Try a new search

Format these results:

Searched for:

person:aa1565

in-biosketch:true

Total Results:

45


ACR Appropriateness Criteria® Supplemental Breast Cancer Screening Based on Breast Density

Weinstein, Susan P; Slanetz, Priscilla J; Lewin, Alana A; Battaglia, Tracy; Chagpar, Anees B; Dayaratna, Sandra; Dibble, Elizabeth H; Goel, Mita Sanghavi; Hayward, Jessica H; Kubicky, Charlotte D; Le-Petross, Huong T; Newell, Mary S; Sanford, Matthew F; Scheel, John R; Vincoff, Nina S; Yao, Katherine; Moy, Linda
Mammography remains the only validated screening tool for breast cancer, however, there are limitations to mammography. One of the limitations of mammography is the variable sensitivity based on breast density. Supplemental screening may be considered based on the patient's risk level and breast density. For average-risk women with nondense breasts, the sensitivity of digital breast tomosynthesis (DBT) screening is high; additional supplemental screening is not warranted in this population. For average-risk women with dense breasts, given the decreased sensitivity of mammography/DBT, this population may benefit from additional supplemental screening with contrast-enhanced mammography, screening ultrasound (US), breast MRI, or abbreviated breast MRI. In intermediate-risk women, there is emerging evidence suggesting that women in this population may benefit from breast MRI or abbreviated breast MRI. In intermediate-risk women with dense breasts, given the decreased sensitivity of mammography/DBT, this population may benefit from additional supplemental screening with contrast-enhancedmammography or screening US. There is strong evidence supporting screening high-risk women with breast MRI regardless of breast density. Contrast-enhanced mammography, whole breast screening US, or abbreviated breast MRI may be also considered. The American College of Radiology Appropriateness Criteria are evidence-based guidelines for specific clinical conditions that are reviewed annually by a multidisciplinary expert panel. The guideline development and revision include an extensive analysis of current medical literature from peer reviewed journals and the application of well-established methodologies (RAND/UCLA Appropriateness Method and Grading of Recommendations Assessment, Development, and Evaluation or GRADE) to rate the appropriateness of imaging and treatment procedures for specific clinical scenarios. In those instances where evidence is lacking or equivocal, expert opinion may supplement the available evidence to recommend imaging or treatment.
PMID: 34794600
ISSN: 1558-349x
CID: 5049552

Artificial intelligence system reduces false-positive findings in the interpretation of breast ultrasound exams

Shen, Yiqiu; Shamout, Farah E; Oliver, Jamie R; Witowski, Jan; Kannan, Kawshik; Park, Jungkyu; Wu, Nan; Huddleston, Connor; Wolfson, Stacey; Millet, Alexandra; Ehrenpreis, Robin; Awal, Divya; Tyma, Cathy; Samreen, Naziya; Gao, Yiming; Chhor, Chloe; Gandhi, Stacey; Lee, Cindy; Kumari-Subaiya, Sheila; Leonard, Cindy; Mohammed, Reyhan; Moczulski, Christopher; Altabet, Jaime; Babb, James; Lewin, Alana; Reig, Beatriu; Moy, Linda; Heacock, Laura; Geras, Krzysztof J
Though consistently shown to detect mammographically occult cancers, breast ultrasound has been noted to have high false-positive rates. In this work, we present an AI system that achieves radiologist-level accuracy in identifying breast cancer in ultrasound images. Developed on 288,767 exams, consisting of 5,442,907 B-mode and Color Doppler images, the AI achieves an area under the receiver operating characteristic curve (AUROC) of 0.976 on a test set consisting of 44,755 exams. In a retrospective reader study, the AI achieves a higher AUROC than the average of ten board-certified breast radiologists (AUROC: 0.962 AI, 0.924 ± 0.02 radiologists). With the help of the AI, radiologists decrease their false positive rates by 37.3% and reduce requested biopsies by 27.8%, while maintaining the same level of sensitivity. This highlights the potential of AI in improving the accuracy, consistency, and efficiency of breast ultrasound diagnosis.
PMCID:8463596
PMID: 34561440
ISSN: 2041-1723
CID: 5039442

Lessons from the first DBTex Challenge

Park, Jungkyu; Shoshan, Yoel; Marti, Robert; Gómez del Campo, Pablo; Ratner, Vadim; Khapun, Daniel; Zlotnick, Aviad; Barkan, Ella; Gilboa-Solomon, Flora; ChÅ‚Ä™dowski, Jakub; Witowski, Jan; Millet, Alexandra; Kim, Eric; Lewin, Alana; Pysarenko, Kristine; Chen, Sardius; Goldberg, Julia; Patel, Shalin; Plaunova, Anastasia; Wegener, Melanie; Wolfson, Stacey; Lee, Jiyon; Hava, Sana; Murthy, Sindhoora; Du, Linda; Gaddam, Sushma; Parikh, Ujas; Heacock, Laura; Moy, Linda; Reig, Beatriu; Rosen-Zvi, Michal; Geras, Krzysztof J.
SCOPUS:85111105102
ISSN: 2522-5839
CID: 5000532

