Coffey Kristen, D'Alessio Donna, Keating Delia M, Morris Elizabeth A
1 Department of Radiology, Evelyn H. Lauder Breast Center, Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center, New York, NY.
AJR Am J Roentgenol. 2017 Jun;208(6):1386-1391. doi: 10.2214/AJR.16.16871. Epub 2017 Mar 16.
Second-opinion review of breast imaging studies can be a time-consuming and labor-intensive process. The purpose of this investigation was to determine whether reinterpretation of studies obtained at institutions outside a cancer center influences clinical management, specifically by revealing additional cancer and preventing unnecessary biopsy.
A review was conducted of breast imaging studies of 200 patients who underwent ultrasound and MRI at community facilities and had the images submitted for second opinions at a cancer center between January and April 2014. Each case was evaluated for concordance between the original report and the second-opinion interpretation. Second-opinion review resulting in the recommendation and performance of new biopsies was further subdivided into benign, high-risk, and malignant categories based on the histopathologic results obtained at the cancer center.
Second-opinion review of the 200 cases showed a change in interpretation in 55 cases (28%; 95% CI, 21-34%). Overall, 26 recommendations (13%; 95% CI, 9-18%) led to a major change in management. Twenty new biopsies were performed, yielding 10 malignancies (5%; 95% CI, 2-9%) and four high-risk lesions (2%; 95% CI, 1-5%). Surgical management was changed to mastectomy for 6 of 10 patients (60%) with new sites of biopsy-proven malignancy. Eight biopsies were averted (4%; 95% CI, 2-8%) on the basis of benign interpretation of the imaging findings, and no disease was found at 1-year follow-up evaluation.
Reinterpretation of studies obtained outside a cancer center resulted in a change in interpretation in more than one-fourth of submitted studies. Additional cancer was detected in 5% of patients, and biopsy was averted for 4%. The practice of second-opinion review influences clinical management and adds value to patient care.
对乳腺影像检查进行二次评估可能是一个耗时且费力的过程。本研究的目的是确定对在癌症中心以外机构获取的检查结果进行重新解读是否会影响临床管理,特别是通过发现额外的癌症并避免不必要的活检。
对200例患者的乳腺影像检查进行回顾,这些患者于2014年1月至4月在社区机构接受了超声和MRI检查,并将图像提交至癌症中心进行二次评估。评估每个病例原始报告与二次评估解读之间的一致性。根据癌症中心获得的组织病理学结果,将导致新活检建议及实施的二次评估进一步细分为良性、高危和恶性类别。
对200例病例的二次评估显示,55例(28%;95%可信区间,21 - 34%)的解读发生了变化。总体而言,26项建议(13%;95%可信区间,9 - 18%)导致了管理上的重大变化。进行了20次新的活检,检出10例恶性肿瘤(5%;95%可信区间,2 - 9%)和4例高危病变(2%;95%可信区间,1 - 5%)。10例经活检证实有新的恶性肿瘤部位的患者中有6例(60%)的手术管理改为乳房切除术。基于对影像结果的良性解读,避免了8次活检(4%;95%可信区间,2 - 8%),1年随访评估未发现疾病。
对癌症中心以外机构获取的检查结果进行重新解读,导致超过四分之一的提交检查结果解读发生变化。5%的患者检测到额外癌症,4%的患者避免了活检。二次评估实践影响临床管理并为患者护理增加价值。