Efficacy of MRI and mammography for breast-cancer screening in women with a familial or genetic predisposition
- PMID: 15282350
- DOI: 10.1056/NEJMoa031759
Efficacy of MRI and mammography for breast-cancer screening in women with a familial or genetic predisposition
Abstract
Background: The value of regular surveillance for breast cancer in women with a genetic or familial predisposition to breast cancer is currently unproven. We compared the efficacy of magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) with that of mammography for screening in this group of high-risk women.
Methods: Women who had a cumulative lifetime risk of breast cancer of 15 percent or more were screened every six months with a clinical breast examination and once a year by mammography and MRI, with independent readings. The characteristics of the cancers that were detected were compared with the characteristics of those in two different age-matched control groups.
Results: We screened 1909 eligible women, including 358 carriers of germ-line mutations. Within a median follow-up period of 2.9 years, 51 tumors (44 invasive cancers, 6 ductal carcinomas in situ, and 1 lymphoma) and 1 lobular carcinoma in situ were detected. The sensitivity of clinical breast examination, mammography, and MRI for detecting invasive breast cancer was 17.9 percent, 33.3 percent, and 79.5 percent, respectively, and the specificity was 98.1 percent, 95.0 percent, and 89.8 percent, respectively. The overall discriminating capacity of MRI was significantly better than that of mammography (P<0.05). The proportion of invasive tumors that were 10 mm or less in diameter was significantly greater in our surveillance group (43.2 percent) than in either control group (14.0 percent [P<0.001] and 12.5 percent [P=0.04], respectively). The combined incidence of positive axillary nodes and micrometastases in invasive cancers in our study was 21.4 percent, as compared with 52.4 percent (P<0.001) and 56.4 percent (P=0.001) in the two control groups.
Conclusions: MRI appears to be more sensitive than mammography in detecting tumors in women with an inherited susceptibility to breast cancer.
Copyright 2004 Massachusetts Medical Society
Comment in
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Breast cancer screening with MRI--what are the data for patients at high risk?N Engl J Med. 2004 Jul 29;351(5):497-500. doi: 10.1056/NEJMe048117. N Engl J Med. 2004. PMID: 15282358 No abstract available.
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MRI in breast cancer.N Engl J Med. 2004 Nov 18;351(21):2235-6; author reply 2235-6. doi: 10.1056/NEJM200411183512118. N Engl J Med. 2004. PMID: 15548786 No abstract available.
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MRI in breast cancer.N Engl J Med. 2004 Nov 18;351(21):2235-6; author reply 2235-6. N Engl J Med. 2004. PMID: 15559961 No abstract available.
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Magnetic resonance imaging was more sensitive than mammography for detecting breast cancer in high-risk women.ACP J Club. 2005 Jan-Feb;142(1):23. ACP J Club. 2005. PMID: 15656564 No abstract available.
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