4.6 Article

MRI versus Mammography plus Ultrasound in Women at Intermediate Breast Cancer Risk: Study Design and Protocol of the MRIB Multicenter, Randomized, Controlled Trial

Journal

DIAGNOSTICS
Volume 11, Issue 9, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/diagnostics11091635

Keywords

intermediate breast cancer risk; screening; contrast-enhanced magnetic resonance imaging; mammography; ultrasound

Funding

  1. Italian Ministry of Health through the Ricerca Finalizzata program [RF-2009-1539582]
  2. Bracco S.p.A.

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The study aims to compare the efficacy of MRI alone versus MX+US screening in women at high/intermediate lifetime risk of breast cancer. The enrolled participants were women aged 40-59 with a 15-30% BC-LTR and/or extremely dense breasts.
In women at high/intermediate lifetime risk of breast cancer (BC-LTR), contrast-enhanced magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) added to mammography +/- ultrasound (MX +/- US) increases sensitivity but decreases specificity. Screening with MRI alone is an alternative and potentially more cost-effective strategy. Here, we describe the study protocol and the characteristics of enrolled patients for MRIB feasibility, multicenter, randomized, controlled trial, which aims to compare MRI alone versus MX+US in women at intermediate breast cancer risk (aged 40-59, with a 15-30% BC-LTR and/or extremely dense breasts). Two screening rounds per woman were planned in ten centers experienced in MRI screening, the primary endpoint being the rate of cancers detected in the 2 arms after 5 years of follow-up. From July 2013 to November 2015, 1254 women (mean age 47 years) were enrolled: 624 were assigned to MX+US and 630 to MRI. Most of them were aged below 50 (72%) and premenopausal (45%), and 52% used oral contraceptives. Among postmenopausal women, 15% had used hormone replacement therapy. Breast and/or ovarian cancer in mothers and/or sisters were reported by 37% of enrolled women, 79% had extremely dense breasts, and 41% had a 15-30% BC-LTR. The distribution of the major determinants of breast cancer risk profiles (breast density and family history of breast and ovarian cancer) of enrolled women varied across centers.

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