Women with unilateral breast cancer are at increased risk for having simultaneous cancer of the contralateral breast. Overall, earlier detection of contralateral breast cancer prevents the burden of additional surgery or chemotherapy rounds and is associated with higher overall survival. However, MRI screening for the contralateral breast is seldom done following an initial unilateral breast cancer diagnosis. The purpose of this study is to retrospectively evaluate patients with known, biopsy-proven malignancy who went on to obtain a breast MRI and were later found to have cancer of the contralateral breast. Methods: This was a retrospective study that reviewed the charts of women aged over 18 years who were determined to have synchronous bilateral breast cancer from January 2017 to January 2022 at the University of Florida, Gainesville, FL. The study extracted data from this institution's cancer registry database, which provided information on patients with breast cancer diagnoses. The study conducted a review of mammography (MAM) and MRI imaging reports to ascertain the presence or absence of contralateral breast cancer identified by each respective imaging modality. Surgical pathology reports from the biopsy of the contralateral breast were reviewed to obtain information on the histological type of cancer and TNM (tumor, node, metastasis) staging. Of the 17 cases in which MAM missed contralateral cancer, follow-up MRI detected contralateral malignancy in 12 cases (70.59%) and subsequently changed management, resulting in additional imaging, biopsy, and eventual diagnosis and treatment of contralateral breast cancer. Examining the number of contralateral breast cancers detected by patients who had undergone MAM followed by MRI and those who had only undergone MAM, the study found that the detection rate of contralateral breast cancer from MAM was 45.45% (15/33). The tumor stages of the missed cancers were all T1 or Tis stage with one T1mi, and there was no nodal involvement. Conclusion: In addition to its utility in staging breast cancers, MRI also has the superior ability to detect otherwise undetected contralateral breast malignancy. This retrospective study found that MRI imaging led to a considerable increase in the detection of contralateral cancer. The study found that these undetected contralateral breast cancers by MAM were often of lower staging with no nodal involvement, highlighting the opportunity for MRI to assist in early cancer detection while the patient's prognosis is still good. Its high cost should be balanced with staging and occult malignancy detection utility in future practice.
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