European Journal of Radiology Open (Jan 2016)

The value of “constant sharpness” as a diagnostic sign in MR-Mammography

  • Clemens G. Kaiser, M.D.,
  • Pascal Baltzer,
  • Anna K. Kaiser,
  • Julia Krammer,
  • Michael Uder,
  • Werner A. Kaiser,
  • Matthias Dietzel

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 3
pp. 236 – 238

Abstract

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Purpose: To examine “constant lesion sharpness” as a morphological diagnostic sign in the differential diagnosis between benign and malignant lesions. Material and methods: This prospective study had institutional review board approval and was HIPAA compliant. In total 1014 consecutive patients were examined (mean age 55 years ± 13 years) and evaluated in our University hospital towards the morphological shape of the lesion borders. The “Constant sharpness Sign” was defined as a lesion remaining continuously sharp for the duration of the dynamic scan. Inclusion criteria were unclear findings (e.g. BIRADS III/IV), Preoperative staging (BRIDAS IV/V), and referred patients from local clinic of gynecology. Exclusion criteria were MRM-examination ≤1 year before, status after surgery and/or biopsy, chemotherapy and/or radiation therapy. Reference Standard was histological verification. Images were diagnosed by two experienced radiologists in consensus, blinded to the standard of reference. Results: 1014 patients with 1084 lesions (436 benign, 648 malignant lesions) were included into the study.41.5% of benign lesions and 6.8% (181/436) of malignant lesions displayed a constant sharpness as an accompanying morphological sign (P < 0.001). This resulted in a sensitivity of 41.5%, specificity of 93.2%, a positive likelihood ratio of 6.1%, a negative likelihood ratio of 0.63 and an odd’s ratio of 9,7%. Summary and conclusion: The constant sharpness sign seems to be an accurate predictor of benign breast lesions, which may help to increase the accuracy of MRM as a morphological sign. Keywords: Constant sharpness, Morphology, MR-Mammography, Breast-MR