Long-term results of screening with magnetic resonance imaging in women with BRCA mutations : British Journal of Cancer
Background:
The
addition of breast magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) to screening
mammography for women with BRCA mutations significantly increases
sensitivity, but there is little data on clinical outcomes. We report
screening performance, cancer stage, distant recurrence rate, and breast
cancer-specific mortality in our screening study.
Methods:
From 1997 to 2009, 496 women aged 25 to 65 years with a known BRCA1/2
mutation, of whom 380 had no previous cancer history, were enrolled in a
prospective screening trial that included annual MRI and mammography.
Results:
In
1847 screening rounds, 57 cancers were identified (53 screen-detected, 1
interval, and 3 incidental at prophylactic mastectomy), of which 37 (65%) were invasive. Sensitivity of MRI vs mammography was 86% vs 19% over the entire study period (P<0.0001), but was 74% vs 35% from 1997 to 2002 (P=0.02) and 94% vs 9%
from 2003 to 2009 (P<0.0001), respectively. The relative
sensitivities of MRI and mammography did not differ by mutation, age, or
invasive vs non-invasive disease. Of the incident cancers, 97%
were Stage 0 or 1. Of 28 previously unaffected women diagnosed with
invasive cancer, 1 BRCA1 mutation carrier died following relapse of a 3 cm, node-positive breast cancer diagnosed on her first screen at age 48 (annual breast cancer mortality rate=0.5%).
Three patients died of other causes. None of the 24 survivors has had a
distant recurrence at a median follow-up of 8.4 years since diagnosis.
Conclusion:
Magnetic resonance imaging surveillance of women with BRCA1/2
mutations will detect the majority of breast cancers at a very early
stage. The absence of distant recurrences of incident cancers to date is
encouraging. However, longer follow-up is needed to confirm the safety of breast surveillance.