Abstract

The goal of this research was to correlate dynamic magnetic resonance (MR) mammographic contrast enhancement and microvessel densities in breast masses. Forty-six female patients with breast masses detected by mammography and/or ultrasonography were included in the study. MR contrast enhancements of the lesions were investigated dynamically using axial three-dimensional fast low-angle shot sequences. After excisional biopsy or mastectomy, immunohistochemical staining with factor VIII-RA was performed, followed by microvessel density measurements. Contrast enhancement patterns in dynamic MR mammography were compared with microvessel density measurements using Student's t-test, Pearson's moment correlation coefficients, and one-way analysis of variance (ANOVA). Malignant lesions exhibited three different enhancement patterns: 1) a peak enhancement within 120 seconds (early phase), followed by a decrease in the delayed phase (25 cases); 2) an increase in the early phase, followed by a plateau in the delayed phase (9 cases); and 3) an increase throughout the examination without any peak (5 cases). In benign lesions, signal intensity did not exhibited a peak in five cases, whereas in two cases enhancement was increased in the early phase and made a plateau in the delayed phase. A significant correlation was found between microvessel density and the percentage of maximal signal increase following paramagnetic contrast administration (r=0.322, p<0.05). Dynamic enhancement patterns and rates of maximal signal increase predict microvessel density in breast malignancies and may possibly be used as prognostic indicators.

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