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Dive into the research topics where Bonnie N. Joe is active.

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Featured researches published by Bonnie N. Joe.


Radiology | 2013

The California Breast Density Information Group: A Collaborative Response to the Issues of Breast Density, Breast Cancer Risk, and Breast Density Notification Legislation

Elissa R. Price; Jonathan Hargreaves; Jafi A. Lipson; Edward A. Sickles; R. James Brenner; Karen K. Lindfors; Bonnie N. Joe; Jessica W.T. Leung; Stephen A. Feig; Lawrence W. Bassett; Haydee Ojeda-Fournier; Bruce L. Daniel; Allison W. Kurian; Elyse Love; Lauren Ryan; Donna D. Walgenbach; Debra M. Ikeda

In anticipation of breast density notification legislation in the state of California, which would require notification of women with heterogeneously and extremely dense breast tissue, a working group of breast imagers and breast cancer risk specialists was formed to provide a common response framework. The California Breast Density Information Group identified key elements and implications of the law, researching scientific evidence needed to develop a robust response. In particular, issues of risk associated with dense breast tissue, masking of cancers by dense tissue on mammograms, and the efficacy, benefits, and harms of supplementary screening tests were studied and consensus reached. National guidelines and peer-reviewed published literature were used to recommend that women with dense breast tissue at screening mammography follow supplemental screening guidelines based on breast cancer risk assessment. The goal of developing educational materials for referring clinicians and patients was reached with the construction of an easily accessible Web site that contains information about breast density, breast cancer risk assessment, and supplementary imaging. This multi-institutional, multidisciplinary approach may be useful for organizations to frame responses as similar legislation is passed across the United States. Online supplemental material is available for this article.


American Journal of Roentgenology | 2007

Diagnosis of Prostate Cancer in Patients with an Elevated Prostate-Specific Antigen Level: Role of Endorectal MRI and MR Spectroscopic Imaging

Nick G. Costouros; Fergus V. Coakley; Antonio C. Westphalen; Aliya Qayyum; Benjamin M. Yeh; Bonnie N. Joe; John Kurhanewicz

OBJECTIVE The objective of our study was to determine the accuracy of endorectal MRI and MR spectroscopic imaging (MRSI) in the diagnosis of prostate cancer in patients with an elevated serum prostate-specific antigen (PSA) level. MATERIALS AND METHODS We retrospectively identified 40 patients with an elevated serum PSA level and without a histologic diagnosis of prostate cancer who underwent endorectal MRI and MRSI at our institution. On the basis of MRI findings alone and then combined MRI and MRSI findings, a single experienced observer rated the presence or absence of prostate cancer in each side of the prostate on a 5-point scale (1 = definitely absent, 5 = definitely present). Areas under the receiver operating characteristic (ROC) curve were calculated using the hemiprostate as the unit of analysis. The presence or absence of cancer on subsequent endorectal sonographically guided sextant biopsy was used as the standard of reference. RESULTS Biopsy revealed no cancer in 24 patients, bilateral cancer in 11, and unilateral cancer in five. The areas under the ROC curve for the diagnosis of prostate cancer by hemigland was 0.70 for MRI alone and 0.63 for combined MRI and MRSI (no significant difference, p = 0.32). CONCLUSION Endorectal MRI and MRSI are reasonably accurate for the diagnosis of prostate cancer in patients with an elevated serum PSA level, but the remaining limitations suggest that MRI and MRSI should be used as a supplement rather than a replacement for biopsy using the current technology and diagnostic criteria.


Radiology | 2008

Renal cyst pseudoenhancement at multidetector CT: What are the effects of number of detectors and peak tube voltage?

