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BI-RADS 2 – Marked BPE, Stable

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Our next case is a 45-year-old

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woman for high-risk screening.

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So this is our MRI on our patient.

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We can see that there's a lot of background

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parenchymal enhancement bilaterally.

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We see her normal blood vessels, and there

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are a few enhancing foci of enhancement.

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We'll go back out and get her T1-weighted nonfat

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10 00:00:26,000 --> 00:00:28,919 saturated images on the left and her first

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post-contrast subtracted images on the right.

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And this patient has had some

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biopsies so you can see susceptibility

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artifact from biopsy clips,

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and there was one biopsy on each side.

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So susceptibility artifacts here on

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the right upper central and then left

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anterior central breast, and those were

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from prior benign MRI-guided biopsies.

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And then on her subtracted images, there's a lot

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of background enhancement, marked background.

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It's asymmetrically more on the right side,

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kind of more in the periphery of the breast.

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Luckily, we had prior images to compare, and

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all of the areas of enhancement were stable.

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So she does definitely have some

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focal non-mass enhancement and some

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enhancing foci, but they were stable.

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And when we first saw this patient, background

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enhancement worried us quite a bit, and we

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ended up doing bilateral MRI-guided biopsies

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for areas that turned out to be benign.

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And then we've just been following

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them over time since then.

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So just an example of marked

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background enhancement.

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But a BI-RADS 2 exam, and of course, we would

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look at all series and her color images and

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everything else, but, and then of course I

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think in this kind of case comparison to

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prior is going to be the most helpful part.

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This is her T1 pre-contrast and post-contrast

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the source images, which can be very helpful.

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But basically, this patient

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might be concerning if you were seeing her

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on her baseline exam, but because everything

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was stable, this was considered a BI-RADS 2.

Report

Description

Faculty

Lisa Ann Mullen, MD

Assistant Professor; Breast Imaging Fellowship Director

Johns Hopkins Medicine

Tags

Women's Health

MRI

Breast

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