Member Center

MRIs Don't Improve Breast Cancer Care, Outcome

MRIs Don't Improve Breast Cancer Care, Outcome

Related News from HealthDay
[an error occurred while processing this directive]
   

SATURDAY, Sept. 6 (HealthDay News) -- Women who receive an MRI after a new diagnosis of breast cancer not only delay the start of treatment, but they are also more likely to have a mastectomy, as opposed to breast-conserving surgery.

And despite clear evidence of a benefit, MRI use is on the rise, said the authors of a study expected to be Saturday at the American Society of Clinical Oncology Breast Cancer Symposium in Washington, D.C.

"There was no rhyme or reason as to when MRIs are being used," said study author Dr. Richard J. Bleicher, co-director of the breast surgery fellowship at Fox Chase Cancer Center in Philadelphia. "This tells us that routine use of MRI in breast cancer does not appear to help us with treatment choices, and it provides a small delay in work-up time."

Although MRI is recommended to screen high-risk women for breast cancer, its use in newly diagnosed breast cancer patients has been controversial.

"There's been a lot of hype about MRI. It is more sensitive . . . and people have assumed that because it is more sensitive that it will improve outcomes in women either for screening or breast cancer, but there's just about no data to suggest that," Bleicher said.

Bleicher and his team analyzed the medical records of 577 women with breast cancer, 130 of whom had had an MRI prior to treatment.

The women who had MRIs tended to be younger (52.4 years versus 58.8 years) but otherwise there appeared to be no difference between the two groups in breast cancer risk factors or in characteristics of the disease.

Having an MRI almost doubled the odds that a woman would undergo a mastectomy, adding to research presented in the spring by Mayo Clinic researchers who found that the mastectomy rate has increased to levels close to those not seen since 1997.

MRIs also delayed pre-treatment evaluation by about three weeks and did not help surgeons better gauge which patients would be good candidates for lumpectomy as opposed to mastectomy.

Although Bleicher advocates reining in post-diagnosis use of MRI, other experts feel there is need for more research.

"We don't really know what the endpoint is. We don't know how this really affects survival. We need larger studies to see the effect," said Dr. Debra L. Monticciolo, a professor of radiology at the Texas A&M Health Science Center College of Medicine, and vice chair of research in radiology and chief of breast imaging at Scott & White in Temple. "We're relatively new in using MRI with newly diagnosed cancer patients. . . . These studies need to develop over time. We're in the trial phase of using the technology in a way that maybe we're not used to."

Neither this nor other studies are yet enough to swing recommendations. "We need more research before we come up with a general recommendation," said Debbie Saslow, director of breast and gynecologic cancer at the American Cancer Society. "It's not a cut-and-dried issue."

More information

The National Cancer Institute has more on breast cancer and MRI.

 

Copyright © 2008 ScoutNews, LLC. All rights reserved.


Have fun

An Excuse to Celebrate

World Television Day

TV

Okay, so this is technically a European holiday, but we Americans love TV too. Watch the tube as much as you want today in celebration. TV listings and more »

Best of Dayton

You Decide What's the Best

Best Barbecue Restaurant [poll]

Best Dayton Ohio Barbecue Restaurant

Here's where you get to tell the world what you think. Every week you get to vote on the best that the Dayton area has to offer in entertainment, restaurants, recreation & and a few other bizarro categories.

Voting in this category ends on Nov. 24.

We have REVISED our official rules »

Search Events

Find Local Events

Find Showtimes

Find Movie Times

Restaurants

Find Restaurants

Food & More

Local Dining

Amelia's Bistro, Bellbrook, restaurant review [review]

Call it comfort food, gourmet style. From crab raviolis with vanilla lobster sauce, to a hand-cut and brined pork chop served with a fig jam, to a simply "Big-Ass Cake" that's a chocolate lover's dream, Amelia's has the potential to become a destination restaurant — worth the drive to Bellbrook. More »