4.7 Article

Results of Magnetic Resonance Imaging (MRI) Screening in Patients at High Risk for Breast Cancer

Journal

ANNALS OF SURGICAL ONCOLOGY
Volume -, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1245/s10434-023-14052-8

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This study aimed to analyze our institutional database of high-risk patients and assess the uptake of screening MRI examinations and the results. The results showed that adding MRI screening in our high-risk cohort did not yield a significant number of additional cancer diagnoses. However, breast cancer cases detected in the MRI-screened group were in very early stages, highlighting the benefits of participation in the program.
Background Screening MRI as an adjunct to mammography is recommended by the ACS for patients with a lifetime risk for breast cancer > 20%. While the benefits are clear, MRI screening is associated with an increase in false-positive results. The purpose of this study was to analyze our institutional database of high-risk patients and assess the uptake of screening MRI examinations and the results of those screenings.Methods Our institutional review board-approved High-Risk Breast Cancer Database was queried for patients enrolled from January 2017 to January 2023 who were at high risk for breast cancer in a comparative analysis between those who were screened versus not screened with MRIs. Variables of interest included risk factor, background, MRI screening uptake, and frequency and results of image-guided breast biopsies.Results A total of 254 of 1106 high-risk patients (23%) had MRI screening. Forty-six of 852 (5.3%) patients in the non-MRI-screened cohort and nine of 254 (3.5%) patients in the MRI-screened cohort were diagnosed with a malignant lesion after image-guided biopsy (p = 0.6). There was no significant difference between MRI and non-MRI guided biopsies in detecting breast cancer. All malignant lesions were T1 or in situ disease. The 254 patients in the MRI-screened group underwent 185 biopsies. Fifty-seven percent of MRI-guided biopsies yielded benign results.Conclusions Although the addition of MRI screening in our high-risk cohort did not produce a significant number of additional cancer diagnoses, patients monitored in our high-risk cohort who developed breast cancer were diagnosed at very early stages of disease, underscoring the benefit of participation in the program.

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