4.7 Review

Clinical advances in PET-MRI for breast cancer

Journal

LANCET ONCOLOGY
Volume 23, Issue 1, Pages E32-E43

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCIENCE INC

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Funding

  1. Department of Radiology at the University of Wisconsin
  2. Department of Medical Physics at the University of Wisconsin
  3. University of Wisconsin Carbone Cancer Center [P30 CA014520]
  4. National Institutes of Health National Center for Advancing Translational Sciences [UL1TR002373]

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PET-MRI is a hybrid imaging technology that combines the advantages of PET and MRI, which plays an important role in the early diagnosis, staging, prognosis, tumor phenotyping, and assessment of treatment response in breast cancer.
Imaging is paramount for the early detection and clinical staging of breast cancer, as well as to inform management decisions and direct therapy. PET-MRI is a quantitative hybrid imaging technology that combines metabolic and functional PET data with anatomical detail and functional perfusion information from MRI. The clinical applicability of PET-MRI for breast cancer is an active area of research. In this Review, we discuss the rationale and summarise the clinical evidence for the use of PET-MRI in the diagnosis, staging, prognosis, tumour phenotyping, and assessment of treatment response in breast cancer. The continued development and approval of targeted radiopharmaceuticals, together with radiomics and automated analysis tools, will further expand the opportunity for PET-MRI to provide added value for breast cancer imaging and patient care.

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