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Nuclear Breast Imaging Technologies Tied to Higher Cancer Risks

By MedImaging International staff writers
Posted on 22 Sep 2010
Some nuclear-based breast imaging scanning may increase a woman's risk of developing radiation-induced cancer, according to new findings. However, the radiation dose and risk from mammography are very low.

"A single breast-specific gamma imaging [BSGI] or positron emission mammography [PEM] examination carries a lifetime risk of inducing fatal cancer greater than or comparable to a lifetime of annual screening mammography starting at age 40,” said the study's author, R. Edward Hendrick, Ph.D., clinical professor of radiology at the University of Colorado-Denver, School of Medicine (Aurora, CO, USA).

The risks and benefits of screening mammography are under constant scrutiny. Meanwhile, newer breast imaging technologies, such as BSGI and PEM, have been approved by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) and introduced into clinical practice. Early studies have shown both to be promising at detecting cancer; however, both involve the injection of radioactive material into the patient.

BSGI uses a high-resolution gamma camera that allows for imaging with mild compression of the breast along with an injection of a nuclear radiotracer, which is absorbed at a higher rate by cancerous cells. In PEM, radioactive material is injected into the body to measure metabolic activity and determine the presence of disease. Other technologies, not yet approved by the FDA, include dedicated breast computed tomography (CT) and digital breast tomosynthesis.

Dr. Hendrick reviewed recent studies on radiation doses from radiologic techniques and organ doses from nuclear medicine procedures, along with Biologic Effects of Ionizing Radiation (BEIR) VII age-dependent risk data, to estimate the lifetime risk of radiation-induced cancer incidence and death from breast imaging exams using ionizing radiation.

Two-view digital mammography and screen-film mammography were found to have an average lifetime risk of fatal breast cancer of 1.3 and 1.7 cases, respectively, per 100,000 women aged 40 years at exposure and less than one case per one million women aged 80 years at exposure. Annual screening mammography (digital or screen-film) performed in women from age 40 to age 80 is associated with a lifetime risk of fatal breast cancer of 20 to 25 cases in 100,000.

"Two-thirds of mammography units in the U.S. are now digital, which, on average, exposes the patient to an even lower radiation dose than screen-film,” Dr. Hendrick said. "Manufacturers and breast centers continue to take steps to lower radiation doses on digital mammography systems without negatively affecting image quality.”

Dedicated breast CT and digital tomosynthesis were both found to have an average lifetime risk of fatal breast cancer of 1.3 to 2.6 cases, respectively, per 100,000 women 40 years of age at exposure.

A single BSGI exam was estimated to involve a lifetime risk of fatal cancer 20 to 30 times that of digital mammography in women aged 40 years, while the lifetime risk of a single PEM was 23 times greater than that of digital mammography. Moreover, while mammography only slightly increases a woman's risk for breast cancer, BSGI and PEM may increase the risk of cancers in other organs as well, including the intestines, kidneys, bladder, gallbladder, uterus, ovaries, and colon.

People are exposed to radiation from natural sources all the time. The average person in the United States receives an effective dose of about three millisieverts (mSv) per year from naturally occurring radioactive materials and cosmic radiation from outer space. The median effective dose from two-view screen-film (0.56 mSv) or digital mammography (0.44 mSv) is equivalent to approximately two months of natural background radiation, while the effective doses from BSGI (6.2 mSv) and PEM (9.4 mSv) exams equal approximately two to three years of natural background radiation exposure.

Currently, no one is advocating using PEM or BSGI as a screening modality to replace mammography. These scans are typically performed on women with suspicious breast lesions and in women with dense breasts who are difficult to examine with other techniques. In spite of the increased radiation dose, these exams have shown potential in detecting cancer accurately and may have a good risk-benefit ratio for some specific indications.

"The primary tool for breast cancer screening is still mammography, which has a very low radiation dose and a very low lifetime risk of cancer induction,” Dr. Hendrick said. "The risk of missing a breast cancer because mammography is not done far outweighs the tiny risk of mammography causing a breast cancer.” He added that the subset of women under 40 who are known to be at higher risk of breast cancer should think about being screened with breast ultrasound or breast magnetic resonance imaging (MRI), both of which deliver no ionizing radiation and have sensitivities to breast cancer that are not affected by higher breast density.

The study was published in a special report appearing online in August 2010 and in the October 2010 issue of the journal Radiology.

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University of Colorado-Denver, School of Medicine



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