Detection of Contralateral Malignancies on Breast MRI
Alan Y Xu, Mariam Hanna

TL;DR
This study shows that breast MRI is better than mammography at detecting early-stage cancer in the opposite breast of women with unilateral breast cancer.
Contribution
The study demonstrates that MRI significantly improves detection of contralateral breast cancer missed by mammography.
Findings
MRI detected 70.59% of contralateral breast cancers missed by mammography.
Missed cancers were mostly early-stage (T1 or Tis) with no nodal involvement.
Mammography alone detected only 45.45% of contralateral breast cancers.
Abstract
Introduction: Women with unilateral breast cancer are at increased risk for having simultaneous cancer of the contralateral breast. Overall, earlier detection of contralateral breast cancer prevents the burden of additional surgery or chemotherapy rounds and is associated with higher overall survival. However, MRI screening for the contralateral breast is seldom done following an initial unilateral breast cancer diagnosis. The purpose of this study is to retrospectively evaluate patients with known, biopsy-proven malignancy who went on to obtain a breast MRI and were later found to have cancer of the contralateral breast. Methods: This was a retrospective study that reviewed the charts of women aged over 18 years who were determined to have synchronous bilateral breast cancer from January 2017 to January 2022 at the University of Florida, Gainesville, FL. The study extracted data from…
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Taxonomy
TopicsMRI in cancer diagnosis · Radiomics and Machine Learning in Medical Imaging · Breast Lesions and Carcinomas
