Interactive Transcript
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What about sequential screens?
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What about how often should you have them?
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Should you have them every 2 years?
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What happens after you've had one?
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So we want to look into this a little bit.
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This is one cohort study that came from
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Korea, and this was almost 2000 women undergoing
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about 3000 exams, and they were
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a mix of mostly high or intermediate risk.
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There were some average-risk women with
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dense breasts, but a very small number.
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So remember higher-risk women
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looking at the typical outcomes.
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And this is interesting because their
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results are important, but very different
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from what we found in average-risk women.
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And I'll show you that they found 38 cancers,
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29 of those detected by abbreviated MR, but nine
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false negatives. Of the nine false negatives,
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they were all node-negative.
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And seven of those nine were not seen by the
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abbreviated MR, but were seen by another
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modality and two were true interval cancers.
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So, if you look at their cancer detection
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rates here and their sensitivity
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and specificity, their cancer detection rates per
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1000 screens of the MRs are much less than
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what we've been seeing, which is interesting.
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Um, 10.7 in year 3, 7 or so per 1000 in year 1, 8.6in year 2.
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31 00:01:20,730 --> 00:01:22,410
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And the sensitivity is not as great
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as what we have been seeing in some
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of our studies, but the specificity is
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higher because they're biopsying less.
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But also sensitivity is less, so very,
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very interesting, somewhat different
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results than what we've had. Biopsy rate,
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very low, short-term follow-up rate.
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We hate those categories.
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3 is also low, but I just wanted you to see this now.
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I want you to see data that
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my colleagues and I presented
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last year on our sequential rounds.
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Now, we had a total of about 2,1800 women who had
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more than one study, and we looked at the baseline
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results of their abbreviated MR versus their
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subsequent rounds, and you can see the cancers.
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You can see the cancer detection rates,
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and we maintained a pretty high cancer
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detection rate on the subsequent round: 16.8,
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and subsequent versus 17.6. Remember, this is looking at
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the women who’ve had more than one MR.
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So, not our whole volume of women that
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I presented to you earlier that had a
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24.7 per 1000 cancer detection
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rate, but this is pretty good.
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So, how frequent were these?
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Between baseline and subsequent,
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the mean interval between the consecutive
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studies was actually a little over a year.
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It was 755 days.
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So they weren’t getting them in general every
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year, but a little bit longer than that.
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And I think this is something that we
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need to look at, you know, perhaps.
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The supplemental screening with
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MR should be yearly for premenopausal women.
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Maybe as women age, it may
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become every other year.
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Of course, it's something that we need
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to consider, but there was no significant
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difference in the cancer detection rate
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on our baseline versus subsequent studies.
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Fascinating.
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There was a trend, as you can imagine of higher PPV 2 and 3.
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81 00:03:18,575 --> 00:03:18,804
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83 00:03:20,174 --> 00:03:21,994 that's the positive predictive value.
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So calling something, um.
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Um, actionable.
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Um, it makes sense if you've got a
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prior to compare your PPV 2 and 3 88 00:03:31,285 --> 00:03:32,605 should become better because you've
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got like a baseline to compare to.
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I hope that makes sense.
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92 00:03:37,465 --> 00:03:40,855 Birads 3% again got better because
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you had something to compare to.
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95 00:03:44,295 --> 00:03:46,685 Very, very interesting compared to the
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data presented in that prior Korean
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paper, but this cancer detection rate was
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maintained and here's the type of cancers.
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The majority of the cancers were early
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stage stage 0 or stage 1, and you can
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see that also on the subsequent rounds.
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You're not seeing any high
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grade 1 stage 2, 3 and 4.
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There was 1 stage 3 at baseline imaging
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in this small less than 2000 group.
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That we had at our site.
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We're looking at, uh, writing this
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up, um, anytime sometime soon.
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