4.7 Article

Classification of hypervascularized lesions in CE MR imaging of the breast

Journal

EUROPEAN RADIOLOGY
Volume 12, Issue 5, Pages 1087-1092

Publisher

SPRINGER-VERLAG
DOI: 10.1007/s00330-001-1213-1

Keywords

MRI of the breast; tumor detection; specificity; classification

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The purpose of this paper is to define and evaluate a classification category for contrast-enhanced (CE) MR imaging of the breast based on the BI-RADS mammographic categories of the American College of Radiology. Using five evaluation criteria for MR findings (initial signal increase, postinitial signal behavior, shape, border, and contrast material distribution within enhancing tumors) 522 patients (1031 breasts) were analyzed. Scores were given from 0 to 8 points and classified into five categories (group 1: 0 points, negative; group 11: 1-2 points, benign; group 111: 3 points, probably benign; group IV: 4-5 points, suspicious abnormality; group V: 6-8 points, highly suspicious for malignancy) to 265 focal hypervascularized breast lesions in 244 breasts (patient group A). These findings were correlated with histology or follow-up. Additionally, this classification was correlated to the contrast medium uptake within the parenchyma of the remaining 787 breasts without any focal lesion (patient group 13). Two hundred sixty-five hypervascularized lesions in 238 patients (244 breasts, patient group A) were classified into group 1: 0%; group 11: 27.3%; group 111: 22.3%; group IV: 18.6%; and group V: 31.8%. Histology revealed 115 benign and 134 malignant tumors in these groups. Sixteen benign lesions were controlled by follow-up. Sensitivity for the detection of malignancy using the presented multifactorial MRM classification was 92%, and specificity was 92%. Excluding cases of ductal carcinoma in situ specificity increased to 95%. Seven hundred eighty-seven breasts without any focal hypervascularized lesion (patient group 13) were classified into groups I or II. Follow-up (n=771) or histology (n=14) confirmed the diagnosis in 785 of these breasts. Histopathology revealed, however, malignant tumors in the remaining two cases. The classification of lesions based on a multifactorial analysis is very helpful in the interpretation of CE MRI of the breast. The evaluation of all diagnostic imaging modalities, however, is essential in determining the correct diagnosis and/or in deciding on the appropriate therapeutic procedure.

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