Abstract

The standard approach for assessing the response of breast tumors to neoadjuvant chemotherapy is to monitor gross changes in tumor size as measured by physical exam and/or conventional imaging such as mammography. However, the deformable nature of the breast and variation in the imaging procedure, make it difficult to match the shape of breasts between serials of temporal mammograms, particularly when the tumor is shrinking due to the treatment. In this paper we propose a method for assessing residual tumor size following neoadjuvant chemotherapy by analyzing changes between pre-treatment and post-treatment mammograms. Our method consists of three steps: (1) pre-treatment and post-treatment mammograms were first registered in order to circumvent the problem of patient repositioning and breast deformation. (2) Tumors at corresponding locations were segmented using region growing segmentation, (3) and based on changes in tumor sizes the response rate is quantified. The proposed method has been tested on 6 breast cancer patients undergoing neoadjuvant chemotherapy, and the experimental results demonstrate that our approach may improve the ability of mammography to evaluate breast tumor response.

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