BSBR
The British Society of Breast Radiology
The British Society of Breast Radiology
High risk protocols
HIGH RISK SCREENING PROTOCOLS
MRI Breast Screening Guidelines
NHSBSP PUBLICATION No 68 DECEMBER 2009
New NBS Guidelines for screening High Risk Women for Breast Cancer with Magnetic Resonance Imaging are being produced
The guidelines are not yet published on the NHS BSP website, but will be available on ours and the NBSS site.
The latest documentation and forms can be found on the MRI page
Tittled - "technical guidelines for magnetic resonance imaging for the surveillance of women at increased risk of developing breast cancer"
The NHS Breast Screening Programme (NHSBSP) is responsible for setting and monitoring the standards for imaging surveillance of women below the screening age who are assessed as being at increased risk of developing breast cancer. This may be because of a family history of breast cancer or previous radiotherapy treatment for Hodgkin’s disease. The guidance sets out the technical standards required for the provision of breast MRI as part of the imaging surveillance of women at increased risk, and describes the arrangements for reporting MRI examinations and for quality assurance of MRI surveillance. The guidance is based on the results of the magnetic resonance imaging breast study (MARIBS)1 and has been compiled by a UK working party made up of members of the MARIBS steering group, representatives from industry including manufacturers of MRI equipment, and software companies producing tools for breast MRI analysis
DOCUMENTATION:
NHSBSP PUBLICATION No 68 DECEMBER 2009
REQUEST AND REPORTING FORM
ACRIN 6666 Study
Breast Ultrasound and Mammography in Screening Women at High Risk for Breast Cancer
Study closed for new subjects
ACRIN PROTOCOL 6666
American College of Radiology FAQs about the ACRIN 6666 study
NCI Summary Document
ACR, SBI Statement on ACRIN Breast Ultrasound Trial Results and Role of Ultrasound in Breast Imaging Care
The results of the American College of Radiology Imaging Network National Breast Ultrasound Trial (ACRIN 6666) demonstrated that a single screening ultrasound examination, added to a screening mammogram, increased detection of breast cancer compared with mammography alone, among women at increased risk of breast cancer who also had dense breast tissue. As is the case for other screening modalities, the ultimate utility of screening ultrasound depends on many other factors in addition to cancer detection, including the number of false positive findings resulting in the need for additional evaluations and benign biopsies, the availability of equipment, staff, and other resources necessary to perform the test on an appropriate scale, and its cost effectiveness.
Papers and presentations produced so far: (RSNA 2009)
- Berg W, Zhang Z, Cormack J, Lehrer D, Bohm-Velez M, Pisano E, et al.
- Screening Breast Ultrasound as a Supplement to Mammography: Yield of Annual Screening in ACRIN 6666
- Berg W, Zhang Z, Cormack J, Lehrer D, Bohm-Velez M, Pisano E, Jong R, Evans W, Morton M, et al.
- False Positives Induced by Annual Screening US Added to Mammography: ACRIN 6666
- Berg W, Zhang Z, Cormack J, Jong R, Barr R, Lehrer D, et al.
- Supplemental Yield and Performance Characteristics of Screening MRI after Combined Ultrasound and Mammography: ACRIN 6666
This page was last modified on 19/09/2011 at 20:42.