Abstract

According to a position paper of the European Commission Initiative on Breast Cancer (ECIBC), DBT is close to being introduced in European breast cancer screening programmes. Our study aimed to examine radiation dose delivered by digital breast tomosynthesis (DBT) and digital mammography (FFDM) in comparison to sole FFDM in a clinical follow-up setting and in an identical patient cohort. Retrospectively, 768 breast examinations of 96 patients were included. Patients received both DBT and FFDM between May 2015 and July 2019: (I) FFDM in cranio-caudal (CC) and DBT in mediolateral oblique (MLO) view, as well as a (II) follow-up examination with FFDM in CC and MLO view. The mean glandular dose (MGD) was determined by the mammography system according to Dance’s model. The MGD (standard deviation (SD), interquartile range (IQR)) was distributed as follows: (I) (CCFFDM+MLODBT) (a) left FFDMCC 1.40 mGy (0.36 mGy, 1.13–1.59 mGy), left DBTMLO 1.62 mGy (0.51 mGy, 1.27–1.82 mGy); (b) right FFDMCC 1.36 mGy (0.34 mGy, 1.14–1.51 mGy), right DBTMLO 1.59 mGy (0.52 mGy, 1.27–1.62 mGy). (II) (CCFFDM+MLOFFDM) (a) left FFDMCC 1.35 mGy (0.35 mGy, 1.10–1.60 mGy), left FFDMMLO 1.40 mGy (0.39 mGy, 1.12–1.59 mGy), (b) right FFDMCC 1.35 mGy (0.33 mGy, 1.12–1.48 mGy), right FFDMMLO 1.40 mGy (0.36 mGy, 1.14–1.58 mGy). MGD was significantly higher for DBT mlo views compared to FFDM (p < 0.001). Radiation dose was significantly higher for DBT in MLO views compared to FFDM. However, the MGD of DBT MLO lies below the national diagnostic reference level of 2 mGy for an FFDM view. Hence, our results support the use of either DBT or FFDM as suggested in the ECIBC’s Guidelines.

Highlights

  • Breast cancer remains one of the most common cancers in women worldwide

  • Our study aimed to examine radiation dose delivered by digital breast tomosynthesis (DBT) and digital mammography (FFDM) in comparison to sole full-field digital mammography (FFDM) in a clinical follow-up setting and in an identical patient cohort

  • In order to improve the quality of breast cancer screening, diagnosis and care across Europe, either FFDM or DBT is recommended for screening purposes [4]

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Summary

Introduction

The survival rate has improved [1], owing to better treatment strategies, and to mammography screening programmes established in the Western world for detection of early stages of breast cancer. The established reference standard for screening, conventional full-field digital mammography (FFDM), is assumed to fail in the detection of 15–30% of breast cancers [3]. According to a position paper of the European Commission Initiative on Breast Cancer (ECIBC), DBT is close to being introduced in European breast cancer screening programmes [4]. In order to improve the quality of breast cancer screening, diagnosis and care across Europe, either FFDM or DBT is recommended for screening purposes [4]. According to the commission initiative, only one technique should be used, not both [4]

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