TABLE 2.
Reference | Year | No. of Women With Personal History of Breast Cancer | Age (y), Mean (Range) | No. of MRI Examinations | No. of MRI-Detected Cancers | Cancer Detection Rate (No. of Cancers/1000 Examinations) |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| ||||||
Elmore and Margenthaler [49] | 2010 | 141a | 51 (24–73) | 202 | 2 | 9.9 |
Brennan et al. [48] | 2010 | 144 | 49 (22–73) | NR (1–11 examinations/woman) | 18b | 10.6c |
Schacht et al. [53] | 2014 | 208 | 52 (NR) | NR | 6 | 28.8c |
Gweon et al. [51] | 2014 | 607 | 48d (20–72) | 932 | 13 | 13.9e |
Giess et al. [50] | 2015 | 691f | 52d (26–86) | 1194 | 12 | 10.1 |
Weinstock et al. [54] | 2015 | 249 | 46d (25–64) | 571 | 11 | 19.3 |
Lehman et al. [52] | 2016 | 915 | NR (< 40 to ≥ 70) | 915 | 18 | 19.7 |
Note—NR = not reported.
Includes eight women with known genetic mutation.
Includes one woman with two metachronous cancers.
Number of cancers per 1000 women, because the number of examinations was not reported.
Median age.
Cancer detection rate over three rounds of surveillance. Cancer detection rate for first round was 11/607, or 18.1 per 1000 examinations.
Includes 172 women with additional family history of breast cancer.