Abstract

ObjectiveDynamic contrast-enhanced imaging of the initial (IP) and delayed phase (DP) is an integral part of any clinical breast MRI protocol. Furthermore, DWI is increasingly used as an add-on sequence by the breast-imaging community. We investigated whether DWI could be used as a substitute DP.Material and methodsOne hundred thirty-two consecutive patients with equivocal or suspicious findings at ultrasound and/or mammography received a full diagnostic breast MRI according to international recommendations. Histopathological verification served as reference standard. We evaluated three sections of the MRI protocol: IP, DP, and apparent diffusion coefficient (ADC) maps derived from DWI. Circular ROIs (regions of interest, mean size 5–10 mm2) were drawn into the enhancing parts of the lesion (first postcontrast). ROIs were transferred to the corresponding location on ADC maps and IP and DP images. Mean ROI values were investigated signal intensity (SI): (1) Initial-phase enhancement = (SI(IP) − SI(precontrast))/SI(precontrast); (2) Delayed-phase enhancement = (SI(DP) − SI(IP))/SI(IP); (3) ADC. Multiparametric combinations were computed using logistic regression analysis: (1) IP+: Initial-phase enhancement and ADC; (2) Curve: Initial-phase enhancement and delayed-phase enhancement; (3) Curve+: Curve and ADC. The diagnostic performances of these feature combinations to diagnose malignancy were compared by the area under the receiver-operating characteristics curve (AUC).ResultsOne hundred thirty-two patients (age: mean = 57.1 years, range 23–83 years) with 145 lesions were included (malignant/benign 101/44). IP+ (AUC = 0.877) outperformed Curve (AUC = 0.788, p = 0.03). Curve+ was not superior to IP+ (p = 1).ConclusionDWI could substitute DP. Because DWI is typically used as an add-on to IP and DP, our results might help to abbreviate and to simplify current practice of breast MRI.Key Points• DWI provides similar but superior diagnostic information for diagnosis of malignancy in enhancing breast lesions compared to DP.• Adding DP to DWI does not provide incremental information to distinguish benign from malignant lesions.• DWI could substitute DP. As DWI is typically used as an add-on to IP and DP, our findings might help to abbreviate and to simplify current breast MRI practice.

Highlights

  • Breast magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) provides the highest sensitivity and the highest negative predictive value in the radiological diagnosis of breast cancer [1, 2]

  • Adding delayed phase (DP) to diffusion-weighted imaging (DWI) does not provide incremental information to distinguish benign from malignant lesions

  • As DWI is typically used as an add-on to initial phase (IP) and DP, our findings might help to abbreviate and to simplify current breast MRI practice

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Summary

Introduction

Breast magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) provides the highest sensitivity and the highest negative predictive value in the radiological diagnosis of breast cancer [1, 2]. Interpretation of MRI is complex and requires special training. This is one reason for the slow adoption of this technique by its stakeholders [6]. Once a lesion is identified, it must be classified as being benign or malignant For this purpose, morphologic criteria are applied during the IP or on T2-weighted images [4, 5]. As morphologic criteria can feature overlapping characteristics in benign and malignant lesions, the dynamic enhancement within the delayed phase (DP) has to be assessed as well; hereby, the change of the signal intensity between the IP and the last scan after contrast agent injection is investigated by semiquantitative metrics. As the DP provides essential diagnostic information, it is considered an integral part of every standard breast MRI protocol [4, 5, 7]

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