4.6 Article

Accurate estimation of compressed breast thickness in mammography

Journal

MEDICAL PHYSICS
Volume 36, Issue 2, Pages 577-586

Publisher

AMER ASSOC PHYSICISTS MEDICINE AMER INST PHYSICS
DOI: 10.1118/1.3065068

Keywords

biological organs; biomechanics; biomedical measurement; biomedical optical imaging; density measurement; mammography; phantoms; photogrammetry; stereo image processing; thickness measurement; volume measurement

Funding

  1. Terry Fox Foundation through the National Cancer Institute of Canada

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The determination of volumetric breast density (VBD) from mammograms requires an accurate knowledge of the thickness of the compressed breast. Previously, the authors described a technique for measuring local thicknesses using optical stereoscopic photogrammetry [A. H. Tyson, G. E. Mawdsley, and M. J. Yaffe, Measurement of compressed breast thickness by optical stereoscopic photogrammetry, Med. Phys. 36(2), 569-576 (2009)]. Here, the authors describe the use of this tool to guide the development of a simpler, more practical field technique for the estimation of breast thickness and test its accuracy. Phantoms were constructed having similar shapes and compression characteristics to breasts of different sizes. These phantoms were compressed at different forces on several types of mammography units and their thickness under compression was measured using optical stereoscopic photogrammetry at many points of contact with the compression plate. A prediction equation was developed that uses the readout of compressed thickness and compression force provided by the mammography system to estimate local breast thickness. Using this approach, systems can be calibrated to an accuracy of better than 5 mm in thickness using a simple test object compared to an error of up to 15 mm associated with using only the thickness readout of the mammography machine. On the systems tested, the estimated value of VBD obtained using this method is significantly reduced from that determined using the constant thickness reported by the mammography machine.

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