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Safely reducing unnecessary benign breast biopsies by applying non-mass and DWI directional variance filters to ADC thresholding.

Authors :
Penn A
Medved M
Abe H
Dialani V
Karczmar GS
Brousseau D
Source :
BMC medical imaging [BMC Med Imaging] 2022 Sep 29; Vol. 22 (1), pp. 171. Date of Electronic Publication: 2022 Sep 29.
Publication Year :
2022

Abstract

Background: Thresholding apparent diffusion coefficient (ADC) maps obtained from Diffusion-Weighted-Imaging (DWI) has been proposed for identifying benign lesions that can safely avoid biopsy. The presence of malignancies with high ADC values leads to high thresholds, limiting numbers of avoidable biopsies.<br />Purpose: We evaluate two previously reported methods for identifying avoidable biopsies: using case-set dependent ADC thresholds that assure 100% sensitivity and using negative likelihood ratio (LR-) with a fixed ADC threshold of 1.50 × 10 <superscript>-3</superscript>  mm <superscript>2</superscript> /s. We evaluated improvements in efficacy obtained by excluding non-mass lesions and lesions with anisotropic intra-lesion morphologic characteristics.<br />Study Type: Prospective.<br />Population: 55 adult females with dense breasts with 69 BI-RADS 4 or 5 lesions (38 malignant, 31 benign) identified on ultrasound and mammography and imaged with MRI prior to biopsy.<br />Field Strength/sequence: 1.5 T and 3.0 T. DWI.<br />Assessment: Analysis of DWI, including directional images was done on an ROI basis. ROIs were drawn on DWI images acquired prior to biopsy, referencing all available images including DCE, and mean ADC was measured. Anisotropy was quantified via variation in ADC values in the lesion core across directional DWI images.<br />Statistical Tests: Improvement in specificity at 100% sensitivity was evaluated with exact McNemar test with 1-sided p-value < 0.05 indicating statistical significance.<br />Results: Using ADC thresholding that assures 100% sensitivity, non-mass and directional variance filtering improved the percent of avoidable biopsies to 42% from baseline of 10% achieved with ADC thresholding alone. Using LR-, filtering improved outcome to 0.06 from baseline 0.25 with ADC thresholding alone. ADC thresholding showed a lower percentage of avoidable biopsies in our cohort than reported in prior studies. When ADC thresholding was supplemented with filtering, the percentage of avoidable biopsies exceeded those of prior studies.<br />Data Conclusion: Supplementing ADC thresholding with filters excluding non-mass lesions and lesions with anisotropic characteristics on DWI can result in an increased number of avoidable biopsies.<br /> (© 2022. The Author(s).)

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
1471-2342
Volume :
22
Issue :
1
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
BMC medical imaging
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
36175878
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1186/s12880-022-00897-0