4.6 Article

Measurement of breast-tissue x-ray attenuation by spectral mammography: solid lesions

Journal

PHYSICS IN MEDICINE AND BIOLOGY
Volume 61, Issue 7, Pages 2595-2612

Publisher

IOP PUBLISHING LTD
DOI: 10.1088/0031-9155/61/7/2595

Keywords

x-ray imaging; mammography; spectral imaging; photon counting; tissue; x-ray attenuation

Funding

  1. Cancer Research UK [C30682/A17321]
  2. NIHR Cambridge Biomedical Research Centre
  3. Cancer Research UK [17321] Funding Source: researchfish

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Knowledge of x-ray attenuation is essential for developing and evaluating x-ray imaging technologies. For instance, techniques to distinguish between cysts and solid tumours at mammography screening would be highly desirable to reduce recalls, but the development requires knowledge of the x-ray attenuation for cysts and tumours. We have previously measured the attenuation of cyst fluid using photon-counting spectral mammography. Data on x-ray attenuation for solid breast lesions are available in the literature, but cover a relatively wide range, likely caused by natural spread between samples, random measurement errors, and different experimental conditions. In this study, we have adapted a previously developed spectral method to measure the linear attenuation of solid breast lesions. A total of 56 malignant and 5 benign lesions were included in the study. The samples were placed in a holder that allowed for thickness measurement. Spectral (energy-resolved) images of the samples were acquired and the image signal was mapped to equivalent thicknesses of two known reference materials, which can be used to derive the x-ray attenuation as a function of energy. The spread in equivalent material thicknesses was relatively large between samples, which is likely to be caused mainly by natural variation and only to a minor extent by random measurement errors and sample inhomogeneity. No significant difference in attenuation was found between benign and malignant solid lesions. The separation between cyst-fluid and tumour attenuation was, however, significant, which suggests it may be possible to distinguish cystic from solid breast lesions, and the results lay the groundwork for a clinical trial. In addition, the study adds a relatively large sample set to the published data and may contribute to a reduction in the overall uncertainty in the literature.

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