We use cookies to understand how you use our site and to improve your experience. This includes personalizing content and advertising. To learn more, click here. By continuing to use our site, you accept our use of cookies. Cookie Policy.

Features Partner Sites Information LinkXpress hp
Sign In
Advertise with Us
GLOBETECH PUBLISHING LLC

Download Mobile App




Rising Use of Breast MRI Scans in the United States

By MedImaging International staff writers
Posted on 26 Nov 2013
Print article
The overall use of breast magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) has risen, with the technology most typically used for diagnostic assessments and screenings.

The study’s findings were published online November 18, 2013, in JAMA Internal Medicine, a JAMA Network publication. Even though breast MRI is being used increasingly, its sensitivity leads to higher false-positive rates, and it is more costly. Guidelines from the American Cancer Society (ACS; Atlanta, GA, USA) indicate that breast MRI should be used to screen asymptomatic women at high risk for breast cancer if they are known carriers of the BRCA gene mutation; first-degree relatives of a known BRCA gene mutation carrier who are themselves untested; or a women with more than a 20% lifetime risk of breast cancer, according to the authors of the study.

Karen J. Wernli, PhD, from the Group Health Research Institute (Seattle, WA, USA) and colleagues examined the patterns of breast MRI scanning in US community practice from 2005 through 2009, with data collected from five national Breast Cancer Surveillance Consortium registries.

Study findings show that through 2005–2009, the overall rate of breast MRI nearly tripled from 4.2–11.5 scans per 1,000 women. The procedure was most typically used for diagnostic evaluation (40.3%), followed by screening (31.7%). Women who underwent screening breast MRI were more likely to be younger than 50 years old, white, nulliparous, have a personal history of breast cancer, a family history of breast cancer, and very dense breast tissue.

Study findings also indicate that the percentage of women screened with breast MRI at high lifetime risk for breast cancer increased from 9% in 2005 to 29% in 2009. The researchers also note that during the study period, the most common use of breast MRI was for diagnostic evaluation of a non-MRI finding. “Our findings suggest that there have been improvements in appropriate use of breast MRI, with a smaller proportion of examinations performed for further evaluation of abnormal mammogram results and symptomatic patients, and more breast MRI performed for screening of women at high risk,” the authors stated.

The use of breast MRI increased in the decade after 2001 before ultimately stabilizing, particularly for screening and monitoring of women with a family or personal history of breast cancer, according to a study by Natasha K. Stout, PhD, from the Harvard Medical School (Boston, MA, USA) and the Harvard Pilgrim Health Care Institute (Boston, MA, USA) and colleagues.

Although breast MRI is more sensitive than mammography in detecting breast cancer, cost and little evidence regarding the mortality benefits have limited recommendations for its use, according to the investigators. Between 2000 and 2001, researchers studied 10,518 women ages 20 and older who were enrolled in a health plan for at least one year and had at least one breast MRI at a multispecialty group medical practice in New England. Breast MRI counts and breast cancer risk status, as well as the reason for testing (screening, diagnostic assessment, staging, or treatment, or surveillance) were obtained.

According to study results, breast MRI increased from 2000 (6.5 examinations per 10,000 women) to 2009 (130.7 exams per 10,000 women), with the greatest rise in use for screening and surveillance. By 2011, use declined then stabilized at 104.8 exams per 10,000 women. Screening and surveillance accounted for 57.6% of MRI use by 2011. Of the women, 30.1% had a claims-document personal history, 51.7% a family history of breast cancer, and 3.5% of women had a documented genetic mutation.

Researchers noted that in a subset of women with electronic medical records who received screening or surveillance MRI scans only 21% had evidence of meeting American Cancer Society criteria for breast MRI. Only 48.4% of women with documented genetic mutations received breast MRI screening. “Understanding who is receiving breast MRI and the downstream consequences of this use should be a high research priority to ensure that the limited health care funds available are used to wisely maximize population health,” the authors concluded.

In a related commentary in the same issue of the journal, E. Shelley Hwang, MD, MPH, from the Duke University Medical Center (Durham, NC, USA) and Isabelle Bedrosian, MD, of the MD Anderson Cancer Center (Houston, TX, USA), reported: “In an era of ever-increasing focus on cost containment in health care, the value of MRI is clearly an issue of concern. What is striking in both studies by Wernli et al. and Stout et al. was that breast MRI was both overused in women not meeting guideline criteria and underused in those who could derive greatest benefit. As a medical community, we bear a collective responsibility to ensure that breast MRI provides sufficient clinical benefit to warrant the additional biopsies, increased patient anxiety, and cost that accrue with its use.”

Related Links:
Group Health Research Institute
Duke University Medical Center
Harvard Medical School

New
HF Stationary X-Ray Machine
TR20G
New
Ultrasound Probe Disinfection Solution
UltrOx
Ultra-Flat DR Detector
meX+1717SCC
New
Stereotactic QA Phantom
StereoPHAN

Print article

Channels

Ultrasound

view channel
Image: Ultrasound detection of vascular changes post-RT corresponds to shifts in the immune microenvironment (Photo courtesy of Theranostics, DOI:10.7150/thno.97759)

Ultrasound Imaging Non-Invasively Tracks Tumor Response to Radiation and Immunotherapy

While immunotherapy holds promise in the fight against triple-negative breast cancer, many patients fail to respond to current treatments. A major challenge has been predicting and monitoring how individual... Read more

Nuclear Medicine

view channel
Image: [18F]3F4AP in a human subject after mild incomplete spinal cord injury (Photo courtesy of The Journal of Nuclear Medicine, DOI:10.2967/jnumed.124.268242)

Novel PET Technique Visualizes Spinal Cord Injuries to Predict Recovery

Each year, around 18,000 individuals in the United States experience spinal cord injuries, leading to severe mobility loss that often results in a lifelong battle to regain independence and improve quality of life.... Read more

General/Advanced Imaging

view channel
Image: The rugged and miniaturized CT scanner is being designed for use beyond a typical hospital setting (Photo courtesy of Micro-X)

World’s First Mobile Whole-Body CT Scanner to Provide Diagnostics at POC

Conventional CT scanners dominate the global medical imaging market, holding approximately 30% of the market share. These scanners are the current standard for various diagnostic applications, including... Read more

Imaging IT

view channel
Image: The new Medical Imaging Suite makes healthcare imaging data more accessible, interoperable and useful (Photo courtesy of Google Cloud)

New Google Cloud Medical Imaging Suite Makes Imaging Healthcare Data More Accessible

Medical imaging is a critical tool used to diagnose patients, and there are billions of medical images scanned globally each year. Imaging data accounts for about 90% of all healthcare data1 and, until... Read more
Copyright © 2000-2025 Globetech Media. All rights reserved.