Zhen J. Wang; Fergus V. Coakley; Yanjun Fu; Bonnie N. Joe; Sven Prevrhal; Luis A. Landeras; Emma M. Webb; Benjamin M. Yeh

PURPOSE To determine the effect of the number of detectors and peak tube voltage on renal cyst pseudoenhancement in a phantom model. MATERIALS AND METHODS This study on computed tomographic (CT) phantoms did not require institutional review board approval. The renal compartments of a CT phantom were filled with iodinated contrast material diluted to attain attenuations of 40, 140, and 240 HU. Saline-filled cylinders simulating cysts of varying diameters (range, 0.7-3.0 cm) were serially suspended in the renal compartments and scanned at 80, 90, 100, 120, and 140 kVp in 16-detector (n = 3) and 64-detector (n = 2) CT scanners. Generalized estimating equations were used to determine predictors of cyst pseudoenhancement (defined as a >10 HU increase in cyst attenuation when the background renal attenuation increased from 40 to 140 or 240 HU). RESULTS Pseudoenhancement was seen with higher frequency (59 [61%] of 96 cysts vs 52 [39%] of 132 cysts, P < .05) and magnitude (17 vs 13 HU, P < .005) with 64- rather than with 16-detector scanners. Pseudoenhancement was also seen with higher frequency (25 [42%] of 60 cysts vs 11 [18%] of 60 cysts, P < .005) and magnitude (18 vs 13 HU, P < .05) at 140 kVp than at 80 or 90 kVp. Cyst pseudoenhancement increased with higher background renal enhancement (P < .005) and smaller cyst diameter (P < .05). The number of detectors, peak tube voltage, renal parenchymal enhancement level, and cyst diameter were independent predictors of cyst pseudoenhancement. CONCLUSION Lower tube voltage settings may be useful when accurate differentiation between small renal cysts and solid masses is critical, particularly for 64-detector CT scanners.


American Journal of Roentgenology | 2008

MRI of adnexal masses in pregnancy.

Nicholas A. Telischak; Benjamin M. Yeh; Bonnie N. Joe; Antonio C. Westphalen; Liina Poder; Fergus V. Coakley

OBJECTIVE The objective of this article is to provide a practical review of the incremental benefit of MRI in the assessment of adnexal masses in pregnancy. CONCLUSION MRI can assist sonographic assessment of adnexal masses in pregnancy by depicting the characteristic findings of exophytic leiomyoma, red degeneration of leiomyoma, endometrioma, decidualized endometrioma, and massive ovarian edema. Accordingly, MRI should be considered as a useful adjunct when sonography is inconclusive or insufficient to guide management of adnexal masses discovered in pregnancy.


Radiology | 2008

Invasive Breast Cancer: Predicting Disease Recurrence by Using High-Spatial-Resolution Signal Enhancement Ratio Imaging

Ka Loh Li; Savannah C. Partridge; Bonnie N. Joe; Jessica Gibbs; Ying Lu; Laura Esserman; Nola M. Hylton

PURPOSE To retrospectively evaluate high-spatial-resolution signal enhancement ratio (SER) imaging for the prediction of disease recurrence in patients with breast cancer who underwent preoperative magnetic resonance (MR) imaging. MATERIALS AND METHODS This retrospective study was approved by the institutional review board and was HIPAA compliant; informed consent was waived. From 1995 to 2002, gadolinium-enhanced MR imaging data were acquired with a three time point high-resolution method in women undergoing neoadjuvant therapy for invasive breast cancers. Forty-eight women (mean age, 49.1 years; range, 29.7-72.4 years) were divided into recurrence-free or recurrence groups. Volume measurements were tabulated for SER values between set ranges; cutoff criteria were defined to predict disease recurrence after surgery. Wilcoxon rank sum tests and the multivariate Cox proportional hazards regression model were used for evaluation. RESULTS Breast tumor volume calculated from the number of voxels with SER values above a threshold corresponding to the upper limit of mean redistribution rate constant in benign tumors (0.88 minutes(-1)) and the volume of cancerous breast tissue infiltrating into the parenchyma were important predictors of disease recurrence. Seventy-five percent of patients with recurrence and 100% of deceased patients were identified as being at high risk for recurrence. Thirty percent of patients with recurrence and 67% of deceased patients were identified as having high risk before chemotherapy. No patients in the recurrence-free group were misidentified as likely to have recurrence. All three prechemotherapy parameters (total tumor volume, tumor volumes with high and low SER) and the postchemotherapy tumor volume with high SER were significantly different between the two groups. The multivariate Cox proportional hazards regression showed that, of the three prechemotherapy covariates, only the low SER and high SER tumor volumes (P = .017 and .049, respectively) were significant and independent predictors of tumor recurrence. Tumor volume with high SER was the only significant postchemotherapy covariate predictor (P = .038). CONCLUSION High-spatial-resolution SER imaging may improve prediction for patients at high risk for disease recurrence and death.


