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Dive into the research topics where Lucy Hanna is active.

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Featured researches published by Lucy Hanna.


Journal of Clinical Oncology | 2008

Impact of Positron Emission Tomography/Computed Tomography and Positron Emission Tomography (PET) Alone on Expected Management of Patients With Cancer: Initial Results From the National Oncologic PET Registry

Bruce E. Hillner; Barry A. Siegel; Dawei Liu; Anthony F. Shields; Ilana F. Gareen; Lucy Hanna; Sharon Hartson Stine; R. Edward Coleman

PURPOSE Under Medicares Coverage with Evidence Development policy, positron emission tomography (PET)/computed tomography (CT) and PET became covered services for previously noncovered cancer indications if prospective registry data were collected. The National Oncologic PET Registry (NOPR) was developed to meet these coverage requirements and to assess how PET affects care decisions. METHODS The NOPR collected questionnaire data from referring physicians on intended patient management before and after PET. After 1 year, the cohort included data from 22,975 studies (83.7% PET/CT) from 1,178 centers. The numbers of scans performed for diagnosis of suspected cancer (or unknown primary cancer), initial cancer staging, restaging, and suspected cancer recurrence were approximately equal. Prostatic, pancreatic and ovarian cancers represented approximately 30% of cases. RESULTS If PET data were not available, the most common pre-PET plan would have been other imaging. In these patients, the post-PET strategies changed to watching in 37% and treatment in 48%. In patients with planned biopsy before PET, biopsy was avoided in approximately 70%. If the pre-PET strategy was treatment, the post-PET strategy involved a major change in type in 8.7% and goal in 5.6%. When intended management was classified as either treatment or nontreatment, the post-PET plan was three-fold more likely to lead to treatment than nontreatment (28.3% v 8.2%; odds ratio = 3.4; 95% CI, 3.2 to 3.6). Overall, physicians changed their intended management in 36.5% (95% CI, 35.9 to 37.2) of cases after PET. CONCLUSION This large, prospective, nationally representative registry of elderly cancer patients found that physicians often change their intended management on the basis of PET scan results across the full spectrum of its potential uses.


Cancer | 2010

Percutaneous radiofrequency ablation of painful osseous metastases: A multicenter American College of Radiology Imaging Network trial

Damian E. Dupuy; Dawei Liu; Donna Hartfeil; Lucy Hanna; Jeffrey D. Blume; Kamran Ahrar; Robert Lopez; Howard Safran; Thomas A. DiPetrillo

The study was conducted to determine whether radiofrequency ablation (RFA) can safely reduce pain from osseous metastatic disease.


Radiology | 2012

Positive Predictive Value of BI-RADS MR Imaging

Mary C. Mahoney; Constantine Gatsonis; Lucy Hanna; Wendy B. DeMartini; Constance D. Lehman

PURPOSE To evaluate the positive predictive values (PPVs) of Breast Imaging and Reporting Data Systems (BI-RADS) assessment categories for breast magnetic resonance (MR) imaging and to identify the BI-RADS MR imaging lesion features most predictive of cancer. MATERIALS AND METHODS This institutional review board-approved HIPAA-compliant prospective multicenter study was performed with written informed consent. Breast MR imaging studies of the contralateral breast in women with a recent diagnosis of breast cancer were prospectively evaluated. Contralateral breast MR imaging BI-RADS assessment categories, morphologic descriptors for foci, masses, non-masslike enhancement (NMLE), and kinetic features were assessed for predictive values for malignancy. PPV of each imaging characteristic of interest was estimated, and logistic regression analysis was used to examine the predictive ability of combinations of characteristics. RESULTS Of 969 participants, 71.3% had a BI-RADS category 1 or 2 assessment; 10.9%, a BI-RADS category 3 assessment; 10.0%, a BI-RADS category 4 or 5 assessment; and 7.7%, a BI-RADS category 0 assessment on the basis of initial MR images. Thirty-one cancers were detected with MR imaging. Overall PPV for BI-RADS category 4 and 5 lesions was 0.278, with 17 cancers in patients with a BI-RADS category 4 lesion (PPV, 0.205) and 10 cancers in patients with a BI-RADS category 5 lesion (PPV, 0.714). Of the cancers, one was a focus, 17 were masses, and 13 were NMLEs. For masses, irregular shape, irregular margins, spiculated margins, and marked internal enhancement were most predictive of malignancy. For NMLEs, ductal, clumped, and reticular or dendritic enhancement were the features most frequently seen with malignancy. Kinetic enhancement features were less predictive of malignancy than were morphologic features. CONCLUSION Standardized terminology of the BI-RADS lexicon enables quantification of the likelihood of malignancy for MR imaging-detected lesions through careful evaluation of lesion features. In particular, BI-RADS assessment categories and morphologic descriptors for masses and NMLE were useful in estimating the probability of cancer.


