4.7 Article Proceedings Paper

Malignant and benign breast masses on 3D US volumetric images: Effect of computer-aided diagnosis on radiologist accuracy

Journal

RADIOLOGY
Volume 242, Issue 3, Pages 716-724

Publisher

RADIOLOGICAL SOC NORTH AMERICA (RSNA)
DOI: 10.1148/radiol.2423051464

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Purpose: To retrospectively investigate the effect of using a custom-designed computer classifier on radiologists' sensitivity and specificity for discriminating malignant masses from benign masses on three-dimensional ( 3D) volumetric ultrasonographic ( US) images, with histologic analysis serving as the reference standard. Materials and Methods: Informed consent and institutional review board approval were obtained. Our data set contained 3D US volumetric images obtained in 101 women ( average age, 51 years; age range, 25-86 years) with 101 biopsy-proved breast masses ( 45 benign, 56 malignant). A computer algorithm was designed to automatically delineate mass boundaries and extract features on the basis of segmented mass shapes and margins. A computer classifier was used to merge features into a malignancy score. Five experienced radiologists participated as readers. Each radiologist read cases first without computer- aided diagnosis ( CAD) and immediately thereafter with CAD. Observers' malignancy rating data were analyzed with the receiver operating characteristic ( ROC) curve. Results: Without CAD, the five radiologists had an average area under the ROC curve ( A(z)) of 0.83 ( range, 0.81-0.87). With CAD, the average A(z) increased significantly ( P = .006) to 0.90 ( range, 0.86-0.93). When a 2% likelihood of malignancy was used as the threshold for biopsy recommendation, the average sensitivity of radiologists increased from 96% to 98% with CAD, while the average specificity for this data set decreased from 22% to 19%. If a biopsy recommendation threshold could be chosen such that sensitivity would be maintained at 96%, specificity would increase to 45% with CAD. Conclusion: Use of a computer algorithm may improve radiologists' accuracy in distinguishing malignant from benign breast masses on 3D US volumetric images.

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