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- Title
Quantitative classification of invasive and noninvasive breast cancer using dynamic magnetic resonance imaging of the mammary gland.
- Authors
Yoshiaki Miyazaki; Juichiro Shimizu; Yuichiro Kubo; Nobuyuki Tabata; Tomohiko Aso
- Abstract
Objectives: Breast cancers are classified as invasive or noninvasive based on histopathological findings. Although time-intensity curve (TIC) analysis using magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) can differentiate benign from malignant disease, its diagnostic ability to quantitatively distinguish between invasive and noninvasive breast cancers has not been determined. In this study, we evaluated the ability of TIC analysis of dynamic MRI data (MRI-TIC) to distinguish between invasive and noninvasive breast cancers. Material and Methods: We collected and analyzed data for 429 cases of epithelial invasive and noninvasive breast carcinomas. TIC features were extracted in washout areas suggestive of malignancy. Results: The graph determining the positive diagnosis rate for invasive and noninvasive cases revealed that the cut-off i/ni value was 21.6° (invasive: w > 21.6°, noninvasive: w = 21.6°). Tissues were classified as invasive or noninvasive using this cut-off value, and each result was compared with the histopathological diagnosis. Using this method, the accuracy of tissue classification by MRI-TIC was 88.6% (380/429), which was higher than that using ultrasound (73.4%, 315/429). Conclusion: MRI-TIC is effective for the classification of invasive vs. noninvasive breast cancer.
- Subjects
BREAST; MAGNETIC resonance imaging; MAGNETIC resonance mammography; MAMMARY glands; BREAST cancer; FEATURE extraction; COMPUTER-aided diagnosis
- Publication
Journal of Clinical Imaging Science, 2022, Vol 12, p1
- ISSN
2156-7514
- Publication type
Article
- DOI
10.25259/JCIS_56_2022