Womens Imaging

Women’s imaging encompasses many radiology procedures related to women and the diseases that are most prevalent to women such as breast cancer or gynecological issues. Mammogram, breast ultrasound, breast MRI and breast biopsy are the most commonly used procedures.

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ACR Appropriateness Criteria for palpable breast masses released

The ACR Appropriateness Criteria for palpable breast masses, which provides thorough recommendations for particular imaging methods and patient situations, was published in the October issue of the Journal of the American College of Radiology.

ProMedica Breast Care at Toledo Hospital First in Ohio to Adopt VolparaDensity™ Breast Imaging Software to Improve Early Detection of Cancer in Women with Dense Breasts

Matakina International today announced that ProMedica Breast Care on the campus of ProMedica Toledo Hospital became the first in Ohio to offer VolparaDensity™ breast imaging software, designed to help overcome the limitations of mammography to detect cancer in women with dense breasts. Serving Northwest Ohio and Southeast Michigan, the Toledo Hospital Breast Care Center is the region’s premier imaging facility devoted exclusively to patients with breast health concerns and issues and has been named a Breast Imaging Center of Excellence by the American College of Radiology.

Pre-op breast MRI linked to increasing rates of invasive surgery

Increasing use of preoperative breast MRI has been associated with significant increases in bilateral cancer diagnoses and subsequent invasive surgeries with questionable long-term benefits, according to a study published online Aug. 14 in Breast Cancer Research and Treatment.

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Mixed bag: Breast MRI CAD boosts sensitivity but not accuracy

A multicenter reader study designed to examine the effect of CAD on the diagnostic accuracy of breast MRI indicated improved sensitivity and comparable accuracy among novice and expert readers reviewing images without and with CAD, according to a study published in the June issue of American Journal of Roentgenology. CAD software did not increase interpretation time.

Reassuring words: Communication w/ rads eases anxiety levels during biopsy

Image-guided breast biopsies are stressful events for women, but better communication with the radiologist recommending the procedure seems to lower patient anxiety, according to a study published in the June issue of the Journal of the American College of Radiology.

Conflicting breast cancer screening guidelines: What’s an MD to do?

Four respected organizations promote different guidelines for routine breast cancer screening. The conflicting recommendations place physicians in a bit of a quandary as the broad set of valid options may leave clinicians feeling vulnerable to malpractice suits. A viewpoint published online May 30 in JAMA sorted through the guidelines and offered some suggestions.

What women–and their physicians–need to know about breast density

Breast density has received national attention from the New York and California density inform bills going into effect and the passage of the Hawaii, Maryland, Tennessee and Alabama bills.  With significant coverage of studies evaluating the impact of dense breast tissue on cancer screening, it seems that breast density is in the news nearly every day.

USPSTF mammo recommendations: Tempest in a teapot?

The U.S. Preventive Task Services (USPSTF) recommendations that women ages 50-74 years undergo biennial screening mammography and women ages 40-49 years make an individual decision regarding screening had little impact on screening mammography use, according to a study published online May 15 in Journal of General Internal Medicine.

Around the web

GE HealthCare designed the new-look Revolution Vibe CT scanner to help hospitals and health systems embrace CCTA and improve overall efficiency.

Clinicians have been using HeartSee to diagnose and treat coronary artery disease since the technology first debuted back in 2018. These latest updates, set to roll out to existing users, are designed to improve diagnostic performance and user access.

The cardiac technologies clinicians use for CVD evaluations have changed significantly in recent years, according to a new analysis of CMS data. While some modalities are on the rise, others are being utilized much less than ever before.