Cargando…

Breast density as indicator for the use of mammography or MRI to screen women with familial risk for breast cancer (FaMRIsc): a multicentre randomized controlled trial

BACKGROUND: To reduce mortality, women with a family history of breast cancer often start mammography screening at a younger age than the general population. Breast density is high in over 50% of women younger than 50 years. With high breast density, breast cancer incidence increases, but sensitivit...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Saadatmand, Sepideh, Rutgers, Emiel J T, Tollenaar, RobAEM, Zonderland, Hermien M, Ausems, MargreetGEM, Keymeulen, KristienBMI, Schlooz-Vries, Margreet S, Koppert, Linetta B, Heijnsdijk, Eveline A M, Seynaeve, Caroline, Verhoef, Cees, Oosterwijk, Jan C, Obdeijn, Inge-Marie, de Koning, Harry J, Tilanus-Linthorst, Madeleine M A
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: BioMed Central 2012
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3488502/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/23031619
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1471-2407-12-440
_version_ 1782248624555556864
author Saadatmand, Sepideh
Rutgers, Emiel J T
Tollenaar, RobAEM
Zonderland, Hermien M
Ausems, MargreetGEM
Keymeulen, KristienBMI
Schlooz-Vries, Margreet S
Koppert, Linetta B
Heijnsdijk, Eveline A M
Seynaeve, Caroline
Verhoef, Cees
Oosterwijk, Jan C
Obdeijn, Inge-Marie
de Koning, Harry J
Tilanus-Linthorst, Madeleine M A
author_facet Saadatmand, Sepideh
Rutgers, Emiel J T
Tollenaar, RobAEM
Zonderland, Hermien M
Ausems, MargreetGEM
Keymeulen, KristienBMI
Schlooz-Vries, Margreet S
Koppert, Linetta B
Heijnsdijk, Eveline A M
Seynaeve, Caroline
Verhoef, Cees
Oosterwijk, Jan C
Obdeijn, Inge-Marie
de Koning, Harry J
Tilanus-Linthorst, Madeleine M A
author_sort Saadatmand, Sepideh
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: To reduce mortality, women with a family history of breast cancer often start mammography screening at a younger age than the general population. Breast density is high in over 50% of women younger than 50 years. With high breast density, breast cancer incidence increases, but sensitivity of mammography decreases. Therefore, mammography might not be the optimal method for breast cancer screening in young women. Adding MRI increases sensitivity, but also the risk of false-positive results. The limitation of all previous MRI screening studies is that they do not contain a comparison group; all participants received both MRI and mammography. Therefore, we cannot empirically assess in which stage tumours would have been detected by either test. The aim of the Familial MRI Screening Study (FaMRIsc) is to compare the efficacy of MRI screening to mammography for women with a familial risk. Furthermore, we will assess the influence of breast density. METHODS/DESIGN: This Dutch multicentre, randomized controlled trial, with balanced randomisation (1:1) has a parallel grouped design. Women with a cumulative lifetime risk for breast cancer due to their family history of ≥20%, aged 30–55 years are eligible. Identified BRCA1/2 mutation carriers or women with 50% risk of carrying a mutation are excluded. Group 1 receives yearly mammography and clinical breast examination (n = 1000), and group 2 yearly MRI and clinical breast examination, and mammography biennially (n = 1000). Primary endpoints are the number and stage of the detected breast cancers in each arm. Secondary endpoints are the number of false-positive results in both screening arms. Furthermore, sensitivity and positive predictive value of both screening strategies will be assessed. Cost-effectiveness of both strategies will be assessed. Analyses will also be performed with mammographic density as stratification factor. DISCUSSION: Personalized breast cancer screening might optimize mortality reduction with less over diagnosis. Breast density may be a key discriminator for selecting the optimal screening strategy for women < 55 years with familial breast cancer risk; mammography or MRI. These issues are addressed in the FaMRIsc study including high risk women due to a familial predisposition. TRIAL REGISTRATION: Netherland Trial Register NTR2789
