| Literature DB >> 19214520 |
Nicky H G M Peters1, Carla Meeuwis, Chris J G Bakker, Willem P Th M Mali, Arancha M Fernandez-Gallardo, Richard van Hillegersberg, Marguerite E I Schipper, Maurice A A J van den Bosch.
Abstract
The feasibility of large-core-needle magnetic resonance imaging (MRI)-guided breast biopsy at 3 T was assessed. Thirty-one suspicious breast lesions shown only by MRI were detected in 30 patients. Biopsy procedures were performed in a closed-bore 3-T clinical MR system on a dedicated phased-array breast coil with a commercially available add-on stereotactic biopsy device. Tissue sampling was technically successful in 29/31 (94%) lesions. Median lesion size (n = 29) was 9 mm. Histopathological analysis showed 19 benign lesions (66%) and one inconclusive biopsy result (3%). At follow-up of these lesions, 15 lesions showed no malignancy, no information was available in three patients and two lesions turned out to be malignant (one lesion at surgical excision 1 month after biopsy and one lesion at a second biopsy because of a more malignant enhancement curve at 12-months follow-up MRI). Nine biopsy results showed a malignant lesion (31%) which were all surgically removed. No complications occurred. MRI-guided biopsy at 3 T is a safe and effective method for breast biopsy in lesions that are occult on mammography and ultrasound. Follow-up MRI at 6 months after the biopsy should be performed in case of a benign biopsy result.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2009 PMID: 19214520 PMCID: PMC2691521 DOI: 10.1007/s00330-009-1310-0
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Eur Radiol ISSN: 0938-7994 Impact factor: 5.315
Fig. 1Stereotactic system for MRI-guided preoperative wire-localization and breast biopsy. This system consists of a breast coil, which can be used for diagnostic MRI of the breast, and an add-on stereotactic device. The breast is compressed by two compression plates. The system allows angulation of the needle
Main scan parameters of the fat-suppressed high-resolution T1-weighted gradient-echo sequence used for guiding the biopsy procedure
| Biopsy protocol | |
|---|---|
| TE/TR (ms) | 1.7/4.5 |
| Flip angle | 10° |
| Fat suppression | Waterselective excitation pulse (PROSET) |
| Field of view (mm2) | 340 × 340 |
| Matrix | 256 × 320 |
| Read-out bandwidth (Hz) | 1,443 |
| Direction read-out gradient | Perpendicular to B0 |
| Effective slice thickness (mm) | 2 |
| Number of slices | 75 |
| Acquired voxel size (mm3) | 1.09 × 1.09 × 2.00 |
| Reconstructed voxel size (mm3) | 1.09 × 1.09 × 1.00 |
| Fast imaging | Scan percentage 80%, over contiguous slices |
| Scan duration (min) | 1.24 |
Fig. 2a, bTwo lesions in which MRI-guided biopsy was not feasible. a A 9-mm lesion located directly posterior to the mammilla. b A 9-mm lesion located directly anterior to the thoracic wall. In both cases the part of the breast which contained the lesions could not be adequately compressed
Fig. 3a–cTypical example of a biopsy procedure. a Diagnostic post-contrast T1-weighted image shows suspicious lesion. b Pre-biopsy image, compressed breast with guiding marker tube at the same location as the lesion. c The needle is inserted in front of the lesion; 3-5 samples were obtained. Histology: DCIS
Histological results of the lesions, lesion size and details on the problem cases (FCC fibrocystic change, LCIS lobular carcinoma in situ, DCIS ductal carcinoma in situ, ILC invasive lobular carcinoma, IDC invasive ductal carcinoma)
| Number of lesions | Size (mm) | ||
|---|---|---|---|
| Benign | 19 | Median: 8 mm | |
| Fibroadenoma | 2 | 11, 20 | |
| FCC | 3 | 8, 12, 45 | |
| Adenosis/hyperplasia | 6 | 3, 6, 7, 9, 10, 15 | |
| Normal breast tissue | 5 | 5, 6, 7, 7, 8 | |
| Lymph node | 1 | 7 | At 12-month follow-up MRI: more malignant enhancement curve; second biopsy showed ILC |
| LCIS | 1 | 8 | At surgery LCIS, DCIS and small invasive ductal component (3-4 mm) |
| Papilloma | 1 | 30 | |
| Non-representative | 1 | 10 | FCC at surgery |
| Malignant | 9 | Median: 11 mm | |
| DCIS | 2 | 18, 35 | |
| ILC | 2 | 6, 7 | |
| IDC | 2 | 8, 26 | |
| Adenocarcinoma | 3 | 6, 11, 30 |
Fig. 4Flow chart of MRI-guided biopsy lesions and follow-up