Bilateral gradient-echo spectroscopic imaging with correction of frequency variations for measurement of fatty acid composition in mammary adipose tissue

Baboli, Mehran; Storey, Pippa; Sood, Terlika Pandit; Fogarty, Justin; Moccaldi, Melanie; Lewin, Alana; Moy, Linda; Kim, Sungheon Gene
PURPOSE/OBJECTIVE:To develop a simultaneous dual-slab three-dimensional gradient-echo spectroscopic imaging (GSI) technique with frequency drift compensation for rapid (<6 min) bilateral measurement of fatty acid composition (FAC) in mammary adipose tissue. METHODS:A bilateral GSI sequence was developed using a simultaneous dual-slab excitation followed by 128 monopolar echoes. A short train of navigator echoes without phase or partition encoding was included at the beginning of each pulse repetition time period to correct for frequency variation caused by respiration and heating of the cryostat. Voxel-wise spectral fitting was applied to measure the areas of the lipid spectral peaks to estimate the number of double-bond (ndb), number of methylene-interrupted double-bond (nmidb), and chain length (cl). The proposed method was tested in an oil phantom and 10 postmenopausal women to assess the influence of the frequency variation on FAC estimation. RESULTS:The frequency drift observed over 5:27 min during the phantom scan was about 10 Hz. Phase correction based on the navigator reduced the median error of ndb, nmidb, and cl from 9.7%, 17.6%, and 3.2% to 2.1%, 9.5%, and 2.8%, respectively. The in vivo data showed a mean ± standard deviation frequency drift of 17.4 ± 2.5 Hz, with ripples at 0.3 ± 0.1 Hz. Our reconstruction algorithm successfully separated signals from the left and right breasts with negligible residual aliasing. Phase correction reduced the interquartile range within each subject's adipose tissue of ndb, nmidb, and cl by 18.4 ± 10.6%, 18.5 ± 13.9%, and 18.4 ± 10.6%, respectively. CONCLUSION/CONCLUSIONS:This study shows the feasibility of obtaining bilateral spectroscopic imaging data in the breast and that incorporation of a frequency navigator improves the estimation of FAC.
PMID: 33533056
ISSN: 1522-2594
CID: 4788292

Breast MRI for Evaluation of Response to Neoadjuvant Therapy

Reig, Beatriu; Lewin, Alana A; Du, Linda; Heacock, Laura; Toth, Hildegard K; Heller, Samantha L; Gao, Yiming; Moy, Linda
Neoadjuvant therapy is increasingly being used to treat early-stage triple-negative and human epidermal growth factor 2-overexpressing breast cancers, as well as locally advanced and inflammatory breast cancers. The rationales for neoadjuvant therapy are to shrink tumor size and potentially decrease the extent of surgery, to serve as an in vivo test of response to therapy, and to reveal prognostic information for the patient. MRI is the most accurate modality to demonstrate response to therapy and to help ensure accurate presurgical planning. Changes in lesion diameter, volume, and enhancement are used to predict complete response, partial response, or nonresponse to therapy. However, residual disease may be overestimated or underestimated at MRI. Fibrosis, necrotic tumors, and residual benign masses may be causes of overestimation of residual disease. Nonmass lesions, invasive lobular carcinoma, hormone receptor-positive tumors, nonconcentric shrinkage patterns, the use of antiangiogenic therapy, and late-enhancing foci may be causes of underestimation of residual disease. In patients with known axillary lymph node metastasis, neoadjuvant therapy may be followed by targeted axillary dissection to avoid the potential morbidity associated with an axillary lymph node dissection. Diffusion-weighted imaging, radiomics, machine learning, and deep learning methods are under investigation to improve MRI accuracy in predicting treatment response.©RSNA, 2021.
PMID: 33939542
ISSN: 1527-1323
CID: 4858892

Abbreviated MR Imaging for Breast Cancer

Heacock, Laura; Lewin, Alana A; Toth, Hildegard K; Moy, Linda; Reig, Beatriu
Breast MR imaging is the most sensitive imaging method for the detection of breast cancer and detects more aggressive malignancies than mammography and ultrasound examination. Despite these advantages, breast MR imaging has low use rates for breast cancer screening. Abbreviated breast MR imaging, in which a limited number of breast imaging sequences are obtained, has been proposed as a way to solve cost and patient tolerance issues while preserving the high cancer detection rate of breast MR imaging. This review discusses abbreviated breast MR imaging, including protocols, multicenter clinical trial results, clinical workflow implementation challenges, and future directions.
PMID: 33223003
ISSN: 1557-8275
CID: 4680132

