MRI of the breast: state of the art

被引:0
|
作者
M. Friedrich
机构
[1] Abteilung Radiologie/Nuklearmedizin,
[2] Krankenhaus am Urban,undefined
[3] Dieffenbachstrasse 1,undefined
[4] D-10 967 Berlin,undefined
[5] Germany,undefined
来源
European Radiology | 1998年 / 8卷
关键词
Key words: MRI; Breast; Breast carcinoma; Indications;
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
Contrast-enhanced MRI of the breast is probably the most sensitive method to detect breast pathology. It is best used to improve the sensitivity of mammography and sonography in selected patient groups with high breast cancer prevalence, where conventional methods are known to be less sensitive. Despite the high sensitivity of MRI, 5–12 % of invasive carcinomas are not recognized during MRI, because of lack of the typical criteria of carcinoma. MRI is probably inferior to mammography in detecting ductal in-situ carcinoma or very small carcinomas (< 3 mm), because the neo-angiogenesis induced by these small carcinomas is too faint to be detected by contrast-enhanced MRI. These tumours cannot be excluded by a normal MRI examination. MRI is non-specific as the distinction of benign and malignant breast lesions is unreliable. Only in selected cases (fat- or blood-containing lesions) may it improve the specificity of mammography and sonography. Mostly image-guided core biopsy is by far the most specific and least expensive method to establish a definitive diagnosis. For lesions exclusively detected by contrast-enhanced MRI, simple and reliable localisation devices are urgently needed. Presently accepted indications for MRI of the breast are: patients with silicone implants after mastectomy or augmentation mammoplasty (detection of recurrence/prothesis rupture/silicon leakage); patients whose breasts are difficult to evaluate by combined mammography and sonography, who have had breast conservation therapy (local recurrence), or who have proven carcinoma in one breast (multifocality/-centricity or contralateral breast carcinoma) or proven axillary lymph node metastases from an unknown primary tumor, especially when these are hormone receptor positive; patients with extensive postoperative scarring. In the future, genetically defined high breast cancer risk may become an indication.
引用
收藏
页码:707 / 725
页数:18
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [41] State-of-the-art CT and MRI of the adrenal gland
    P. D. Peppercorn
    R. H. Reznek
    European Radiology, 1997, 7 : 822 - 836
  • [42] State of the art survey on MRI brain tumor segmentation
    Gordillo, Nelly
    Montseny, Eduard
    Sobrevilla, Pilar
    MAGNETIC RESONANCE IMAGING, 2013, 31 (08) : 1426 - 1438
  • [43] State of the Art: Quantitative Cardiac MRI in Cardiac Amyloidosis
    Guo, Yubo
    Li, Xiao
    Wang, Yining
    JOURNAL OF MAGNETIC RESONANCE IMAGING, 2022, 56 (05) : 1287 - 1301
  • [44] State of the Art in Quantitative Imaging in CT, PET and MRI
    McNitt-Gray, M.
    Kinahan, P.
    Jackson, E.
    MEDICAL PHYSICS, 2012, 39 (06) : 3862 - 3863
  • [45] Whole-body MRI in children: state of the art
    Gaunt, Trevor
    Humphries, Paul D.
    BJR OPEN, 2022, 4 (01):
  • [46] Evaluation of the state of the art in digital breast tomosynthesis
    Pacifici, Stefano
    IMAGEN DIAGNOSTICA, 2014, 5 (02): : 64 - 67
  • [47] Clinical application of breast elastography: State of the art
    Ricci, Paolo
    Maggini, Elena
    Mancuso, Ester
    Lodise, Pietro
    Cantisani, Vito
    Catalano, Carlo
    EUROPEAN JOURNAL OF RADIOLOGY, 2014, 83 (03) : 429 - 437
  • [48] Atypical epithelial hyperplasia of the breast: state of the art
    Dion, Ludivine
    Racin, Adelaide
    Brousse, Susie
    Beltjens, Francoise
    Cauchois, Aurelie
    Leveque, Jean
    Coutant, Charles
    Lavoue, Vincent
    EXPERT REVIEW OF ANTICANCER THERAPY, 2016, 16 (09) : 943 - 953
  • [49] State of art and optimization perspectives for breast imaging
    Calandrino, Riccardo
    Loria, Alessandro
    Panizza, Pietro
    Taibi, Angelo
    del Vecchio, Antonella
    PHYSICS OPEN, 2021, 7
  • [50] PERCUTANEOUS BIOPSIES OF THE BREAST - STATE-OF-THE-ART
    FORNAGE, BD
    CARDIOVASCULAR AND INTERVENTIONAL RADIOLOGY, 1991, 14 (01) : 29 - 39