute, 253 patients with non palpable breast lesions (NBPL) underwent a surgical excision. Fifty-one lesions (19.7%) were localized by an injection of a sterile 3% charcoal suspension under sonographic guide. The sonographic features of NBPL were classified as follows: positive in one case (2%), doubtful in 31 cases (60%) and negative in 19 cases (38%). According to our data the preoperative sonographic localization is a useful alternative procedure to stereotactis mammography in case of breast masses and/or areas of increased tissue density or distorted breast architecture

    The role of surgery in the combined treatment of locally advanced breast cancer.

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    Sixty patients with stage IIIA and IIIB breast cancer have been treated with a combined modality approach including induction chemotherapy, surgery and adjuvant chemotherapy: 74.5\% of patients achieved an objective response after 3 cycles of induction chemotherapy, and 98.3\% of patients were rendered disease-free after induction chemotherapy and surgery or radiotherapy; at 4 years, actuarial survival and disease-free survival are 71.5\% and 43\%, respectively. These results are significantly better than our historical control, and locally advanced breast cancer must now be considered a curable disease when treated with an aggressive multimodal approach
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