Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
4224711 | The Egyptian Journal of Radiology and Nuclear Medicine | 2012 | 13 Pages |
ObjectiveThe purpose of our study was to investigate whether adding diffusion weighted imaging to dynamic contrast-enhanced MRI could improve the diagnostic performance of breast MRI.Materials and methodsThis retrospective study included 86 women with 93 primary and postoperative breast lesions detected on DCE-MRI who underwent subsequent biopsy. The diagnostic performance was calculated for DCE-MRI alone, combined DCE-MRI and quantitative DWI, and for quantitative DWI alone.ResultsOf the 93 lesions, 42 were benign and 51 malignant (5 DCIS, 41 IDC, 2 ILC, 3 NOS). Both DCIS (mean ADC = 1.17 ± 0.12 × 10−3 mm2/s) and IDC (mean ADC, 0.98 ± 0.14) exhibited lower mean ADC values than benign lesions (ADC value = 1.72 ± 0.36). Applying an ADC cutoff value of 1.33 increased the specificity and PPV of DCE-breast MRI from 59.5% and 75% to 78.5% and 83.3%, respectively. The specificity and PPV for quantitative DW-MRI alone (73.5% and 83.3%) were close to those broken out from the combined use of DCE and quantitative DW-MRI. However, the sensitivity and NPV of DWI remains lower than that of DCE-MRI.ConclusionDWI shows potential for improving the diagnostic performance of breast MRI and may reduce the number of unnecessary biopsies.