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Sequential AB-MR Screenings

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0:00

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.

1:00

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.

1:42

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

4:14

up, um, anytime sometime soon.

Report

Faculty

Emily F. Conant, MD

Professor of Radiology, Chief of Breast Imaging, Vice Chair of Faculty Development

Department of Radiology, University of Pennsylvania

Tags

Screening

Neoplastic

MRI

Breast

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