American Journal of Roentgenology | 2007

CT Differentiation of Adenomyomatosis and Gallbladder Cancer

Brian H. Ching; Benjamin M. Yeh; Antonio C. Westphalen; Bonnie N. Joe; Aliya Qayyum; Fergus V. Coakley

OBJECTIVE The purpose of this study was to determine the accuracy of CT in differentiating adenomyomatosis from gallbladder cancer. MATERIALS AND METHODS We retrospectively identified the cases of 36 patients with pathologically proven adenomyomatosis (n = 22) or gallbladder cancer (n = 14) who had undergone preoperative abdominal CT. Two reviewers independently evaluated the presence and nature of morphologic gallbladder abnormalities, including the presence of intramural diverticula (i.e., small cystic-appearing spaces within the gallbladder wall). The reviewers used a five-point scale (1, definitely absent; 5, definitely present) to rate the overall likelihood of the presence of adenomyomatosis and gallbladder cancer. Ratings were dichotomized such that a diagnosis was considered present at a rating of 4 or 5 and considered absent at lower ratings. RESULTS Reviewer 1 detected a morphologic gallbladder abnormality in 17 patients and correctly characterized the abnormality in 14 (82%) of the patients (eight with adenomyomatosis and six with gallbladder cancer). Reviewer 2 detected an abnormality in 18 patients and was correct for 13 (72%) of the patients (eight with adenomyomatosis and five with gallbladder cancer). In particular, reviewer 1 detected intramural diverticula in eight patients, and all had the pathologic diagnosis of adenomyomatosis, whereas reviewer 2 detected intramural diverticula in 11 patients, and eight (73%) had the pathologic diagnosis of adenomyomatosis. CONCLUSION CT is limited in the detection and differentiation of adenomyomatosis and gallbladder cancer, but the diagnosis of adenomyomatosis can be made with reasonable accuracy when thickening of the gallbladder wall is seen to contain small cystic-appearing spaces.


Investigative Radiology | 2005

Evaluation of 1h-magnetic Resonance Spectroscopy of Breast Cancer Pre- and Postgadolinium Administration

Bonnie N. Joe; Victoria Y. Chen; Nouha Salibi; Pornpim Fuangtharntip; Charles F. Hildebolt; Kyongtae T. Bae

Objectives:We sought to evaluate spectroscopic measurements in breast cancer and compare variability in choline peak parameters related to contrast administration versus that inherent to repeated measurements. Materials and Methods:Single-voxel, proton spectroscopy measurements were obtained before and after the administration of gadolinium on 15 patients with ≥1-cm breast cancers. The protocol was repeated on a separate day in 7 patients. Results:Postcontrast spectra demonstrated a significant increase in choline peak linewidth (day 1: 15% ± 21%, P = 0.03; day 2: 19% ± 12%, P = 0.001) and decrease in choline peak area (day 1: 11% ± 9% (P < 0.001); day 2: 18% ± 21% (P = 0.03). A variance-components analysis indicated that day-to-day variation in linewidth accounted for 0.0% of the total variation in width measurements and was not significant (P = 0.85). Day-to-day variation in area was also not significant (0.0%, P = 0.95). Conclusions:Contrast administration caused significant increases in choline peak linewidth and decreases in choline peak area in spectroscopic measurements of breast cancer.


Annals of Surgery | 2008

Accuracy of Plain Abdominal Radiographs in the Detection of Retained Surgical Needles in the Peritoneal Cavity

Skorn Ponrartana; Fergus V. Coakley; Benjamin M. Yeh; Richard S. Breiman; Aliya Qayyum; Bonnie N. Joe; Liina Poder; Ying Lu; Verna C. Gibbs; John P. Roberts

