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Being accepted onto the FAST MRI DYAMOND study - Stage 2

Thank you so much if you have already signed up for the FAST MRI DYAMOND study.

The second stage of the FAST MRI DYAMOND study involves having the FAST MRI scan. A member of the research team will contact you to give you the information about Stage 2. They will discuss the study with you. If you can have the scan and would like to, they will book you a scan appointment. The scan itself takes just 3-5 minutes, but the whole appointment would last up to 45 minutes. Scans are provided at a Hospital associated with your local breast screening service.

Stage 2 - Participant Information

Why have I been asked to take part in this study?

Following your first mammogram, we invited you to take part in Stage 1 of the DYAMOND study: to measure your breast density and to check your breast screening results. Your images have now been checked and we think you could be eligible to join Stage 2 of the study to have a FAST MRI scan. 

Do I have to take part?

No, it’s up to you to decide whether to take part. If you choose not to, be reassured that your clinical care will not be affected. You will still be offered your routine screening mammograms every 3 years until you turn 71. 

What does taking part involve?

We have designed the study to be as convenient as it can be, so that as many people can be involved as possible. If you decide to take part, we will:

  • Ask you some questions about your health
  • Check that you can have a FAST MRI scan
  • Book a FAST MRI scan at a time convenient to you
  • Ask you to complete a survey about your experience

Some people may also be invited to take part in an interview about their experience.

We expect a small proportion of people having a FAST MRI scan to be invited for another scan after a year or be referred for further investigations.

What do I do next if I am interested in taking part?

A Research Nurse will contact you to discuss this part of the study and answer any questions you may have. If you would like to join the study, they will ask you some questions about your health to make sure that you are safe to have the FAST MRI scan. They will help you complete an online consent form and book you in for your scan at a time convenient to you. This will need to be between day 6 and 16 of your cycle if you are still having regular periods.

What would stop me from having a FAST MRI scan?

Please let the Research Nurse know if you are affected by any of the below as these things may prevent you having an MRI scan:

  • If you are or may be pregnant or if you are breast feeding
  • If you have ever had a penetrating eye injury
  • If you have ever had brain surgery
  • If you have a pacemaker or defibrillator
  • If you have an implanted neurostimulator
  • If you have a cochlear implant
  • If you have ever had a shrapnel injury
  • If you are claustrophobic
  • If you have had conditions associated with your kidneys
  • If you wear a sensor to measure your blood sugars (e.g. a “continuous glucose monitor”), this will need to be removed for the scan. We will try to arrange your scan around the time when you are due to change your sensor.

What is it like to have a FAST MRI scan?

We encourage you to watch this video to see what it is like to have a FAST MRI scan

Your FAST MRI scan appointment will take up to 45 minutes.

When you arrive, the radiographer will ask some questions to confirm that it’s safe for you to have the scan and ask you to sign a standard safety checklist. 

You will be asked to change into a hospital gown. 

You will have a cannula (a small, soft plastic tube) placed into a vein in your arm. This is necessary so that the radiographer can inject dye during your scan, which makes a cancer show up clearly if it’s there. The injection of dye is not painful. 

The radiographer will explain what is going to happen during the scan, which we expect to take between 3 and 5 minutes.

Once you have had the scan and your cannula has been removed, you will be free to go. Your scans will be sent to specialists who look at them in detail and check the findings. This means we can’t give you the results on the day of your scan.  

How will you get the results of your FAST MRI?

We will let you know the results of your FAST MRI scan 3-4 weeks after your scan date. 

If your scan is clear, you will receive your scan results by letter. 

Some people with a clear FAST MRI scan may be invited to have another scan in a year's time. This is because their scan is most likely normal but we would like to see if it has changed over time, as we are still learning which appearances on FAST MRI we can confidently call “clear”. We expect that all the people invited to have this second scan will then have a clear result.

If your scan shows that further investigations are needed, a Research Nurse will contact you by telephone to explain the results and what will happen next. The Research Nurse will arrange an appointment at your local Breast Care Clinic. Appointments are usually offered within about 2 weeks of referral. This does not necessarily mean that you have a breast cancer, just that you need to have additional tests. You will receive a letter confirming the FAST MRI scan results.   

At these appointments a healthcare professional will look at your mammogram and FAST MRI scan results and will ask for more tests to be done, including another scan and possibly a biopsy. If you have a biopsy, we may ask you if we can collect an extra sample to donate to a tissue bank to help support future research. Information about this option will only be sent to you if you need further investigations following your FAST MRI.

