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Ellie Proussaloglou, MD

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Assistant Professor
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Assistant Professor

Biography

Ellie Proussaloglou, MD is an Assistant Professor of Surgery (Breast Surgical Oncology) at Yale University. She completed her fellowship in Breast Surgery at Yale University and her residency in Obstetrics and Gynecology at Brown University/Women & Infants Hospital of RI. Ellie earned her BS from Duke University in Biology (Genomics), where she developed a passion for understanding the policy and financial implications of healthcare. She explored this interest further as a healthcare consultant before attending medical school at the University of Chicago Pritzker School of Medicine.

Her joint training in breast and gynecologic surgery allows her to provide comprehensive counseling about breast cancer care, along with a thorough understanding of the gynecologic and sexual side effects of care. Her research focuses on decisions facing patients undergoing surgery or high-risk screening, with an emphasis on the financial side effects of care. She has led interdisciplinary research focused on survivorship, quality of life, and sexual health after cancer diagnosis, including novel research on financial toxicity in BRCA carriers. She has local and national advocacy experience as the Legislative Chair for District 1 (New England) of the American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists. She is particularly passionate about caring for high-risk genetic mutation carriers and young women with breast cancer.

Appointments

Education & Training

Interdisciplinary Breast Surgery Fellow
Yale University (2023)
Resident Physician
Brown University/ Women and Infants Hospital of RI (2022)
MD
University of Chicago, Pritzker School of Medicine (2018)

Academic Achievements and Community Involvement

  • honor

    Alpha Omega Alpha Honor Medical Society

  • honor

    Gold Humanism Honor Society

Clinical Care

Overview

Ellie Proussaloglou, MD, is a surgical oncologist who specializes in breast surgery.

Growing up with a mother who is a breast pathologist, Dr. Proussaloglou says she was naturally interested in medicine.

“My mother showed me that if you’re drawn to caring for women with cancer, you can do that from a variety of specialties and it sparked an interest in interdisciplinary learning,” she says. “I knew I wanted to explore aspects outside of traditional medical training. I wanted to become an expert at understanding how policy, business, and health care all intersect.”

Between college and medical school, Dr. Proussaloglou worked as a healthcare consultant for two years to further educate herself. During medical school, she continued interdisciplinary work with research on financial toxicity (how the cost of care impacts patients). She then took a unique training path focused on reproductive health.

“Most of my surgical oncology colleagues completed a general surgery residency, but I chose a residency in obstetrics and gynecology,” she says. “I wanted to better understand the spectrum of reproductive health care for women, trans and nonbinary patients, and how cancer care impacts their fertility, sexual health, and quality of life.”

When she meets a patient, Dr. Proussaloglou says the most important thing she can do is figure out “where they are.”

“Everyone comes to a new doctor's appointment with their own history, and it's impossible to get to know someone and their family fully in the course of even an hour-long visit,” she says. “I try to find out what they've heard about breast cancer. Do they have fears from seeing family members or friends who have gone through it? What is important to them? And then I walk them through their imaging, pathology, and diagnosis, and build a picture for them of what we are seeing. I try to break things down into digestible next steps.”

Dr. Proussaloglou says she tells them about the other doctors they will see, what surgery and recovery might be like, and addresses their questions and concerns.

The best part of her job, she says, is working with patients. “It's such a privilege to meet someone and to have them trust you,” she says. “Every time we go into the operating room, I love holding my patient’s hand as they go off to sleep, reminding them that we're going to take the best care of them. I wouldn't have chosen this field if I didn't really love it. And I feel so fortunate to take care of people.”

Her research focuses on patient experience and quality of life after cancer care, with a focus on young patients with breast cancer. She is also interested in caring for people who are considered high risk for developing cancer based on genetic screening.

“We all know that early detection of cancer improves outcomes and saves lives. But how can we best support individuals in making the surgical decisions that make the most sense for them and their future life,” she says.

Clinical Specialties

Breast Surgical Oncology

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