PET/MRI wins support in breast lesion comparisons

2016 10 05 17 45 45 493 Breast Cancer 400

PET/MRI is better than MRI alone for the detection and staging of nodes and distant metastases in women with breast cancer, according to a study presented by German researchers at the recent RSNA 2019 meeting.

Researchers from the University of DĂĽsseldorf in Germany found that the combination of PET with MRI was statistically superior to MRI alone for normal detection and staging, as well as in the detection of distant metastases (M staging).

"Both modalities have the diagnostic accuracy in detecting the M stage, but also bear the risk to overestimate the M stage," said study co-author and presenter Dr. Nils Bruckmann. "Therefore, PET/MRI should be considered as a useful alternative for the systematic staging of breast cancer patients at time of diagnosis."

Appropriate breast cancer treatment depends heavily on initial staging. Current guidelines recommend mammography, sonography, FDG-PET/CT, and breast MRI as effective methods to evaluate the local tumor extent, with the tumor, node, and metastases (TNM) system used to describe the spread of cancer.

"Consequently, FDG-PET/MRI could be an all-in-one solution involving dedicated breast MRI and PET," Bruckmann told RSNA attendees. "Therefore, the purpose of our study was to evaluate the diagnostic accuracy of whole-body MRI to whole-body FDG-PET/MRI for the initial TNM staging for newly diagnosed histologically proven breast cancer patients."

For this prospective, multicenter study, the researchers included 104 consecutive women (mean age, 53.4 ± 12.5 years) with histologically proven breast cancer. All subjects underwent whole-body FDG-PET/MRI in the supine position from the head to the midthigh using a 3-tesla MRI and PET system.

Two experienced radiologists separately analyzed the results on a per-patient and per-lesion basis and repeated the process four weeks later to avoid recognition bias. Their evaluations include the number of lesions, the lesion type, locations, sizes, and diagnostic confidence. Histopathology or follow-up exams were used as the reference standard, with that information available for all 104 patients.

A total of 298 lesions were included in the study. As for the nodal analysis, PET/MRI correctly detected nodes in more patients (83%) than MRI (74%), as well as more patients with positive nodes. PET/MRI also detected 87% of all nodes, compared with 75% for MRI alone. All of the aforementioned results were statistically significant in favor of PET/MRI.

MRI vs. PET/MRI for staging breast cancer lesions
  MRI alone PET/MRI
No. of patients 74% 83%
Nodal-positive patients 62% 75%
Detected lesions 75% 87%

The researchers also noted distant metastases in seven patients (6%). PET/MRI identified all seven subjects (100%) and detected all of their metastases (100%). Unfortunately, both PET/MRI and MRI alone also had false-positive findings in four patients. Relative to the lesion-based analysis, PET/MRI detected all 31 metastatic lesions (100%). MRI detected only 18 (58%) of those metastases, resulting in a statistically significant difference in favor of PET/MRI.

"Our study demonstrates that PET/MRI has a superior diagnostic performance on a per-patient basis and on a lesion-based basis, compared with MRI alone in the TNM stage," Bruckmann said.

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