Comparison of breast tissue measurements using magnetic resonance imaging, digital mammography and a mathematical algorithm

Women with mostly mammographically dense fibroglandular tissue (breast density, BD) have a four- to six-fold increased risk for breast cancer compared to women with little BD. BD is most frequently estimated from two-dimensional (2D) views of mammograms by a histogram segmentation approach (HSM) and...

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Veröffentlicht in:Physics in medicine & biology 2012-11, Vol.57 (21), p.6903-6927
Hauptverfasser: Lu, Lee-Jane W, Nishino, Thomas K, Johnson, Raleigh F, Nayeem, Fatima, Brunder, Donald G, Ju, Hyunsu, Leonard, Morton H, Grady, James J, Khamapirad, Tuenchit
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Women with mostly mammographically dense fibroglandular tissue (breast density, BD) have a four- to six-fold increased risk for breast cancer compared to women with little BD. BD is most frequently estimated from two-dimensional (2D) views of mammograms by a histogram segmentation approach (HSM) and more recently by a mathematical algorithm consisting of mammographic imaging parameters (MATH). Two non-invasive clinical magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) protocols: 3D gradient-echo (3DGRE) and short tau inversion recovery (STIR) were modified for 3D volumetric reconstruction of the breast for measuring fatty and fibroglandular tissue volumes by a Gaussian-distribution curve-fitting algorithm. Replicate breast exams (N = 2 to 7 replicates in six women) by 3DGRE and STIR were highly reproducible for all tissue-volume estimates (coefficients of variation 0.75 indicating that all four methods were reliable for measuring BD and that the mathematical algorithm and the two complimentary non-invasive MRI protocols could objectively and reliably estimate different types of breast tissues.
ISSN:0031-9155
1361-6560
DOI:10.1088/0031-9155/57/21/6903