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Diffusion magnetic resonance imaging of breast lesions: Initial experience at Alexandria University
Abstract
Objective: The purpose of our study was to investigate whether adding diffusion weighted imaging (DWI) to dynamic contrast-enhanced MRI (DCE-MRI) could improve specificity and the positive predictive value (PPV) of breast MRI in differentiating benign and malignant focal breast mass lesions.
Materials and methods: The prospective study included 71 females with 103 focal breast lesions on DCE-MRI who underwent subsequent biopsy. DWI was acquired during diagnostic breast MRI using b= 0, 400 and 800 s/mm2. Apparent diffusion coefficient (ADC) values were compared for
benign and malignant lesions. Sensitivity and PPV were calculated for DCE-MRI alone (based on biopsy recommendations) and DCE-MRI plus DWI (adding an ADC threshold) for the same set of lesions.
Results: On pathological basis, 57 out of 103 focal lesions were benign and the remaining revealed, 45 were malignant and one borderline. Malignant lesions exhibited lower mean ADC (<1.3 · 103 mm2/s) than benign lesions (>1.3 · 103 mm2/s). Applying an ADC threshold of 1.3 · 103 mm2/s sensitivity increased (on conventional DCE-MRI basis) from 86.95% up to 93.47% and the specificity from 91.22% to 96.49% in detection of malignancy with PPV of 95.55% in comparison to 86.95% for enhancement kinetics alone, which would have avoided biopsy for 10.5% (6/57) of benign lesions without missing any cancers.
Conclusion: DWI shows potential for improving the PPV of breast MRI for detection of malignant breast lesions.
Recommendation: Furthermore, larger studies should be made to use it as a monitor for tumor response to chemotherapy.