Abstract

To investigate whether a correlation exists between perfusion parameters obtained from dynamic contrast-enhanced (DCE) magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) and prognostic factors or immunohistochemical subtypes of breast cancers. Quantitative parameters (K(trans) , k(ep) , and v(e) ) of 70 invasive ductal carcinomas were obtained using DCE-MRI as a postprocessing procedure. Correlations between parameters and prognostic factors, including tumor size, axillary nodal status, histologic grade, nuclear grade, expression of estrogen receptor (ER), progesterone receptor (PR), Ki-67, p53, bcl-2, and human epidermal growth factor receptor 2 (HER2) and subtypes categorized as luminal (ER or PR-positive), triple negative (ER or PR-negative, HER2-negative), and HER2 (ER and PR-negative, HER2 overexpression) were analyzed. Mean K(trans) was higher in tumors with a high histologic grade than with a low histologic grade (P = 0.007), with a high nuclear grade than with a low nuclear grade (P = 0.002), and with ER negativity than ER positivity (P = 0.056). Mean k(ep) was higher in tumors with a high histologic grade than with a low histologic grade (P = 0.005), with a high nuclear grade than with a low nuclear grade (P = 0.001), and with ER negativity than with ER positivity (P = 0.043). Mean v(e) was lower in tumors with a high histologic grade than with a low histologic grade (P = 0.038) and with ER negativity than with ER positivity (P = 0.015). Triple-negative cancers showed a higher mean k(ep) than the luminal type (P = 0.015). Breast cancers with higher K(trans) and k(ep) , or lower v(e) , had poor prognostic factors and were often of the triple-negative subtype.

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