“…By comparing pre and post-treatment scans, magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) identifies the persistence of EMVI in a greater percentage of patients than histopathology (mrEMVI; Chand et al , 2015) and has a high sensitivity even when enhanced histopathological techniques are used (Jhaveri et al , 2016). Several studies have reported the prevalence of mrEMVI and its correlation to the development of metastatic disease (Smith et al , 2008; Hunter et al , 2012; Bugg et al , 2014; Sohn et al , 2014; Seehaus et al , 2015; Chand et al , 2015; Kim et al , 2016). Given the standardised, reproducible and prognostically validated methods of describing tumour using MRI, it is considered a standard for preoperative risk stratification and treatment decision-making (Brown et al , 2003; Ernst-Stecken et al , 2004; Mercury Study Group, 2006; Smith et al , 2008; NICE, 2011; Shihab et al , 2011; Taylor et al , 2011, 2014b; Glimelius et al , 2013; Yu et al , 2014; Battersby et al , 2016; National Comprehensive Cancer Network 2015; Chand et al , 2015).…”