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AOCR Resident Distance Learning Lecture

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Title: AOCR Resident Distance Learning Lecture


1
AOCR Resident Distance Learning Lecture
  • Sponsored by the American Osteopathic College of
    Radiology Education Foundation

2
MRI Breast IndicationsWhat, when, howGetting
the ball rolling
  • Claire McKay, DO
  • MS Imaging Associates
  • San Antonio, TX

3
Goals
  • Understand WHAT MRI breast is and where it came
    from
  • Review WHEN MRI breast is appropriate
  • Gather information and direction on HOW to begin
    to incorporate an MRI breast program for total
    breast healthcare for patients
  • Technique Patient, equipment, protocol
  • Interpretation and overview
  • MRI Breast challenges
  • Biopsy and intervention overview

4
Nuts and Bolts
  • Technique patient, equipment, protocol
  • Interpretation overview
  • Challenges
  • Biopsy, interventions

5
What is MRI Breast?
  • With contrast, it is a sensitive (95-98) and
    relatively specific (37-97) modality for breast
  • Negative predictive value gt95
  • Positive predictive value 56-75
  • Sensitive in conjunction with PET
  • Sensitivity decreases for DCIS and lobular CA
  • Premenopausal specificity varies with menstrual
    phase, glandular tissue
  • Adjuvant with mammography, US, PE

6
WhatEarly Breast MRI
  • 1971 T1 relaxation times longer for tumors than
    normal tissue
  • 1979 Breast images produced before brain images
  • NY 1983 Breast MRI coils first available
  • Germany 1988 Gadolinium contrast used on
    cancers to avoid excisional biopsy
  • 1990 Fat suppression with hi-resolution MRI for
    tumor staging
  • 1990s Slow adaptation due to poor fat
    suppression, no biopsy tools, poor RF coils

7
WhatBreast MRI Coming of Age
  • Coils, fat suppression, image processing widely
    available and of quality
  • Stereotactic capabilities
  • CAD
  • MRI compatible needles, markers, wires
  • ACR, ACS, ASBD, ASBS Practice Guidelines
  • ACR Breast MRI Lexicon

8
When Indications
  • Tumor workup and staging
  • Incomplete workup, occult mammogram and/or US
  • Neoadjuvant response, post op margins
  • High risk screening
  • Implants

9
Indications
Breast cancer staging Extent of disease
evaluation prior to breast conservation surgery
or mastectomy planning. Contralateral breast
examination in patients with breast malignancy
MRI can detect unsuspected disease in the
opposite breast in at least 4-5 of breast cancer
patients. Often, with negative mammography and
physical examination. Lesion characterization
When conventional breast imaging studies such as
mammography, ultrasound or physical examination
are inconclusive for the presence of breast
cancer. Large lymph nodes may be
present. Monitoring chemotherapy treatment To
evaluate chemotherapeutic response and the extent
of residual disease prior to surgical treatment
10
Indications
Evaluating patients with positive surgical
margins for residual disease To help determine
which patients could be effectively treated by
re-excision or whether a mastectomy is required
due to the presence of more extensive
disease. Silicone and non-silicone breast
implant evaluation Evaluating breast implants
for rupture and detecting cancer in women with
breast implants pre-operative for
implants. Evaluating post-operative scar versus
tumor recurrence Occult breast cancer Locating
the very small, undiagnosed breast cancer (occult
cancer) when a malignant axillary node is found
and the origin cannot be determined with
mammography or physical examination. Surveillance
of high risk patients Breast cancer screening
in patients with a genetic predisposition to
breast cancer.
11
What MRI Breast Basics 1
  • Radiofrequency pulses with precise spacial
    modulation (use and manipulation) of strong
    magnetic field to image magnetic characteristics
    of hydrogen atoms
  • 2-D thin slice, multiplanar or 3-D volumetric
    images without ionizing radiation
  • Operator independent, not limited by dense breast
    tissue (relative)

