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Incidental findings in research brain MRI: Definition, prevalence and ethical implications

journal contribution
posted on 2025-05-05, 06:56 authored by KJ de Jong, E Poon, M Foo, Julian MaingardJulian Maingard, HK Kok, C Barras, A Yazdabadi, B Shaygi, GJ Fitt, G Egan, M Brooks, Hamed AsadiHamed Asadi
SummaryRadiological incidental findings (IFs) are previously undetected abnormalities which are unrelated to the original indication for imaging and are unexpectedly discovered. In brain magnetic resonance imaging (MRI), the prevalence of IFs is increasing. By reviewing the literature on IFs in brain MRI performed for research purposes and discussing ethical considerations of IFs, this paper provides an overview of brain IF research results and factors contributing to inconsistencies and considers how the consent process can be improved from an ethical perspective. We found that despite extensive literature regarding IFs in research MRI of the brain, there are major inconsistencies in the reported prevalence, ranging from 1.3% to 99%. Many factors appear to contribute to this broad range: lack of standardised definition, participant demographics variance, heterogenous MRI scanner strength and sequences, reporter variation and results classification. We also found significant discrepancies in the review, consent and clinical communication processes pertaining to the ethical nature of these studies. These findings have implications for future studies, particularly those involving artificial intelligence. Further research, particularly in relation to MRI brain IFs would be useful to explore the generalisability of study results.

History

Journal

Journal of Medical Imaging and Radiation Oncology

Volume

69

Pagination

35-45

Location

London, Eng.

Open access

  • No

ISSN

1754-9477

eISSN

1754-9485

Language

eng

Publication classification

C1 Refereed article in a scholarly journal

Issue

1

Publisher

Wiley

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