Abstract

BackgroundThe presence of lymphovascular invasion (LVI) in cases with breast cancer is considered a bad prognostic sign. The purpose of this study is to compare the efficacy of dynamic contrast-enhanced magnetic resonance imaging (DCE-MRI) versus unenhanced magnetic resonance imaging (UE-MRI + DBT) in predicting LVI in women with pathologically confirmed breast cancer.MethodsThis prospective self-controlled study enrolled a total of 70 cases of pathologically proven breast cancer. All the patients underwent tomosynthesis, non-contrast, and post-contrast MRI. Depending on the broken halo sign seen in tomosynthesis, peritumoral edema, dark rim diffusion at diffusion-weighted imaging (DWI), and apparent diffusion coefficient (ADC) values evaluated in MRI.ResultsThe accuracy of LVI detection by tomosynthesis was 58%; unenhanced and enhanced MRI had the same results at 60%. The accuracy of detecting LVI was raised to 64% by combining the tomosynthesis results with unenhanced MRI.ConclusionsTomosynthesis parameters are promising tools in detecting LVI in breast cancer with better diagnostic accuracy in combination with unenhanced MRI.

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