Screening MRI in Women With a Personal History of Breast Cancer

Constance D. Lehman(Seattle Cancer Care Alliance), Janie M. Lee(Seattle Cancer Care Alliance), Wendy B. DeMartini(Seattle Cancer Care Alliance), Daniel S. Hippe(Seattle Cancer Care Alliance), Mara H. Rendi(Seattle Cancer Care Alliance), Grace Kalish(Seattle Cancer Care Alliance), Peggy L. Porter(Seattle Cancer Care Alliance), Julie R. Gralow(Seattle Cancer Care Alliance), Savannah C. Partridge(Seattle Cancer Care Alliance)
JNCI Journal of the National Cancer Institute
January 7, 2016
Cited by 143Open Access
Full Text

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Screening MRI is recommended for individuals at high risk for breast cancer, based on genetic risk or family history (GFH); however, there is insufficient evidence to support screening MRI for women with a personal history (PH) of breast cancer. We compared screening MRI performance in women with PH vs GFH of breast cancer. METHODS: We analyzed case-series registry data, collected at time of MRI and at 12-month follow-up, from our regional Clinical Oncology Data Integration project. MRI performance was compared in women with PH with those with GFH. Chi-square testing was used to identify associations between age, prior history of MRI, and clinical indication with MRI performance; logistic regression was used to determine the combined contribution of these variables in predicting risk of a false-positive exam. All statistical tests were two-sided. RESULTS: Of 1521 women who underwent screening MRI from July 2004 to November 2011, 915 had PH and 606 had GFH of breast cancer. Overall, MRI sensitivity was 79.4% for all cancers and 88.5% for invasive cancers. False-positive exams were lower in the PH vs GFH groups (12.3% vs 21.6%, P < .001), specificity was higher (94.0% vs 86.0%, P < .001), and sensitivity and cancer detection rate were not statistically different (P > .99). Age (P < .001), prior MRI (P < .001), and clinical indication (P < .001) were individually associated with initial false-positive rate; age and prior MRI remained statistically significant in multivariable modeling (P = .001 and P < .001, respectively). CONCLUSION: MRI performance is superior in women with PH compared with women with GFH. Screening MRI warrants consideration as an adjunct to mammography in women with a PH of breast cancer.


Related Papers

No related papers found

Powered by citation graph analysis