Role of MRI to Assess Response to Neoadjuvant Therapy for Breast Cancer

Reig, Beatriu; Heacock, Laura; Lewin, Alana; Cho, Nariya; Moy, Linda
The goals of imaging after neoadjuvant therapy for breast cancer are to monitor the response to therapy and facilitate surgical planning. MRI has been found to be more accurate than mammography, ultrasound, or clinical exam in evaluating treatment response. However, MRI may both overestimate and underestimate residual disease. The accuracy of MRI is dependent on tumor morphology, histology, shrinkage pattern, and molecular subtype. Emerging MRI techniques that combine functional information such as diffusion, metabolism, and hypoxia may improve MR accuracy. In addition, machine-learning techniques including radiomics and radiogenomics are being studied with the goal of predicting response on pretreatment imaging. This article comprehensively reviews response assessment on breast MRI and highlights areas of ongoing research. LEVEL OF EVIDENCE: 3 TECHNICAL EFFICACY STAGE: 3.
PMID: 32227407
ISSN: 1522-2586
CID: 4370022

Cross-sectional evaluation of humoral responses against SARS-COV-2 spike [Meeting Abstract]

Prevost, J; Gasser, R; Beaudoin-Bussieres, G; Richard, J; Duerr, R; Laumaea, A; Anand, S; Goyette, G; Benlarbi, M; Ding, S; Medjahed, H; Lewin, A; Perreault, J; Tremblay, T; Gendron-Lepage, G; Gauthier, N; Carrier, M; Marcoux, D; Piche, A; Lavoie, M; Benoit, A; Loungnarath, V; Brochu, G; Haddad, E; Stacey, H; Miller, M; Desforges, M; Talbot, P; Gould, Maule G; Cote, M; Therrien, C; Serhir, B; Bazin, R; Roger, M; Finzi, A
Background: SARS-CoV-2 is responsible for the coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID- 19) pandemic, infecting millions of people and causing hundreds of thousands of deaths. The Spike glycoproteins of SARS-CoV-2 mediate viral entry and are the main targets for neutralizing antibodies.
Aim(s): Understanding the antibody response directed against SARS-CoV-2 is crucial for the development of vaccine, therapeutic, and public health interventions.
Method(s): Here, we perform a cross-sectional study on 106 SARS-CoV-2-infected individuals to evaluate humoral responses against SARS-CoV-2 Spike.
Result(s): Most infected individuals elicit anti-Spike antibodies within 2 weeks of the onset of symptoms. The levels of receptor binding domain (RBD)-specific immunoglobulin G (IgG) persist over time, and the levels of anti-RBD IgM and IgA decrease after symptom resolution. Some of the elicited antibodies cross-reacted with other human coronaviruses in a genus-restrictive manner. Although most individuals develop neutralizing antibodies within 2 weeks of infection, the level of neutralizing activity is significantly decreased over time. Summary/Conclusions: Our results highlight the importance of studying the persistence of neutralizing activity upon natural SARS-CoV-2 infection
EMBASE:633986147
ISSN: 1423-0410
CID: 4774332

Abbreviated Breast MRI: Road to Clinical Implementation

Heacock, Laura; Reig, Beatriu; Lewin, Alana A; Toth, Hildegard K; Moy, Linda; Lee, Cindy S
Breast MRI offers high sensitivity for breast cancer detection, with preferential detection of high-grade invasive cancers when compared to mammography and ultrasound. Despite the clear benefits of breast MRI in cancer screening, its cost, patient tolerance, and low utilization remain key issues. Abbreviated breast MRI, in which only a select number of sequences and postcontrast imaging are acquired, exploits the high sensitivity of breast MRI while reducing table time and reading time to maximize availability, patient tolerance, and accessibility. Worldwide studies of varying patient populations have demonstrated that the comparable diagnostic accuracy of abbreviated breast MRI is comparable to a full diagnostic protocol, highlighting the emerging role of abbreviated MRI screening in patients with an intermediate and high lifetime risk of breast cancer. The purpose of this review is to summarize the background and current literature relating to abbreviated MRI, highlight various protocols utilized in current multicenter clinical trials, describe workflow and clinical implementation issues, and discuss the future of abbreviated protocols, including advanced MRI techniques.
PMID: 38424988
ISSN: 2631-6129
CID: 5639442

Abbreviated breast MRI: Road to clinical implementation

Heacock, Laura; Reig, Beatriu; Lewin, Alana A.; Toth, Hildegard K.; Moy, Linda; Lee, Cindy S.
Breast MRI offers high sensitivity for breast cancer detection, with preferential detection of high-grade invasive cancers when compared to mammography and ultrasound. Despite the clear benefits of breast MRI in cancer screening, its cost, patient tolerance, and low utilization remain key issues. Abbreviated breast MRI, in which only a select number of sequences and postcontrast imaging are acquired, exploits the high sensitivity of breast MRI while reducing table time and reading time to maximize availability, patient tolerance, and accessibility. Worldwide studies of varying patient populations have demonstrated that the comparable diagnostic accuracy of abbreviated breast MRI is comparable to a full diagnostic protocol, highlighting the emerging role of abbreviated MRI screening in patients with an intermediate and high lifetime risk of breast cancer. The purpose of this review is to summarize the background and current literature relating to abbreviated MRI, highlight various protocols utilized in current multicenter clinical trials, describe workflow and clinical implementation issues, and discuss the future of abbreviated protocols, including advanced MRI techniques.
SCOPUS:85090429600
ISSN: 2631-6110
CID: 4612692