1. Can DWI provide additional value to Kaiser score in evaluation of breast lesions
- Author
-
Yongyu An, Guoqun Mao, Weiqun Ao, Fan Mao, Hongxia Zhang, Yougen Cheng, and Guangzhao Yang
- Subjects
Diagnosis, Differential ,Diffusion Magnetic Resonance Imaging ,Contrast Media ,Humans ,Breast Neoplasms ,Female ,Radiology, Nuclear Medicine and imaging ,Breast ,General Medicine ,Magnetic Resonance Imaging ,Sensitivity and Specificity ,Retrospective Studies - Abstract
To explore added value of diffusion-weighted imaging (DWI) as an adjunct to Kaiser score (KS) for differentiation of benign from malignant lesions on breast magnetic resonance imaging (MRI).Two hundred forty-six patients with 273 lesions (155 malignancies) were included in this retrospective study from January 2015 to December 2019. All lesions were proved by pathology. Two radiologists blind to pathological results evaluated lesions according to KS. Lesions with score4 were considered malignant. Four thresholds of ADC values -1.3 × 10The AUC of KS was significantly higher than that of DWI alone (0.941 vs 0.901, p = 0.04). The sensitivity of KS (96.8%) and DWI (97.4 - 99.4%) was comparable (p0.05) while the specificity of KS (83.9%) was significantly higher than that of DWI (19.5-56.8%) (p0.05). Adding DWI as an adjunct to KS resulted in a 0-2.5% increase of specificity and a 0.1-1.3% decrease of sensitivity; however, the difference did not reach statistical significance (p0.05).KS showed higher diagnostic performance than DWI alone for discrimination of breast benign and malignant lesions. DWI showed no additional value to KS for characterizing breast lesions.• KS showed higher diagnostic performance than DWI alone for differentiation of benign from breast malignant lesions. • DWI alone showed a high sensitivity but a low specificity for characterizing breast lesions. • Diagnostic performance did not improve using DWI as an adjunct to KS.
- Published
- 2022