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. 2002 Aug 15;20(16):3413-23.
doi: 10.1200/JCO.2002.08.600.

Effect of breast magnetic resonance imaging on the clinical management of women with early-stage breast carcinoma

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Effect of breast magnetic resonance imaging on the clinical management of women with early-stage breast carcinoma

Gayle F Tillman et al. J Clin Oncol. .

Abstract

Purpose: To determine the impact of breast magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) on the clinical management of patients with early-stage breast cancer.

Patients and methods: A review was performed of the records of 207 women with early-stage breast cancer (including five women with bilateral disease) who underwent breast MRI during work-up for breast conservation treatment. All patients presented with clinical stage 0, I, or II disease. For each patient, a determination was made whether the breast MRI affected the clinical management, and if so, whether the patient was well served by the change in management.

Results: The MRI findings affected the clinical management in 43 cases (20% of 212 breast cancers). Based on the pathology findings and the overall clinical course for each case, the breast MRI was judged to have had a strongly favorable effect on management in 18 cases (8%), a somewhat favorable effect in six cases (3%), an uncertain effect in five cases (2%), a somewhat unfavorable effect in 11 cases (5%), and a strongly unfavorable effect in three cases (1%). The effect of MRI was not significantly different for invasive carcinoma compared with ductal carcinoma-in-situ (all P > or =.27). However, the effect of MRI was significantly greater when the MRI was performed before an excisional biopsy (P =.0011) or for larger tumors (P =.0089).

Conclusions: Breast MRI alters the clinical management for a sizable fraction of women with early-stage breast cancer and appears to offer clinically useful information for determining optimal local treatment.

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