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Independent and P2S supine breast MRI tumor contrast compared to prone MRI in surgical guidanceSupine breast MRI matches prone for tumor contrast in surgery planning

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Key Takeaway
Note that independent supine breast MRI shows non-inferior tumor contrast compared to prone MRI in this cohort.

This cohort study examined subjects undergoing breast MRI for surgical guidance applications. The setting involved breast MRI imaging for surgical guidance applications. The population included 78 subjects in the prone group, 17 in the independent supine group, and 61 in the P2S supine group.

Researchers compared independent supine imaging and P2S (prone-to-supine) supine imaging against diagnostic prone MRI. Primary outcomes focused on regional tumor contrast. Independent supine cohorts possessed non-inferior contrast compared to prone with p = 0.002. P2S supine cohorts were inferior to prone regarding tumor-to-fibroglandular contrast.

Both investigational supine scans produced non-inferior contrast compared to prone MRI for tumor-to-adipose contrast with p < 0.001. However, regional contrast between tumor and surrounding fibroglandular tissue suffered in the P2S supine study, resulting in inferior tumor contrast at later timepoints.

Safety data including adverse events, serious adverse events, and discontinuations were not reported. Limitations note that comparing image contrast quantitatively between different MRI sequences and breast orientations presents a significant challenge. Practice relevance suggests supine breast MRI tumor contrast should be non-inferior to prone MRI for surgical guidance applications, though findings vary by orientation. Funding or conflicts were not reported.

Getting clear images of breast tumors is crucial for surgery planning. Traditionally, women lie face-down (prone) for breast MRI. But that position doesn't match how they'll be positioned during surgery, which is on their back (supine). A new study tested whether supine MRI could provide equally good tumor contrast.

Researchers compared two supine imaging methods to standard prone MRI in women undergoing breast MRI. One method, called independent supine, showed non-inferior tumor-to-fibroglandular contrast compared to prone. The other method, P2S supine, was inferior in that measure. For tumor-to-adipose contrast, both supine methods were non-inferior.

The study included 78 women in the prone group, 17 in the independent supine group, and 61 in the P2S supine group. The findings suggest that supine MRI, especially the independent approach, could be a viable option for surgical planning without sacrificing image quality.

However, the researchers note a key limitation: comparing contrast between different MRI sequences and breast positions is challenging. More research is needed to confirm these results and determine the best supine imaging technique for routine use.

What this means for you:
Supine breast MRI can provide tumor contrast comparable to prone MRI for surgical guidance.

Study Details

Study typeCohort
EvidenceLevel 3
PublishedApr 2026
View Original Abstract ↓
For surgical guidance applications, supine breast MRI tumor contrast should be non-inferior to prone MRI, currently considered the standard-of-care. However, comparing image contrast quantitatively between different MRI sequences and breast orientations presents a significant challenge. Herein, we present a method for quantitatively comparing regional tumor contrast in the prone and supine breast MRI orientations for the purpose of tumor localization, and we apply this framework to assess the performance of two investigational supine scans (i.e. independent and prone-to-supine, P2S) compared to diagnostic prone MRI. Patient tumors from two studies (NCT03573804, NCT03573661) were outlined slice-by-slice by a breast radiologist using Gd-enhanced, T1-weighted MRI. Image data were derived from subjects undergoing standard-of-care prone imaging (n = 78), independent supine imaging (n = 17), and P2S supine imaging (n = 61). Normalized tumor contrast was computed between the segmented tumor and neighboring normal tissue regions and compared for statistical differences amongst cohorts and non-inferiority to prone MRI. The independent supine cohort possessed non-inferior tumor-to-fibroglandular contrast compared to prone (p = 0.002), while tumor-to-fibroglandular contrast from the P2S supine cohort was found inferior to the prone cohort. However, both investigational supine scans produced non-inferior tumor-to-adipose contrast when compared to prone MRI (p< 0.001 in both cases). Regional contrast between tumor and surrounding fibroglandular tissue suffered at later timepoints observed in the P2S supine study, resulting in inferior tumor contrast. However, when contrast-enhanced supine breast MRI is acquired independently, ratiometric comparisons indicate that tumor contrast is non-inferior to prone MRI.
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