format Online
Article
Text
id pubmed-3488502
institution National Center for Biotechnology Information
language English
publishDate 2012
publisher BioMed Central
record_format MEDLINE/PubMed
spelling pubmed-34885022012-11-05 Breast density as indicator for the use of mammography or MRI to screen women with familial risk for breast cancer (FaMRIsc): a multicentre randomized controlled trial Saadatmand, Sepideh Rutgers, Emiel J T Tollenaar, RobAEM Zonderland, Hermien M Ausems, MargreetGEM Keymeulen, KristienBMI Schlooz-Vries, Margreet S Koppert, Linetta B Heijnsdijk, Eveline A M Seynaeve, Caroline Verhoef, Cees Oosterwijk, Jan C Obdeijn, Inge-Marie de Koning, Harry J Tilanus-Linthorst, Madeleine M A BMC Cancer Study Protocol BACKGROUND: To reduce mortality, women with a family history of breast cancer often start mammography screening at a younger age than the general population. Breast density is high in over 50% of women younger than 50 years. With high breast density, breast cancer incidence increases, but sensitivity of mammography decreases. Therefore, mammography might not be the optimal method for breast cancer screening in young women. Adding MRI increases sensitivity, but also the risk of false-positive results. The limitation of all previous MRI screening studies is that they do not contain a comparison group; all participants received both MRI and mammography. Therefore, we cannot empirically assess in which stage tumours would have been detected by either test. The aim of the Familial MRI Screening Study (FaMRIsc) is to compare the efficacy of MRI screening to mammography for women with a familial risk. Furthermore, we will assess the influence of breast density. METHODS/DESIGN: This Dutch multicentre, randomized controlled trial, with balanced randomisation (1:1) has a parallel grouped design. Women with a cumulative lifetime risk for breast cancer due to their family history of ≥20%, aged 30–55 years are eligible. Identified BRCA1/2 mutation carriers or women with 50% risk of carrying a mutation are excluded. Group 1 receives yearly mammography and clinical breast examination (n = 1000), and group 2 yearly MRI and clinical breast examination, and mammography biennially (n = 1000). Primary endpoints are the number and stage of the detected breast cancers in each arm. Secondary endpoints are the number of false-positive results in both screening arms. Furthermore, sensitivity and positive predictive value of both screening strategies will be assessed. Cost-effectiveness of both strategies will be assessed. Analyses will also be performed with mammographic density as stratification factor. DISCUSSION: Personalized breast cancer screening might optimize mortality reduction with less over diagnosis. Breast density may be a key discriminator for selecting the optimal screening strategy for women < 55 years with familial breast cancer risk; mammography or MRI. These issues are addressed in the FaMRIsc study including high risk women due to a familial predisposition. TRIAL REGISTRATION: Netherland Trial Register NTR2789 BioMed Central 2012-10-02 /pmc/articles/PMC3488502/ /pubmed/23031619 http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1471-2407-12-440 Text en Copyright ©2012 Saadatmand et al.; licensee BioMed Central Ltd. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0 This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License ( http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Study Protocol
Saadatmand, Sepideh
Rutgers, Emiel J T
Tollenaar, RobAEM
Zonderland, Hermien M
Ausems, MargreetGEM
Keymeulen, KristienBMI
Schlooz-Vries, Margreet S
Koppert, Linetta B
Heijnsdijk, Eveline A M
Seynaeve, Caroline
Verhoef, Cees