They may also discuss your case with a team of other professionals after your appointment to help decide if more investigations are needed, which could include deciding to perform a full MRI. If you do need further tests, your care team will explain why each test is important and what having the test would involve for you. Any extra tests you may have will help the team decide if what was seen on the FAST MRI is a cancer or not.

We expect that if 100 people have a FAST MRI scan, 5 of those people will be called back for further investigations. Of those 5 people, we expect that only around 1 participant will be diagnosed with a cancer.

What are the possible benefits of taking part?

Taking part in the FAST MRI DYAMOND Study gives you access to a new test (a FAST MRI scan).

We do not know if your FAST MRI scan will pick up a cancer that was not found on your first mammogram. If it does, it is possible that you will have a better outcome, because the cancer will have been found earlier than it would have been if you had not taken part in the study. 

By taking part in this important study, you will be making a difference by helping us plan more research to improve breast screening for everyone in the future.

What are the possible disadvantages and risks of taking part?

We expect that the potential advantages of taking part will outweigh any disadvantages or risks.

Having an MRI scan is painless, and it’s one of the safest medical procedures available, but there are some risks. For example, there are increased risks to people with certain implants or foreign bodies. The Research Nurse and Radiographer will ask you questions about your medical history to check that you can have the scan. 

Some patients occasionally experience a tingling sensation or feel hot from being in the MRI scanner. These effects only last a short while and should ease as soon as the scan is over.

The scan involves having an injection of dye which is used to highlight any cancer cells (if a cancer is there). The risks associated with this injection are small and are well known: 

  • About 1 in every 100 people may have a mild reaction to this dye (such as pain at the injection site, nausea or headache)
  • About 1 in 1000 people may experience vomiting and/or an itchy rash   
  • A more severe allergic rection is very rare, affecting about 1 in 10,000 people.  The radiographers who will be looking after you during your FAST MRI scan are trained to support individuals if this happens, and appropriate medical care will be given.  The dye is not recommended for people who are pregnant or breast feeding.
  • Tiny amounts of dye can stay in the body for a long time after the scan but this has never been shown to cause any problems.   

If you take part in this study, you will have had mammograms, and some may have follow-up imaging and biopsy. These will be extra to those that you would have if you did not take part. These procedures use ionising radiation to form images of your body and provide your doctor with other clinical information. Ionising radiation can cause cell damage that may, after many years or decades, turn cancerous. 

We are all at risk of developing cancer during our lifetime. The normal risk is that this will happen to about 50% of people at some point in their life. The chances of this happening to you, as a consequence of taking part in this study, are up to 0.022 %, depending on the imaging required.

Will my GP be informed that I am taking part in the FAST MRI DYAMOND study?

If you decide to take part in the study, we will let your GP know and we will tell them the results of your scan when they are available.

Expenses and payments

You will not be paid for taking part in the FAST MRI DYAMOND study but reasonable expenses (up to £10) to attend your FAST MRI scan will be covered. Your Research Nurse will give you this information.

How do I consent to Stage 2 of the study?

If you are eligible to proceed to the next stage of the trial you will receive an email from the study team with a link to the online consent form. 

Please contact FASTMRI@nbt.nhs.uk if you have any queries.

Additional Information about taking part in research

In this study we will use information from you and from your medical records. We will only use information that we need for the research study. We will let very few DYAMOND team members know your name or contact details, and only if they really need it for this study. This includes research staff at Royal Surrey Hospital who are providing the Consent Form website. Everyone involved in this study will keep your data safe and secure. We will also follow all privacy rules.  At the end of the study, we will save some of the data for up to 5 years after the study closes, in case we need to check it and for future research (if you have given us permission). We will make sure no-one can work out who you are from the reports we write. Please contact us on the details below for more information about this. 

This study is run by Dr Lyn Jones (Consultant Radiologist) at the FAST MRI Programme Team at North Bristol NHS Trust and a Consultant Radiologist at your local Hospital.

What information will be collected from me if I take part in the study?

If you agree to take part, we will use information we collect from you and your medical records. We will only collect information that we need for the research, and only people who need to contact you or to check your records will have access to your name and contact details.

How will your information be stored?

North Bristol NHS Trust are the study Sponsors and have overall responsibility for making sure that your information is looked after correctly.

