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MRI BI-RADS Lexicon – Amount of Fibroglandular Tissue

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MRI BI-RADS is really fundamental

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to our interpretation of breast MRI.

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This is the Breast Imaging Reporting and Data

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System, which was developed by the American

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College of Radiology and developed to improve

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consistency in interpretation and reporting.

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It covers all of breast imaging, including

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mammography, ultrasound, and MRI, and provides

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standard descriptors for lesions, which we

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refer to as the BI-RADS lexicon, and those

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are the words that we use in our reports

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and when we're talking about these cases.

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And it provides a format for reporting.

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We're using the fifth edition of the BI-

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RADS Atlas, which was published in 2013.

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Typically, the Atlas had been updated every five

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years, so we were expecting an update in 2018.

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But I think there was so much going on in breast

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imaging at that time that it took a little bit

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longer for the new edition to be published.

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And I know it's, it's in the

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works, but it's not available yet.

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The first thing that we want to look at

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under the MRI BI-RADS lexicon is the amount

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of fibroglandular tissue, and this roughly

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parallels breast tissue density, but we

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don't refer to it as density on an MRI exam.

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That would be an X-ray term.

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So the amount of fibroglandular tissue

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can be described as almost entirely fat.

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Scattered fibroglandular tissue,

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heterogeneous fibroglandular tissue,

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and extreme fibroglandular tissue.

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And we evaluate this on the

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T1 non-fat saturated sequence.

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Just for comparison, this is the

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spectrum of what we can see on

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mammography for breast density.

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On the left side of your screen, there's

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a patient whose breast tissue might

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be described as almost entirely fatty.

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And then on the right-hand side of the screen,

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the breast tissue is extremely dense, so

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there is a spectrum, a range of breast tissue

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densities, and there's a similar range of

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fibroglandular tissue that we see on breast MRI.

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This is an example of a patient who would

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be described as almost entirely fat.

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We saw from our previous images of the

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breast imaging protocol that on the T1

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weighted non-fat saturated sequence, fat

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is going to be bright signal intensity, so

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we see a lot of high signal intensity fat.

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Here on this image, scattered

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fibroglandular tissue.

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There's a little bit more of that low signal

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intensity breast tissue, but still quite a

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bit of the high signal intensity fatty tissue.

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Heterogeneous fibroglandular tissue,

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really just getting into the tissue.

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That's a little bit more fibroglandular as we

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go through this spectrum, but this would be

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described as heterogeneous, a lot more tissue

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and a little bit less of the fatty tissue.

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And then extreme fibroglandular tissue,

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there's really quite a lot of that low

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signal intensity breast tissue, a little

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bit less fatty tissue in this patient.

Report

Description

Faculty

Lisa Ann Mullen, MD

Assistant Professor; Breast Imaging Fellowship Director

Johns Hopkins Medicine

Tags

Women's Health

MRI

Breast

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