Supplemental Breast MRI Widely Underutilized in High-Risk Women

Article

Further study may determine if patient awareness can mitigate the underutilization of supplemental screening breast MRI.

Nearly half of women who have a high lifetime breast cancer risk undergo routine screening mammography, yet supplemental breast MR imaging remains widely underutilized in this group, according to a study published in the Journal of Women’s Health.

The researchers obtained data of 422,406 women who underwent routine mammography screening across 86 Breast Cancer Surveillance Consortium (BCSC) facilities in 2012. They determined availability and use of on-site screening breast MRI services based on woman-level characteristics, including a higher than 20 percent lifetime absolute risk using the National Cancer Institute risk assessment tool.

The results showed that 2,403 of 5,468 women (43.9 percent) who had a high lifetime risk attended a facility with on-site breast MRI screening availability. However, only 6.6 percent (158/2,403) of high-risk women obtained breast MRI screening within a two-year window of their screening mammogram.

The patient factors associated with on-site MRI screening use included being younger than 40 years of age, having a family history of breast cancer, having a prior breast biopsy, and postsecondary education.

The researchers concluded that while nearly half of women at high lifetime breast cancer risk undergo routine screening mammography at a facility with on-site breast MRI availability, supplemental breast MRI remains widely underutilized among those who may benefit from earlier cancer detection. They recommended that future studies evaluate whether other enabling factors such as formal risk assessment and patient awareness of high lifetime breast cancer risk can mitigate the underutilization of supplemental screening breast MRI.

Recent Videos
New Mammography Studies Assess Image-Based AI Risk Models and Breast Arterial Calcification Detection
Pertinent Insights into the Imaging of Patients with Marfan Syndrome
What New Brain MRI Research Reveals About Cannabis Use and Working Memory Tasks
Current and Emerging Legislative Priorities for Radiology in 2025
Teleradiology and Breast Imaging: Keys to Facilitating Personalized Service, Efficiency and Equity
Radiology Study Finds Increasing Rates of Non-Physician Practitioner Image Interpretation in Office Settings
Addressing the Early Impact of National Breast Density Notification for Mammography Reports
Where the USPSTF Breast Cancer Screening Recommendations Fall Short: An Interview with Stacy Smith-Foley, MD
A Closer Look at MRI-Guided Transurethral Ultrasound Ablation for Intermediate Risk Prostate Cancer
Improving the Quality of Breast MRI Acquisition and Processing
Related Content
© 2025 MJH Life Sciences

All rights reserved.