Objective:To determine the accuracy of plain abdominal radiographs in the detection of retained surgical needles of varying size in the peritoneal cavity. Summary Background Data:Accidental retention of surgical foreign bodies in the peritoneal cavity is estimated to occur once in every 1000 to 1500 abdominal operations and early prevention and identification of retained foreign bodies is increasingly important because of mounting public awareness. Most of the existing literature on the imaging detection of surgical foreign bodies has focused on retained sponges, even though retained needles may account for up to 50% of such objects and the true accuracy of plain abdominal radiographs in the detection of retained needles is not well established. Methods:Eight plain radiographs were obtained of a 41 kg pig cadaver after placement of a total of 39 surgical needles of varying size (4–77 mm in length) in a randomized selection of the 9 segments of the peritoneal cavity. Five radiologists independently reviewed the radiographs and indicated the location of all suspected retained needles. Analyses were performed using the known site and size of placed needles as the standard of reference. Results:In total for all readers, 195 needles were detectable in 360 abdominal segments. The overall mean accuracy, sensitivity, and specificity for plain radiographs in the detection of retained surgical needles were 74% (267 of 360), 69% (135 of 195), and 80% (132 of 165), respectively. Sensitivity for needles 25 mm or more in length was significantly (P < 0.0001) higher than that for needles of 11 to 24 mm or 10 mm or less, with respective values of 99% (69 of 70), 84% (46 of 55), and 29% (20 of 70). Readers demonstrated moderate interobserver agreement, with a multireader κ value of 0.60. Conclusions:Abdominal radiographs have high sensitivity and interobserver agreement in the detection of retained surgical needles over 10 mm in length, but smaller needles are detected with significantly lower sensitivity and the utility of plain abdominal radiographs in this setting is more debatable.


Radiology | 2012

Benefit of Semiannual Ipsilateral Mammographic Surveillance Following Breast Conservation Therapy

Vignesh A. Arasu; Bonnie N. Joe; Natalya M. Lvoff; Jessica W.T. Leung; R. James Brenner; Chris I. Flowers; Dan H. Moore; Edward A. Sickles

PURPOSE To compare cancer recurrence outcomes on the basis of compliant semiannual versus noncompliant annual ipsilateral mammographic surveillance following breast conservation therapy (BCT). MATERIALS AND METHODS A HIPAA-compliant retrospective review was performed of post-BCT examinations from 1997 through 2008 by using a deidentified database. The Committee on Human Research did not require institutional review board approval for this study, which was considered quality assurance. Groups were classified according to compliance with institutional post-BCT protocol, which recommends semiannual mammographic examinations of the ipsilateral breast for 5 years. A compliant semiannual examination was defined as an examination with an interval of 0-9 months, although no examination had intervals less than 3 months. A noncompliant annual examination was defined as an examination with an interval of 9-18 months. Cancer recurrence outcomes were compared on the basis of the last examination interval leading to diagnosis. RESULTS Initially, a total of 10 750 post-BCT examinations among 2329 asymptomatic patients were identified. Excluding initial mammographic follow-up, there were 8234 examinations. Of these, 7169 examinations were semiannual with 94 recurrences detected and 1065 examinations were annual with 15 recurrences detected. There were no differences in demographic risk factors or biopsy rates. Recurrences identified at semiannual intervals were significantly less advanced than those identified at annual intervals (stage I vs stage II, P = .04; stage 0 + stage I vs stage II, P = .03). Nonsignificant findings associated with semiannual versus annual intervals included smaller tumor size (mean, 11.7 vs 15.3 mm; P = .15) and node negativity (98% vs 91%, P = .28). CONCLUSION Results suggest that a semiannual interval is preferable for ipsilateral mammographic surveillance, allowing detection of a significantly higher proportion of cancer recurrences at an earlier stage than noncompliant annual surveillance.


Journal of Magnetic Resonance Imaging | 2014

High-resolution diffusion-weighted imaging for the separation of benign from malignant BI-RADS 4/5 lesions found on breast MRI at 3T

Dorota J. Wisner; Nathan Rogers; Vibhas S. Deshpande; David N. Newitt; Gerhard A. Laub; David Andrew Porter; John Kornak; Bonnie N. Joe; Nola M. Hylton

To determine whether readout‐segmented echo‐planar diffusion imaging (RESOLVE) improves separation of malignant versus benign lesions compared to standard single‐shot echo‐planar imaging (ss‐EPI) on BI‐RADS 4/5 lesions detected on breast magnetic resonance imaging (MRI).

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Nola M. Hylton

University of California

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Aliya Qayyum

University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center

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Laura Esserman

University of California

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