Abstract

The purpose of this study was to compare the accuracy and effectiveness of automated breast volume scanning (ABVS) and hand-held ultrasound (HHUS) in the detection of breast cancer in a large population group with a long-term follow-up, and to investigate whether different ultrasound systems may influence the estimation of cancer detection. Institutional review board approval was obtained for this retrospective study, and informed consent was waived. From September 2010 to August 2011, a total of 1,866 ABVS and 3,700 HHUS participants, who underwent these procedures at our institute, were included in this study. Cancers occurring during the study and subsequent follow-up were evaluated. The reference standard was a combination of histology and follow-up imaging (≥12 months). The recall rate, cancer detection yield, diagnostic accuracy, sensitivity, specificity, and positive (PPV) and negative (NPV) predictive values were calculated with exact 95% confidence intervals. The recall rate was 2.57 per 1,000 (48/1,866) for ABVS and 3.57 per 1,000 (132/3,700) for HHUS, with ? significant difference (p=0.048). The cancer detection yield was 3.8 per 1,000 for ABVS and 2.7 per 1,000 for HHUS. The diagnostic accuracy was 97.7% for ABVS and 96.5% for HHUS with statistical significance (p=0.018). The specificity of ABVS and HHUS were 97.8%, 96.7%, respectively (p=0.022). ABVS shows a comparable diagnostic performance to HHUS. ABVS is an effective supplemental tool for mammography in breast cancer detection in a large population.

Highlights

  • Breast cancer screening with mammography is a standard imaging method and has been shown to decrease mortality

  • The purpose of this study was to compare the accuracy and effectiveness of automated breast volume scanning (ABVS) and hand-held ultrasound (HHUS) in the detection of breast cancer in a large population group with a long-term follow-up, and to investigate whether different ultrasound systems may influence the estimation of cancer detection

  • The sensitivity is lower among women younger than 50 years and extremely dense breast tissue carries a higher risk for breast cancer: up to an 18-fold increase in interval cancer compared with fatty breast tissue (Boyd et al, 2007)

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Summary

Introduction

Breast cancer screening with mammography is a standard imaging method and has been shown to decrease mortality. Mammography has well recognized limitations, such as reduced sensitivity of both screening and diagnostic mammography in dense breast tissue by as much as 50% compared with fatty breast tissue (Kolb et al, 2002; Berg et al, 2004; Boyd et al, 2007). Supplemental screening using breast US increased the detection of early, node-negative, invasive breast cancers not normally seen on mammography in women with dense parenchyma (Benson et al, 2004; Berg et al, 2004; Wang et al, 2013). The purpose of this study was to compare the accuracy and effectiveness of automated breast volume scanning (ABVS) and hand-held ultrasound (HHUS) in the detection of breast cancer in a large population group with a long-term follow-up, and to investigate whether different ultrasound systems may influence the estimation of cancer detection. ABVS is an effective supplemental tool for mammography in breast cancer detection in a large population

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