JAMA Internal Medicine | 2014

Consequences of false-positive screening mammograms.

Anna N. A. Tosteson; Dennis G. Fryback; Cristina S. Hammond; Lucy Hanna; Margaret R. Grove; Mary Maureen Brown; Qianfei Wang; Karen K. Lindfors; Etta D. Pisano

IMPORTANCE False-positive mammograms, a common occurrence in breast cancer screening programs, represent a potential screening harm that is currently being evaluated by the US Preventive Services Task Force. OBJECTIVE To measure the effect of false-positive mammograms on quality of life by measuring personal anxiety, health utility, and attitudes toward future screening. DESIGN, SETTING, AND PARTICIPANTS The Digital Mammographic Imaging Screening Trial (DMIST) quality-of-life substudy telephone survey was performed shortly after screening and 1 year later at 22 DMIST sites and included randomly selected DMIST participants with positive and negative mammograms. EXPOSURE Mammogram requiring follow-up testing or referral without a cancer diagnosis. MAIN OUTCOMES AND MEASURES The 6-question short form of the Spielberger State-Trait Anxiety Inventory state scale (STAI-6) and the EuroQol EQ-5D instrument with US scoring. Attitudes toward future screening as measured by womens self-report of future intention to undergo mammographic screening and willingness to travel and stay overnight to undergo a hypothetical new type of mammography that would identify as many cancers with half the false-positive results. RESULTS Among 1450 eligible women invited to participate, 1226 (84.6%) were enrolled, with follow-up interviews obtained in 1028 (83.8%). Anxiety was significantly higher for women with false-positive mammograms (STAI-6, 35.2 vs 32.7), but health utility scores did not differ and there were no significant differences between groups at 1 year. Future screening intentions differed by group (25.7% vs 14.2% more likely in false-positive vs negative groups); willingness to travel and stay overnight did not (9.9% vs 10.5% in false-positive vs negative groups). Future screening intention was significantly increased among women with false-positive mammograms (odds ratio, 2.12; 95% CI, 1.54-2.93), younger age (2.78; 1.5-5.0), and poorer health (1.63; 1.09-2.43). Womens anticipated high-level anxiety regarding future false-positive mammograms was associated with willingness to travel overnight (odds ratio, 1.94; 95% CI, 1.28-2.95). CONCLUSIONS AND RELEVANCE False-positive mammograms were associated with increased short-term anxiety but not long-term anxiety, and there was no measurable health utility decrement. False-positive mammograms increased womens intention to undergo future breast cancer screening and did not increase their stated willingness to travel to avoid a false-positive result. Our finding of time-limited harm after false-positive screening mammograms is relevant for clinicians who counsel women on mammographic screening and for screening guideline development groups.


Cancer | 2009

The impact of positron emission tomography (PET) on expected management during cancer treatment: findings of the National Oncologic PET Registry.

Bruce E. Hillner; Barry A. Siegel; Anthony F. Shields; Dawei Liu; Ilana F. Gareen; Lucy Hanna; Sharon Hartson Stine; R. Edward Coleman

Positron emission tomography (PET) performed during cancer therapy (treatment monitoring) has shown promise for predicting treatment outcome. However, when used for this purpose, PET generally is not considered standard care. Under the Medicare ‘coverage with evidence development’ policy, PET (and integrated PET/computed tomography) became a covered service for treatment monitoring if prospective registry data were collected.


