MRI Evaluation of the Contralateral Breast in Women with Recently Diagnosed Breast Cancer
University of Washington Medical Center · Brown University · +11 more institutions
Abstract
Even after careful clinical and mammographic evaluation, cancer is found in the contralateral breast in up to 10% of women who have received treatment for unilateral breast cancer. We conducted a study to determine whether magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) could improve on clinical breast examination and mammography in detecting contralateral breast cancer soon after the initial diagnosis of unilateral breast cancer.
A total of 969 women with a recent diagnosis of unilateral breast cancer and no abnormalities on mammographic and clinical examination of the contralateral breast underwent breast MRI. The diagnosis of MRI-detected cancer was confirmed by means of biopsy within 12 months after study entry. The absence of breast cancer was determined by means of biopsy, the absence of positive findings on repeat imaging and clinical examination, or both at 1 year of follow-up.
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 40.39
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 29
Authors
13Topics & keywords
- Medicine
- Breast cancer
- Mammography
- Magnetic resonance imaging
- Breast MRI
- Biopsy
- Radiology
- Occult
- Good health and well-being