Scientific Reports (May 2021)

Kinetic information from dynamic contrast-enhanced MRI enables prediction of residual cancer burden and prognosis in triple-negative breast cancer: a retrospective study

  • Ayane Yamaguchi,
  • Maya Honda,
  • Hiroshi Ishiguro,
  • Masako Kataoka,
  • Tatsuki R. Kataoka,
  • Hanako Shimizu,
  • Masae Torii,
  • Yukiko Mori,
  • Nobuko Kawaguchi-Sakita,
  • Kentaro Ueno,
  • Masahiro Kawashima,
  • Masahiro Takada,
  • Eiji Suzuki,
  • Yuji Nakamoto,
  • Kosuke Kawaguchi,
  • Masakazu Toi

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-021-89380-4
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 11, no. 1
pp. 1 – 11

Abstract

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Abstract This study aimed to evaluate the predictions of dynamic contrast-enhanced magnetic resonance imaging (DCE-MRI) for prognosis of triple-negative breast cancer (TNBC), especially with residual disease (RD) after preoperative chemotherapy. This retrospective analysis included 74 TNBC patients who received preoperative chemotherapy. DCE-MRI findings from three timepoints were examined: at diagnosis (MRIpre), at midpoint (MRImid) and after chemotherapy (MRIpost). These findings included cancer lesion size, washout index (WI) as a kinetic parameter using the difference in signal intensity between early and delayed phases, and time-signal intensity curve types. Distant disease-free survival was analysed using the log-rank test to compare RD group with and without a fast-washout curve. The diagnostic performance of DCE-MRI findings, including positive predictive value (PPV) for pathological responses, was also calculated. RD without fast washout curve was a significantly better prognostic factor, both at MRImid and MRIpost (hazard ratio = 0.092, 0.098, p < 0.05). PPV for pathological complete remission at MRImid was 76.7% by the cut-off point at negative WI value or lesion size = 0, and 66.7% at lesion size = 0. WI and curve types derived from DCE-MRI at the midpoint of preoperative chemotherapy can help not only assess tumour response but also predict prognosis.