Substance Abuse | 2001

Active and Former Injection Drug Users Report of HIV Risk Behaviors During Periods of Incarceration.

Jennifer G. Clarke; Michael D. Stein; Lucy Hanna; Mindy Sobota; Josiah D. Rich

American prisons have increasing numbers of inmates incarcerated for drug offenses. This population is at high risk for HIV-infection and may continue HIV transmission risk behaviors while incarcerated. We find that 31% of injection drug users with a history of imprisonment had used illicit drugs in prison, and nearly half of these persons had injected drugs while incarcerated. Male gender and number of times incarcerated were associated with drug use in prison. Interventions for drug-using prisoners that are advocated in some European prisons, such as needle exchange programs and methadone maintenance, need attention in the United States.


The Journal of Nuclear Medicine | 2014

Impact of 18F-Fluoride PET in Patients with Known Prostate Cancer: Initial Results from the National Oncologic PET Registry

Bruce E. Hillner; Barry A. Siegel; Lucy Hanna; Fenghai Duan; Anthony F. Shields; R. Edward Coleman

Under Medicare’s Coverage with Evidence Development policy, PET using 18F-sodium fluoride (NaF PET) to identify osseous metastasis became a covered service if prospective registry data were collected. The National Oncologic PET Registry (NOPR) developed a NaF PET registry built on the foundation of its prior registry for PET with 18F-FDG. Men with prostate cancer represented 72% of the cases. Methods: Prospective data before and after NaF PET were collected from referring and interpreting physicians. The analysis set consisted of consenting men age 65 y or older with prostate cancer undergoing NaF PET for initial staging (IS, n = 1,024), suspected first osseous metastasis (FOM, n = 1,997), or suspected progression of osseous metastasis (POM, n = 510). Results: Referring physicians indicated that if NaF PET were not available, other advanced imaging (body CT, MR imaging, or 18F-FDG PET) would be their plan in about half of the cases. After NaF PET, the postimaging plan was revised to treatment in 77%, 52%, and 71% for IS, FOM, and POM, respectively. When intended management was classified as either treatment or nontreatment, the overall change in intended management ranged from 44% to 52% and from 12% to 16% if no effect was assumed for those cases with pre-PET plans for other imaging (imaging-adjusted impact). Interpreting physicians recorded definite findings of bone metastasis in 14%, 29%, and 76% for IS, FOM, and POM, respectively. The intended care patterns varied widely across indication and scan abnormality category combinations. Conclusion: NaF PET has high overall impact, principally related to its effect on replacing intended use of other advanced imaging. Its imaging-adjusted impact was similar to that observed with 18F-FDG PET for restaging or suspected recurrence in other cancer types.


Journal of General Internal Medicine | 1998

Economic effects of community versus hospital-based faculty pneumonia care

Michael D. Stein; Scott Hanson; Dominick Tammaro; Lucy Hanna; A S Most

To compare the length of stay and charges for patients with pneumonia admitted in 1995 to the teaching and nonteaching services of a Northeastern teaching hospital, we reviewed the charts of 237 patients. Patients cared for by hospital-based generalists working with housestaff (teaching service) were discharged more quickly and with lower or equivalent charges than patients cared for by community-based attending physicians working either with housestaff (private teaching service) or alone (nonteaching service). Academic teaching services staffed by general medicine faculty may provide efficient inpatient pneumonia care.


Radiology | 2010

Frequency of Malignancy Seen in Probably Benign Lesions at Contrast-enhanced Breast MR Imaging: Findings from ACRIN 6667

Susan P. Weinstein; Lucy Hanna; Constantine Gatsonis; Mitchell D. Schnall; Mark A. Rosen; Constance D. Lehman

