Title of article :
The Accuracy of MR Spectroscopy and MR Diffusion Technique in Diagnosing Female Breast Cancer
Author/Authors :
Saeed, Ikhlas Osman M. saudi arabia - Faculty of Applied Medical Sciences, Saudi Arabia , Warda, Rady Mohammed A. Mansoura University - Faculty of Medicine, Egypt , Gar-Elnabi, MEM Sudan University of Science and Technology - College of Medical Radiological Sciences, Sudan
Abstract :
OBJECTIVE. Magnetic Resonance Spectroscopy (MRS) and Diffusion Techniques (DWI) are currently being used more extensively than conventional Magnetic Resonance Imaging (MRI) in diagnosing lesions, therefore the main objective of this study was to evaluate the accuracy of MRS and DWI in characterization of female breast cancer. The data was collected from 100 patients with breast lesions in Saudi German Hospital using MRS and DWI. MRI was performed using a 1.5-T system (Magnetom symphony 1.5 Tesla, Siemens-Germany). MATERIALS AND METHODS. For Magnetic Resonance Spectroscopy a Singlevoxel MRS (SVS) was applied using a Point-resolved Spectroscopy Sequence (PRESS). All patients underwent diffusion weighted images with b values, 500, 1,000, 1,500, 2,000, and 3,000 s/mm^2. Apparent Diffusion Coefficient (ADC) values were generated automatically through soft-ware system. If a highsignal- intensity lesion was detected in high-b-value (b = 3,000 s/mm^2) images, that lesion was defined as malignant. We observed that the signal-intensity of benign lesion disappeared in the high-b-value (b = 3,000 s/mm^2) and continue in brightness in case of malignant. The ADC values of the mass was calculated from two different gradient factors (bt = 500 s/mm^2 and b^2 = 1,500 s/mm^2) for positive results. RESULTS. For the in vivo MRS studies, each spectrum was evaluated for the presence of choline based on consensus reading, the results of this study showed that the sensitivity, specificity and accuracy of MRS were 100%, 90% and 93% respectively. For DWI; lesions with ADC values ( 1.5 mm^2/s) were considered benign where as lesions with ADC values ( 1 mm^2/s) were considered malignant. Those lesions with ADC values (≥1- 1.5 mm^2/s) represents the overlap cases. This method of using ADC values for the detection of malignant lesions showed a sensitivity, specificity and accuracy of 96%, 86% and 89%) respectively. CONCLUSION. In conclusion MR spectroscopy was useful for characterizing breast lesions measuring 1.5 cm or larger and diffusion-weighted imaging was useful for characterizing small and large lesions despite of overlap in some cases.
Keywords :
Apparent diffusion coefficient (ADC) , Breast tumor , Diffusion , weighted imaging (DWI) , Magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) , Magnetic Resonance Spectroscopy (MRS) ,
Journal title :
Kasr El-Aini Medical Journal
Journal title :
Kasr El-Aini Medical Journal