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New Information About Using MRI Scans To Screen For Breast Cancer


New Information About Using MRI Scans To Screen For Breast Cancer


March 26, 2007

Magnetic Resonance Imaging (MRI) scans of women who were diagnosed with cancer in one breast detected over 90 percent of cancers in the other breast that were missed by mammography and clinical breast exam at initial diagnosis, according to a new study led by Dr. Constance Lehman of the Seattle Cancer Care Alliance and University of Washington.

Given the established rates of mammography and clinical breast exams for detecting cancer in the opposite, or contralateral breast, adding an MRI scan to the diagnostic evaluation effectively doubled the number of cancers immediately found in these women.

The American College of Radiology Imaging Network (ACRIN) study, supported by the National Cancer Institute (NCI), part of the National Institutes of Health (NIH), appeared in the March 29, 2007 issue of the New England Journal of Medicine.

“We can now identify the vast majority of contralateral cancers at the time of a woman’s initial breast cancer diagnosis,” said Lehman, principal investigator of the ACRIN Breast MRI Trial, professor of radiology and director of breast imaging at the University of Washington and Seattle Cancer Care Alliance. “This means that instead of those women having another cancer diagnosis years after their initial treatment, we can diagnose and treat those opposite breast cancers at the time of the initial diagnosis.”

Researchers hope that with breast MRI’s strong ability to predict the absence of a tumor, they can avoid some unnecessary mastectomies and provide women with more reassurance that the breast is disease free.

“Although no imaging tool is perfect, if the MRI is negative, the chance of cancer in that breast is extremely low. A potential outcome that we would be delighted to see is fewer unnecessary bilateral mastectomies,” said Lehman.

In conjunction with this news, the American Cancer Society announced new recommendations for use of MRI for women at increased risk for breast cancer. An expert panel, of which Lehman is a member, recommended annual screening using MRI in addition to mammography for women with a 20-25 percent or greater lifetime risk of the disease.

Those include women who:

* Have a first-degree relative with a BRCA 1 or 2 mutation and are untested,
* Have a lifetime risk of breast cancer of 20-25 percent or more using standard risk assessment models
* Received radiation treatment to the chest between ages 10 and 30, such as for Hodgkin Disease
* Carry or have a first-degree relative who carries a genetic mutation in the TP53 or PTEN genes


“These guidelines are a critical step to help define who should be screened using MRI in addition to mammography, a question of significant importance as we discover women at very high risk of breast cancer can be diagnosed much earlier when combining the two technologies rather than mammography alone,” said Lehman.

If you have questions or concerns about the guidelines for breast MRI, please contact your Primary Care Doctor to discuss whether it may be an appropriate test for you.

Learn more about breast imaging services at Seattle Cancer Care Alliance.

Read SCCA's MRI Protocols below.

Read the American Cancer Society Guidelines.

Read the paper "American Cancer Society Guidelines for Breast Screening with MRI as an Adjunct to Mammography" in CA: A Cancer Journal for Clinicians.

Find out how MRIs can discover tumors in the other breast of women who are newly diagnosed with breast cancer.

Read the NCI Cancer Bulletin's summary and patient information about this MRI study.

Click here to read the paper authored by Dr. Connie Lehman in the New England Journal of Medicine.

Related Documents:

03-15-2009 March 2009 Breast MRI Protocol (15kb)
03-15-2009 March 2009-15t HD Software (20kb)
07-15-2006 July 2006 Breast Protocol (17kb)
10-15-2005 Oct 2005 Breast Protocol (21kb)
02-15-2004 February 2004 Breast Protocol (16kb)
03-15-2002 March 2002-2004 Breast MRI Protocol (40kb)
02-28-2011 MR-Breast-Protocol-June-2010.pdf (10kb)

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