12
What MRI Breast Basics 2
  • MRI pulse sequences create images that reflect
    different tissue properties
  • MRI is very sensitive to paramagnetic IV contrast
    to shorten T1 relaxation increases signal to
    improve tissue differentiation
  • Invasive breast tumors have neovascular borders
    thinned/leaky abnormal endothelium leads to rapid
    exchange of the contrast in the tumor compared to
    normal tissue.
  • Thus, sensitivity for breast CA gt90
  • Morphology and time course enhancement help
    differentiate benign from malignant

13
What Breast CA MRI Principles
  • Breast cancers are sensitive to contrast
    enhancement regardless of tissue density
  • Tumor angiogenesis gives preferential enhancement
    of CA with IV contrast
  • Lesion morphology must be used there is overlap
    between B9 and malignant lesions
  • Time course enhancement
  • Cancers have rapid wash-in in the 1st 2 min
  • Cancers have plateau or gradual wash-out
  • Cancers peak enhancement approx lt/2 minutes
  • Benign conditions generally enhance gradually

14
How Patient selection
  • Appropriate indication(s)
  • Menstrual cycle 7-10d after menstrual onset
  • Contraindications vascular clips, ocular metal,
    pacemaker, implanted electromagnetic devices use
    a safety form
  • Breast history form complaints, lumps previous
    bxs and clip sizes (signal void, blooming) XRT,
    chemo, surgery dates, HRT, cycle phase, family hx
  • Get old films mammograms and US, PET

15
How Equipment
  • 1.5T magnet provides best STN ratio high
    performance gradients fastest, highest
    resolution.
  • 1.5T improves fat suppression
  • Not all software is alike shop and try before
    you buy
  • Open MRI has weaker gradient systems
  • Dedicated breast coil (4,7,8 channel)
  • Prone reduces respiratory motion
  • Stablizes breasts with little/no compression
  • Do not use firm compression
  • Coil maximizes STN ratio
  • Remote power injector for dynamic imaging

16
How Breast Coil RF System
  • Parallel
  • Multi small receive only coils higher SNR, less
    homogeneity, more hot spots
  • Higher resolution but higher SNR, parallel
    artifacts
  • Simultaneous acquisition
  • Dedicated
  • Transmit-receive quadrature coils larger FOV
    lower SNR but more efficient pulse sequence, less
    artifacts
  • Broad homogenous coverage, few hot spots

17
How Breast Coils
20cm unilat 40cm bilat
18
How Breast Coil
  • 1. Open Lateral, medial, cranial for
    intervention
  • 2. Multichannel Parallel imaging for faster
    scan time and aid in diagnostic and intervention
  • 3. Ergonomic Patient comfort careful of
    breast size and axillary imaging
  • Integrated light source Ease with intervention
  • Size One size fits most

19
Dedicated Breast MRI
20
How What is Shim?
  • Area affected for image in a coil
  • Factory round vs ellipsoid
  • Round Each breast region of interest
  • Ellipsoid Spherical FOV

21
How Protocols
  • Protocols are individualized for equipment
  • Vendors have software
  • Pulse sequences Gradient echo, spin echo, 3D,
    2D, fat sat /- subtraction, post contrast
    dynamic scans, time interval between postcontrast
    scans, matrix, scan time, slice thickness
    ax-sag-cor
  • Postprocessing Multiplanar recons, MIP, time
    intensity curves
  • Scan time 30 minutes postprocessing
  • CAD cuts postprocessing time

22
How Protocol/Interpretation
  • T1 Skin, fibroglandular tissue, muscle, LN
  • Moderately low signal compared to fat
  • Mammary gland mixed low signal in high signal fat
    lobules
  • Also includes lipoma, protein cyst
  • T2 Heterogenous fibroglandular higher signal to
    muscle high signal cysts, lymph nodes,
    papilloma, ducts, blood vessels especially at
    periphery
  • T1 fat sat post Enhance peripheral SQ vessels,
    nipple, tumor enhancement
  • Dynamic post Fibroglandular tissue gradual,
    invasive cancer and lymph nodes rapid uptake
  • Signal Time Intensity Curve