All information we collect about you for this research will be kept securely throughout the study. It will not be accessed by anyone outside the research team which includes your local Research Team, and researchers from North Bristol NHS Trust, Royal Surrey NHS Foundation Trust, and Warwick Clinical Trials Unit. 

When the study has ended, we will do a final check of all the information we have for you and anonymise it all. We may use your anonymised data to inform future research.

Your information will be stored for a period of 5 years. 

We expect to publish the results and some images in academic journals. It will not be possible to identify you from any of the results or images that we publish. 

To help with any future investigations or treatment you may need, a copy of your FAST MRI scan images and results will be added to your screening records and medical notes. 

What if something goes wrong?

In the unlikely event that something does go wrong, and you are harmed during the research study there are no special compensation arrangements. If you are harmed and this is due to someone’s negligence, then you may have grounds for a legal action for compensation against North Bristol NHS Trust but you may have to pay your legal costs. The normal National Health Service complaints mechanisms will still be available to you.’

In the unlikely event that you feel that you have been adversely affected by participating in this study, you should contact the research team as soon as possible. The team will arrange to meet you as soon as possible to discuss your concerns. Please visit www.nbt.nhs.uk/patients-carers/feedback for further information about how to make a complaint or contact the North Bristol NHS Trust Hospital Patient Advice and Liaison Service (PALS) on 0117 4144569. PALS can also provide confidential advice and support to patients, families, and their carers. 

If you do not want to discuss your concerns with the research staff or their manager, or if you have tried this and are still unhappy, you can contact the Advice & Complaints Team (ACT) at Southmead Hospital. 

The ACT address is:

Advice & Complaints Team, Beaufort House, Beaufort Way, Southmead Hospital, Bristol, BS10 5NB

Tel: 0117 4144569 or 0117 4144568 or 0117 4144572

Fax: 0117 4144572 

Email: complaints@nbt.nhs.uk

If you decide to withdraw, what are your choices about how your information is used?

  • You can stop being part of the study at any time, without giving a reason, but we will keep information about you that we have already collected up to the point of your withdrawal.
  • If you choose to stop taking part in the study, we would like to continue collecting information about your health from central NHS records and your hospital. If you do not want this to happen, tell us and we will stop.
  • We need to manage your records in specific ways for the research to be reliable. This means that we won’t be able to let you see or change the data we hold about you.
  • If you agree to take part in this study, you will have the option to take part in future research using your data saved from this study. 

Where can you find out more about how your information is used?

You can find out more about how we use your information: 

What will happen to the results of this study?

The results from the study will be published in academic journals and at international conferences. It is also important to us that members of the public and people who have taken part in this study have access to the results, therefore summaries of the results will be published on the FAST MRI website https://www.nbt.nhs.uk/FASTMRI and on social media.  At any point you can contact the research office  to find out the status of the study and any results which may have come through

Who is organising and funding this study?

The study has been funded by a grant from the Efficacy and Mechanism Evaluation funding stream, which is a partnership between the Medical Research Council (MRC) and the National Institute for Health and Care Research (NIHR). The grant is overseen by North Bristol NHS Trust.

How have patients and the public been involved in this study?

Throughout the development of the study we have listened to members of the public, NHS Breast Screening Programme clients, and to people who have been diagnosed with breast cancer. 

Women from various backgrounds have reviewed our study design and the study documents, such as this one, to make sure they are clear and can be easily understood. 

Who has reviewed this study?

All research in the NHS is looked at by an independent group of people, called a Research Ethics Committee, to protect your interests. This research study has been given a Favourable Ethical Opinion by the Yorkshire & The Humber (Sheffield) Research Ethics Committee. 

Our Contact details:

If you have further questions, or for more information, you can contact your local Research Team:

FAST MRI Research Office,  Breast Care Research Office, Bristol Breast Care Centre, Southmead Hospital, Bristol BS10 5NB

Tel: 0117 4147014

Email: FASTMRI@nbt.nhs.uk

Chief Investigator: Dr Lyn Jones,  Consultant Radiologist, Southmead Hospital, Bristol BS10 5NB                              

You can also contact the Trial Sponsor, who has responsibility of overseeing the study:

FAST MRI DYAMOND Study Sponsor
Research and Development, Level 3, Learning & Research Building, North Bristol NHS Trust, Southmead Hospital, Westbury on Trym,
Bristol BS10 5NB 

Tel: 0117 4149330

Email: ResearchSponsor@nbt.nhs.uk