The effect of acute aromatase inhibition on breast parenchymal enhancement in magnetic resonance imaging: a prospective pilot clinical trial
- PMID: 22258545
- DOI: 10.1097/gme.0b013e31823772a8
The effect of acute aromatase inhibition on breast parenchymal enhancement in magnetic resonance imaging: a prospective pilot clinical trial
Abstract
Objective: The breast is highly hormonally sensitive especially to the sex steroid hormone estrogen. Both physiological and iatrogenic steroid hormone modifications could affect how the breast tissue may appear in breast imaging techniques. We hypothesized that estrogen deprivation therapy could reduce breast nonspecific enhancement on magnetic resonance imaging (MRI).
Methods: This study was a prospective pilot phase II clinical trial. The study was approved by Health Canada and the institutional research ethics board, and participants signed informed consent forms. Sixteen healthy postmenopausal women were enrolled, and 14 completed the study. Baseline breast MRI was done followed 1 month later by administration of a high-dose aromatase inhibitor (letrozole 12.5 mg/day) for 3 successive days before a second breast MRI. Background breast parenchymal enhancement was compared between the pretreatment and posttreatment studies.
Results: There was a statistically significant reduction of the average background breast enhancement after treatment with aromatase inhibitors compared with baseline MRI. Of particular interest, specific areas of benign breast enhancement were reduced after aromatase inhibitor treatment. No significant adverse effects were recorded using this relatively high dose of the aromatase inhibitors.
Conclusions: This preliminary study provided evidence that aromatase inhibitors could reduce the parenchymal background enhancement of benign breast tissue during MRI and may improve the specificity of the technique.
Trial registration: ClinicalTrials.gov NCT01129622.
Comment in
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Aromatase inhibition to decrease background parenchymal enhancement: premedication before magnetic resonance imaging?Menopause. 2012 Apr;19(4):385-6. doi: 10.1097/gme.0b013e31824af478. Menopause. 2012. PMID: 22453132 No abstract available.
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In response to Cuce et al.Menopause. 2013 Feb;20(2):241-2. doi: 10.1097/gme.0b013e318280a499. Menopause. 2013. PMID: 23340261 No abstract available.
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To the editor: acute aromatase inhibition.Menopause. 2013 Feb;20(2):241. doi: 10.1097/gme.0b013e318280a2e2. Menopause. 2013. PMID: 23340262 No abstract available.
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