23
T1 ax VIBRANT pre/fatsat
24
Sag T2 FSE
Post op
25
Fast STIR T2
Implant leakage, incidental pleural R effusion.
26
T1 Post contrast Dynamic X4
Ax Post Sub
Cor Post Sub
27
MIP 3D Post XRT Left Breast
L
R
28
Portfolio with multiple nodules
Enhancement Curves
29
3D MIP fatsat/subtraction IDC
Pre chemo
Post chemo 4 mo
30
Portfolio pages pre - post
31
How Artifacts
  • Ghosting cardiac or respiratory motion
  • Poor fat suppression from poor shim or excitation
    center frequency
  • Patient motion causes blur or bright/dark bands
  • Poor enhancement from failed contrast injection
  • Metal void or blooming

32
Shim
Blooming
Breathing motion large breasts
Ghosting, blooming
Artifacts
33
What is a Time Intensity Curve?
  • Goal To evaluate the enhancement pattern of a
    lesion
  • ROI placed selectively onto lesion(s)
  • Signal intensity (SI) is plotted on the SI Time
    Course
  • To identify the part of the lesion with the
    strongest and fastest enhancement
  • Manual vs CAD
  • Selective information for differential diagnosis

34
Persistent
Plateau
Bowed
There is overlap. Nothing replaces morphology
PLUS enhancement in interpretation.
Washout
35
How ACR Lexicon
  • Lesion Focus, mass, linear, ductal,
    focal/segmental/regional/diffuse, clumped,
    heterogenous/homogeneous, reticular,
    symmetric/asymmetric
  • Shape Round, oval, lobulated, irregular
  • Margins Smooth, irregular, spiculated
  • Other Nipple retraction, skin thickening, edema,
    ducts, cysts, signal void
  • Signal pattern
  • Initial rise lt/ 2 min slow, medium, rapid
  • Enhancement background, persistent, plateau,
    washout
  • BIRADS Breast MRI BIRADS should be used

36
When do I need MRI Biopsy or MRI guided Needle
Loc?
  • Nonpalpable imaging detected breast lesion
  • Accurate and safe targeting
  • Real lesion
  • Cooperative patient
  • Well visualized in 2 views
  • Safe lesion access

37
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38
In the beginning
  • Sagital T2
  • T1 pre and post fat saturation axial
  • Axial dynamic imaging post contrast
  • Coronal post contrast
  • Post processing thin mip and 3-D
  • Implant spin echo axial
  • Gadolinium is necessary for cancer detection

39
How Interpretation
Morphology
Probably B9
Suspicious
Benign
KINETICS
Plateau or bowed curve
Persistent curve
Short term follow up
Biopsy
40
37yo with 100 lb weight loss new palpable mass
41
Ax Post T1 fat sat
Ax 3D MIP fat sat sub
DCIS
42
Ax 3D MIP fat sat sub post
Ax T2 STIR (implant rupture)
Sag T2
43
Sag T2
Ax T1 post fat sat
43yo post excisional bx seroma MRI to check for
residual disease
44
Screening MRI High Risk Family Hx
Pre contrast
Post contrast
45
IDC
Benign tissue
Slow, persistent
Rapid, plateau
46
Sag T2
55yo Prior R mastectomy, implants, new nodule on
L on annual mammogram
3D MIP post
47
47 yo, prior mastectomy, breast pain, f/u 4mm
nodule
48
6 mop fu nodule R 6 ocl stable MRI bx B9
stromal, florid UDH
49
60 yo for known DCIS R 3 ocl MRI prior to
surgical excision
2 additional nodules found R
50
3D MIP DCIS portfolio Irregular, lobular enhance
rapid, plateau
51
DCIS R with additional nodules medial irregular,
enhancement rapid, plateau
MRI biopsy Stromal fibrosis, FCC, calcifications
52
MRI Breast Challenges
  • Resolution DCIS, lobular carcinomas
  • Interpretation Few normals, time consuming, CAD
    confusion, difficult to correlate with mammogram
    and US and clinical information plus old films
  • Time Pulse sequences longer scan time, post
    processing
  • Cost Does the information justify the cost?
    Does it increase biopsies?
  • MRI intervention Expensive tools, time consuming
    in the MRI suite, lesions access
  • NOT meant to replace mammography

53
Thank you !
cmckayhart_at_juno.com
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