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Assessment of repeated reference measurements to inform the validity of optical breast spectroscopy.

Authors :
Lloyd R
Walter J
Pirikahu S
Cadby G
Hickey M
Sampson DD
Karnowski K
Hackmann MJ
Saunders C
Lilge L
Stone J
Source :
The Review of scientific instruments [Rev Sci Instrum] 2022 Apr 01; Vol. 93 (4), pp. 044101.
Publication Year :
2022

Abstract

Mammographic breast density is a strong breast cancer risk factor, and its routine clinical measurement could potentially be used to identify women at higher risk of breast cancer and/or monitor primary prevention strategies. Previous reports of optical breast spectroscopy (OBS), a novel approach to measuring breast density, demonstrated that it is safe (no ionizing radiation), portable, low-cost, and does not require image interpretation but have been limited to small, single-center studies. Reference measurements taken on a phantom breast prior to and after each woman's OBS assessment are required for the calibration of the system transfer function as a part of processing participant data. To inform the validity of participant data, a detailed description of the reference measurements and a repeatability analysis of these measurements taken before and after participant assessment is presented. Reference measurements for OBS from 539 women aged 18-40 years were obtained as a part of a high-throughput epidemiological pilot study. Of these, measurements from 20 women with no useable data due to device failure (3.7%) were excluded and from another 12 women due to user error. The intra-class correlation (ICC) within complete pairs of reference data (taken before and after assessment) was high (all ICC > 0.84). The analysis presented here confirms the OBS participant data as valid for use in ongoing epidemiological research, providing further supporting evidence of OBS as a measure of breast density. A novel method of measuring breast density is needed to bridge large gaps in the knowledge of breast density in younger women and its relation to later-life breast cancer risk.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
1089-7623
Volume :
93
Issue :
4
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
The Review of scientific instruments
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
35489887
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1063/5.0072223