4.5 Article

Self-reported barriers to screening breast MRI among women at high risk for breast cancer

Journal

BREAST CANCER RESEARCH AND TREATMENT
Volume 202, Issue 2, Pages 345-355

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s10549-023-07085-w

Keywords

Breast cancer; cancer risk; Screening; Breast MRI; Health Services utilization model

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This study aimed to assess factors associated with screening breast MRI among high-risk women. The results showed that high-risk women had a low uptake of screening breast MRI, with only 32% having ever received a breast MRI. Breast cancer knowledge and screening-supportive social norms are two key areas to target in future interventions.
Background Annual screening breast MRI is recommended for women at high (>= 20% lifetime) breast cancer risk, but is underutilized. Guided by the Health Services Utilization Model (HSUM), we assessed factors associated with screening breast MRI among high-risk women. Methods From August 2020-January 2021, we recruited an online convenience sample of high-risk women ages 25-85 (N=232). High-risk was defined as: pathogenic genetic mutation in self or first-degree relative; history of lobular carcinoma in situ; history of thoracic radiation; or estimated lifetime risk >= 20%. Participants self-reported predisposing factors (breast cancer knowledge, health locus of control), enabling factors (health insurance type, social support), need factors (perceived risk, screening-supportive social norms, provider recommendation), and prior receipt of screening breast MRI. Multivariable logistic regression analysis with backward selection identified HSUM factors associated with receipt of screening breast MRI. Results About half (51%) of participants had received a provider recommendation for screening breast MRI; only 32% had ever received a breast MRI. Breast cancer knowledge (OR=1.15, 95% CI=1.04-1.27) and screening-supportive social norms (OR=2.21, 95% CI=1.64-2.97) were positively related to breast MRI receipt. No other HSUM variables were associated with breast MRI receipt (all p's > 0.1). Conclusions High-risk women reported low uptake of screening breast MRI, indicating a gap in guideline-concordant care. Breast cancer knowledge and screening-supportive social norms are two key areas to target in future interventions. Data were collected during the COVID-19 pandemic and generalizability of results is unclear. Future studies with larger, more heterogeneous samples are needed to replicate these findings.

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