PURPOSE To determine the frequency of malignancy in probably benign lesions seen at magnetic resonance (MR) screening of the contralateral breast in patients with known breast cancer enrolled in American College of Radiology Imaging Network (ACRIN) protocol 6667. MATERIALS AND METHODS ACRIN conducted a prospective multi-institutional MR imaging screening trial of the contralateral breast in women in whom breast cancer had been diagnosed recently. Each participating institution obtained institutional review board approval before patient accrual and was compliant with HIPAA. Informed consent was obtained from the patients. At enrollment, all women had negative clinical breast examination results and negative mammograms of the study breast. At image interpretation, radiologists scored lesions by using the Breast Imaging and Reporting and Data System (BI-RADS) lexicon. Of the 969 women who comprised the final study group, 106 were classified as having a BI-RADS category 3 lesion as their highest scoring lesion at MR imaging. There were 145 BI-RADS category 3 lesions in 106 patients. RESULTS In the 106 patients with at least one BI-RADS category 3 lesion, there were 37 masses (25.5%), 59 areas of nonmass enhancement (40.7%), and 47 foci of enhancement (32.4%). In two (1.4%) of these patients, no findings were reported. Eighty-three (78.3%) of the 106 patients had no evidence of malignancy in the study breast after 2 years of follow-up; the remaining 23 (21.7%) received a tissue diagnosis. Seventeen (16.0%) of the 106 patients elected to undergo biopsy. Biopsy was recommended in the remaining six patients (5.7%) on the basis of follow-up imaging findings. The biopsy results were benign in 18 (78%) of the 23 patients, whereas they showed atypical hyperplasia in two (9%). One (4%) of the 23 patients had ductal carcinoma in situ. Overall, malignancy was diagnosed in one (0.9%) of the 106 patients. CONCLUSION In a multi-institutional study, the frequency of malignancy in MR-detected BI-RADS category 3 lesions was 0.9% (95% confidence interval: 0.02%, 5.14%).


Radiology | 2011

Use of BI-RADS 3–Probably Benign Category in the American College of Radiology Imaging Network Digital Mammographic Imaging Screening Trial

Janet K. Baum; Lucy Hanna; Suddhasatta Acharyya; Mary C. Mahoney; Emily F. Conant; Lawrence W. Bassett; Etta D. Pisano

PURPOSE To determine (a) how often the Breast Imaging Reporting and Data System (BI-RADS) category 3 was used in the American College of Radiology Imaging Network (ACRIN) Digital Mammographic Imaging Screening Trial (DMIST), either at the time of screening mammography or after work-up, (b) how often subjects actually returned for the recommended follow-up examination, and (c) the rate and stages of any malignancies subsequently found in subjects for whom short-term interval follow-up was recommended. MATERIALS AND METHODS This study was approved by the Institutional Review Board at all institutions where subjects were enrolled. All subjects participating in DMIST gave informed consent and the study was HIPAA-compliant. A total of 47,599 DMIST-eligible and evaluable subjects, all of whom consented to undergo both digital and screen-film mammography, were included in this analysis. Cases referred for short-term interval follow-up based on digital, screen-film, or both imaging examinations were determined. Compliance with the recommendations and the final outcome (malignancy diagnosis at biopsy or no malignancy confirmed through follow-up) of each evaluable case were determined. RESULTS A total of 1114 of the 47,599 (2.34%) subjects had tumors assigned a BI-RADS 3 category and were recommended to undergo short-interval follow-up. In this study, 791 of 1114 (71%) of the subjects were compliant with the recommendation and returned for short-interval follow-up. Of the women who did not return for short-interval follow-up, 70% (226 of 323) did return for their next annual mammography. Among all subjects whose tumors were assigned a BI-RADS 3 category either at screening mammography or after additional work-up, nine of 1114 (0.81%) were found to have cancer. Of the nine biopsy-proved cancers, six were invasive cancers and three were ductal carcinoma in situ stage Tis-T1c. The invasive cancers were all less than 2 cm in size. CONCLUSION In DMIST, radiologists used the BI-RADS 3 classification infrequently (2.3% of patients). Tumors assigned a BI-RADS 3 category had a low rate of malignancy. The relatively high rate of noncompliance with short-interval follow-up recommendations (323 of 1114, or 29%) supports prior recommendations that radiologists thoroughly evaluate lesions before placing them in this category.

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Barry A. Siegel

Washington University in St. Louis

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Bruce E. Hillner

Virginia Commonwealth University

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