Literature DB >> 31206889

Potential role of abbreviated MRI for breast cancer screening in an academic medical center.

Vandana Dialani1, Irene Tseng2, Priscilla J Slanetz1, Valerie Fein-Zachary1, Jordana Phillips1, Evguenia Karimova1, Alexander Brook1, Tejas S Mehta1.   

Abstract

The purpose is to determine whether an abbreviated MRI protocol (ABMR) is ready to be used for breast cancer screening in an academic practice setting. Two hundred and fifty nine breast MRIs from 1/1/2012 to 6/30/2012 were retrospectively reviewed using ABMR (MIP, Pre-contrastT1, single dynamic post-contrastT1, and subtraction). Five breast radiologists (4-28 year-expr) participated in this reader study performed in two phases: Phase1 - radiologist's privy to clinical history but not to comparison imaging. Phase2 - radiologists provided comparison imaging. For phase1, studies were reviewed using three steps: (a) MIP only (positive/negative/intermediate); (b) ABMR (recall/no recall) and (c) With T2 (for changes in recommendations). Radiologist also recorded total time for interpretation. In Phase2 the MRIs coded as "recall" were re-reviewed with available comparison studies, noting changes in final recommendation. The abnormal interpretation rates (AIRs) were calculated for phase1 and phase2 results with comparison to the original full protocol. Of the 259 patients (avg. age-52 years; range 26-78), there were seven cancers (three invasive, three DCIS and one breast lymphoma). Acquisition time for ABMR was 3 minutes, ABMR + T2-8 minutes, and original full protocol 16 minutes. Average MIP was positive or indeterminate in 86% (6/7) and negative in 14% (1/7) cancers. The average AIR for MIP only was 20.8% (sens-77.1%; spec-80.8%. The AIR w/o comparisons was 25.6% (sens-91.4%; spec- 76.2%); however the average AIR decreased in phase 2 with comparisons to 13.7% (sens-91.4%; spec-88.5%). The AIR of the original full protocol read was 16.2% (sens-100%; spec-85.7%). Addition of T2 changed assessment in only 3% (1.2%-6.5%). Avg. read time for ABMR including T2 was 2.5 minutes (1.6-4.0 minutes). ABMR is reliable for breast cancer screening, with acceptable interpretation time and acceptable AIR.
© 2019 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.

Entities:  

Keywords:  abbreviated breast MRI; breast MRI; breast cancer; fast MRI; screening

Mesh:

Year:  2019        PMID: 31206889     DOI: 10.1111/tbj.13297

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Breast J        ISSN: 1075-122X            Impact factor:   2.431


  4 in total

1.  MRI Screening of BRCA Mutation Carriers: Comparison of Standard Protocol and Abbreviated Protocols With and Without T2-Weighted Images.

Authors:  Isaac Daimiel Naranjo; Julie Sogani; Carolina Saccarelli; Joao V Horvat; Varadan Sevilimedu; Mary C Hughes; Roberto Lo Gullo; Maxine S Jochelson; Jeffrey Reiner; Katja Pinker
Journal:  AJR Am J Roentgenol       Date:  2021-12-22       Impact factor: 6.582

2.  Biomimetic nanobubbles for triple-negative breast cancer targeted ultrasound molecular imaging.

Authors:  Natacha Jugniot; Tarik F Massoud; Jeremy J Dahl; Ramasamy Paulmurugan
Journal:  J Nanobiotechnology       Date:  2022-06-10       Impact factor: 9.429

Review 3.  Abbreviated magnetic resonance imaging in breast cancer: A systematic review of literature.

Authors:  María Liliana Hernández; Santiago Osorio; Katherine Florez; Alejandra Ospino; Gloria M Díaz
Journal:  Eur J Radiol Open       Date:  2020-12-17

4.  Evaluating the effectiveness of abbreviated breast MRI (abMRI) interpretation training for mammogram readers: a multi-centre study assessing diagnostic performance, using an enriched dataset.

Authors:  Lyn I Jones; Andrea Marshall; Premkumar Elangovan; Rebecca Geach; Sadie McKeown-Keegan; Sarah Vinnicombe; Sam A Harding; Sian Taylor-Phillips; Mark Halling-Brown; Christopher Foy; Elizabeth O'Flynn; Hesam Ghiasvand; Claire Hulme; Janet A Dunn
Journal:  Breast Cancer Res       Date:  2022-07-30       Impact factor: 8.408

  4 in total

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