Litcius/Paper detail

Implementation of Abbreviated Breast MRI for Screening: <i>AJR</i> Expert Panel Narrative Review

Lars J. Grimm, Victoria L. Mango, Jennifer A. Harvey, Donna M. Plecha, Emily F. Conant

2021American Journal of Roentgenology44 citationsDOI

Abstract

Abbreviated breast MRI (AB-MRI) is being rapidly adopted to harness the high sensitivity of screening MRI while addressing issues related to access, cost, and workflow. The successful implementation of an AB-MRI program requires collaboration across administrative, operational, financial, technical, and clinical providers. Institutions must be thoughtful in defining patient eligibility for AB-MRI and providing recommendations for screening intervals, as existing practices are heterogeneous. Similarly, there is no universally accepted AB-MRI protocol, though guiding principles should harmonize abbreviated and full protocols while being mindful of scan duration and amount of time patients spend on the MRI table. The interpretation of AB-MRI will be a new experience for many radiologists and may require a phased rollout and a careful audit of performance metrics over time to ensure benchmark metrics are achieved. AB-MRI finances, which are driven by patient self-payment, will require buy-in from hospital administration with the recognition that downstream revenues will be needed to support initial costs. Finally, successful startup of an AB-MRI program requires active engagement with the larger community of patients and referring providers. As AB-MRI becomes more widely accepted and available, best practices and community standards will continue to evolve to ensure high-quality patient care.

Topics & Concepts

MedicineAuditMedical physicsBreast MRIBest practiceNarrative reviewMEDLINEReimbursementCommunity hospitalPatient experienceQuality assuranceGuidelineInterpretation (philosophy)Clinical auditMedical emergencyMedical educationBenchmark (surveying)RevenueMri scanBreast imagingPanel discussionProtocol (science)MRI in cancer diagnosisRadiology practices and educationGlobal Cancer Incidence and Screening