Abstract
To compare the diagnostic performance of digital breast tomosynthesis (DBT) and unenhanced magnetic resonance imaging (UMRI) in the preoperative assessment of breast cancer. We retrospectively included 59 patients with 74 pathology-proven cancers who underwent DBT and preoperative 1.5 T magnetic resonance imaging between January 2016 and February 2017. Four residents with 2-3 years of experience, blinded to pathology, independently reviewed DBT and UMRI (diffusion-weighted and unenhanced T1-weighted sequences), using the breast imaging reporting and data system (BI-RADS) and a 0-5 Likert score, respectively. We calculated per-lesion sensitivity and positive predictive value of DBT, UMRI, and combined DBT+UMRI, as well as the agreement between DBT and UMRI vs. pathology in assessing cancer size (Bland-Altman analysis). Logistic regression was performed to assess clinical features predictive of missing cancer. Of 74 lesions, 84% were invasive ductal carcinoma, 27% of which with an in situ component; 31% of cancers were ≤10 mm large. Sensitivity of UMRI (74-85%) was equal or higher than that of DBT (68-82%), with similar positive predictive value (93-97% vs. 98-100%, respectively). DBT+UMRI increased the sensitivity up to 88%. UMRI showed closer limits of agreement with pathological size than DBT. Missing cancer was independently predicted by size ≤10 mm on DBT, UMRI, and DBT+UMRI (odds ratio 18.7, 5.1, and 13.3, respectively), and by increased breast density on DBT alone (odds ratio 3.50). UMRI was equal or better than DBT in the preoperative assessment of breast cancer. Combined imaging achieved up to 88% per-lesion sensitivity, suggesting potential use in clinical practice.
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