Oosterwijk, Jan C
Obdeijn, Inge-Marie
de Koning, Harry J
Tilanus-Linthorst, Madeleine M A
Breast density as indicator for the use of mammography or MRI to screen women with familial risk for breast cancer (FaMRIsc): a multicentre randomized controlled trial
title Breast density as indicator for the use of mammography or MRI to screen women with familial risk for breast cancer (FaMRIsc): a multicentre randomized controlled trial
title_full Breast density as indicator for the use of mammography or MRI to screen women with familial risk for breast cancer (FaMRIsc): a multicentre randomized controlled trial
title_fullStr Breast density as indicator for the use of mammography or MRI to screen women with familial risk for breast cancer (FaMRIsc): a multicentre randomized controlled trial
title_full_unstemmed Breast density as indicator for the use of mammography or MRI to screen women with familial risk for breast cancer (FaMRIsc): a multicentre randomized controlled trial
title_short Breast density as indicator for the use of mammography or MRI to screen women with familial risk for breast cancer (FaMRIsc): a multicentre randomized controlled trial
title_sort breast density as indicator for the use of mammography or mri to screen women with familial risk for breast cancer (famrisc): a multicentre randomized controlled trial
topic Study Protocol
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3488502/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/23031619
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1471-2407-12-440
work_keys_str_mv AT saadatmandsepideh breastdensityasindicatorfortheuseofmammographyormritoscreenwomenwithfamilialriskforbreastcancerfamriscamulticentrerandomizedcontrolledtrial
AT rutgersemieljt breastdensityasindicatorfortheuseofmammographyormritoscreenwomenwithfamilialriskforbreastcancerfamriscamulticentrerandomizedcontrolledtrial
AT tollenaarrobaem breastdensityasindicatorfortheuseofmammographyormritoscreenwomenwithfamilialriskforbreastcancerfamriscamulticentrerandomizedcontrolledtrial
AT zonderlandhermienm breastdensityasindicatorfortheuseofmammographyormritoscreenwomenwithfamilialriskforbreastcancerfamriscamulticentrerandomizedcontrolledtrial
AT ausemsmargreetgem breastdensityasindicatorfortheuseofmammographyormritoscreenwomenwithfamilialriskforbreastcancerfamriscamulticentrerandomizedcontrolledtrial
AT keymeulenkristienbmi breastdensityasindicatorfortheuseofmammographyormritoscreenwomenwithfamilialriskforbreastcancerfamriscamulticentrerandomizedcontrolledtrial
AT schloozvriesmargreets breastdensityasindicatorfortheuseofmammographyormritoscreenwomenwithfamilialriskforbreastcancerfamriscamulticentrerandomizedcontrolledtrial
AT koppertlinettab breastdensityasindicatorfortheuseofmammographyormritoscreenwomenwithfamilialriskforbreastcancerfamriscamulticentrerandomizedcontrolledtrial
AT heijnsdijkevelineam breastdensityasindicatorfortheuseofmammographyormritoscreenwomenwithfamilialriskforbreastcancerfamriscamulticentrerandomizedcontrolledtrial
AT seynaevecaroline breastdensityasindicatorfortheuseofmammographyormritoscreenwomenwithfamilialriskforbreastcancerfamriscamulticentrerandomizedcontrolledtrial
AT verhoefcees breastdensityasindicatorfortheuseofmammographyormritoscreenwomenwithfamilialriskforbreastcancerfamriscamulticentrerandomizedcontrolledtrial
AT oosterwijkjanc breastdensityasindicatorfortheuseofmammographyormritoscreenwomenwithfamilialriskforbreastcancerfamriscamulticentrerandomizedcontrolledtrial
AT obdeijningemarie breastdensityasindicatorfortheuseofmammographyormritoscreenwomenwithfamilialriskforbreastcancerfamriscamulticentrerandomizedcontrolledtrial
AT dekoningharryj breastdensityasindicatorfortheuseofmammographyormritoscreenwomenwithfamilialriskforbreastcancerfamriscamulticentrerandomizedcontrolledtrial
AT tilanuslinthorstmadeleinema breastdensityasindicatorfortheuseofmammographyormritoscreenwomenwithfamilialriskforbreastcancerfamriscamulticentrerandomizedcontrolledtrial