Abstract

BackgroundBreast cancer is the most common malignancy in females around the world representing 25.1% of all cancers.The high prevalence and need for early treatment of breast malignancy highlight the importance of early and accurate diagnosis. In order to achieve this target, it is necessary to select the most appropriate modality for investigation.Early detection of breast cancer by conventional mammography tends to reduce mortality; however, it has a low sensitivity and specificity in young females with dense breasts owing to reduced contrast between a possible tumor and the surrounding breast tissue with superimposition of the glandular tissue obscuring underlying lesions.Our study included 25 patients with dense breasts presented with different breast symptoms, yet the breast lump was the most common complaint. The aim of our study is to evaluate the supplementary value of contrast-enhanced spectral mammography in the assessment of symptomatic patients with dense breasts.ResultsIn our study, the enrolled subjects underwent both contrast-enhanced spectral mammography (CESM) and conventional full-field digital mammography (FFDM). CESM was shown to be better than FFDM in terms of sensitivity, positive predictive value, negative predictive value, and accuracy, measuring 100%, 77.8%, 100%, and 84%, compared to 56%, 75%, 46%, and 60%, respectively, yet both modalities showed low specificity, measuring 63.6% and 66.6% for CESM and FFDM, respectively.The added value of CESM was assessed in terms of ability to detect and correctly characterize the lesions in correlation to histopathological results where CESM could detect 88% of the lesions included in our study and correctly characterized 84% of the lesions; on the other side, FFDM detected only 20% of the lesions and correctly characterized 60% of the lesions. CESM changed the treatment plan to a more extensive surgery +/− neoadjuvant chemotherapy in 57% out of fourteen cases diagnosed with breast cancer emphasizing the role of CESM in assessing the extent of the disease, multicentricity, and multifocality and consequently tailoring the most appropriate treatment plan suitable for each patient.ConclusionContrast-enhanced spectral mammography is superior to full-field digital mammography in patients with dense breasts with a significant supplementary value in detection, characterization of lesions, and tailoring the appropriate treatment plan.

Highlights

  • Breast cancer is the most common malignancy in females around the world representing 25.1% of all cancers

  • We aim to evaluate the supplementary value of contrast-enhanced spectral mammography in the assessment of symptomatic patients with dense breasts

  • As regards the Breast Imaging Reporting and Data system (BIRADS) given to the detected lesions by full-field digital mammography (FFDM) and targeted ultrasound (US), seven patients were categorized as BIRADS 3 (28%), nine patients as BIRADS 4 (36%), one patient as BIRADS 5 (4%), and eight patients as BIRADS 6 (32%)

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Summary

Introduction

Breast cancer is the most common malignancy in females around the world representing 25.1% of all cancers. Detection of breast cancer by conventional mammography tends to reduce mortality; it has a low sensitivity and specificity in young females with dense breasts owing to reduced contrast between a possible tumor and the surrounding breast tissue with superimposition of the glandular tissue obscuring underlying lesions. Conventional mammography is proven to reduce mortality by early detection of breast cancer; in patients with dense breasts, its sensitivity and specificity are significantly decreased due to superimposition of the glandular tissue possibly obscuring underlying tumors [2]. MRI is considered the best imaging investigation for the detection of breast cancer and the assessment of the disease extent in preoperative planning, yet due to the high costs and limited availability, MRI is only performed in a very limited number of cases [2]

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