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Home > News Releases 

For Immediate Release

Mercy Breast MRI Study One of the Largest

Oklahoma City—In a new study, published in September’s American Journal of Surgery, Alan Hollingsworth, M.D., and physicians from Mercy Women’s Center share results from a recent study they completed concerning pre-operative breast MRIs. This study, co-sponsored by Breast MRI of Oklahoma, includes 603 patients and is the largest series of pre-operative patients ever reported from a single institution.

“The only study larger than ours is the American College of Radiology Imaging Network (ACRIN) trial that included 969 patients from 25 sites, reported in the New England Journal of Medicine in 2007,” said Dr. Hollingsworth, study coordinator and lead author. “And while our results were very similar to the ACRIN study, we also found that much of the speculative criticism about pre-op breast MRI today appears to be without merit. Women in our study who underwent breast MRIs had a better chance of avoiding mastectomies. They also knew pre-operatively, thanks to the MRI, whether or not they had cancer elsewhere in either breast.”

Since 2003, when breast MRI was introduced at Mercy, more patients have opted for breast conservation procedures. Surprisingly, this trend was even stronger when patients underwent additional biopsies before surgery because of MRI results.

“We think we’re seeing this because we can demonstrate to women who have solitary tumors that breast conservation is safe,” said Rebecca Stough, M.D., radiologic director of Mercy Women’s Center. “Not only are they good candidates for lumpectomy, but they can often have partial breast irradiation, which reduces treatment time to one week, with few side effects.”

The study also showed 7.7 percent of patients had other areas of cancer in the same breast while 3.7 percent had cancers in the other breast that were unsuspected. “Although these may seem like small percentages, we feel that it justifies routine use of pre-op breast MRI,” said Dr. Hollingsworth. “Small percentages translate into large numbers in a common disease like breast cancer. And mammography only detected 19 percent of opposite-side cancers in our study.”

Most remarkable was the finding that with a breast MRI pre-operatively, only 8.8 percent of women had to undergo further surgery due to positive margins after lumpectomy. “This number contrasts sharply with the 30 to 60 percent re-excision rates among the critics of pre-op breast MRI use,” said Dr. Hollingsworth. “If you’re operating twice on so many lumpectomy patients, it makes the cost-effectiveness of mapping the tumor pre-operatively with MRI an easy winner, and more importantly, reduces the patient’s stress and anxiety caused by re-operations.”

Dr. Hollingsworth was assisted in his efforts by Dr. Stough, Carol O’Dell, M.D., and Charles Brekke, M.D., breast radiologists at Mercy.

Press release dated: September 3, 2008

 

Mercy Health Center, the first Magnet hospital in Oklahoma and among only 3 percent of hospitals in the nation to be awarded Magnet status, is a member of Mercy Health System of Oklahoma and the Sisters of Mercy Health System. Magnet-designated facilities: report higher patient satisfaction rates, deliver better patient outcomes, provide more nursing care at the bedside of patients and consistently outperform non-magnet organizations.

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