(Press-News.org) Contact information: Steve Graff
stephen.graff@uphs.upenn.edu
215-349-5653
University of Pennsylvania School of Medicine
3D mammography increases cancer detection and reduces call-back rates, Penn study finds
CHICAGO—Compared to traditional mammography, 3D mammography—known as digital breast tomosynthesis—found 22 percent more breast cancers and led to fewer call backs in a large screening study at the Hospital of the University of Pennsylvania (HUP), researchers reported today at the annual meeting of the Radiological Society of North America (RSNA).
Conventional digital mammography is the most widely-used screening modality for breast cancer, but may yield suspicious findings that turn out not to be cancer, known as false-positives. Such findings are associated with a higher recall rate, or the rate at which women are called back for additional imaging or biopsy that may be deemed unnecessary.
Tomosynthesis, however, allows for 3-D reconstruction of the breast tissue, giving radiologists a clearer view of the overlapping slices of breast tissue. And though a relatively new technology, it has shown promise at reducing recall rates in all groups of patients, including younger women and those with dense breast tissue. This study, presented by Emily F. Conant, MD, chief of Breast Imaging the department of Radiology at the Perelman School of Medicine at the University of Pennsylvania, is one of the largest prospective trials in tomosynthesis to date.
For the study, the research team compared imaging results from 15,633 women who underwent tomosynthesis at HUP beginning in 2011 to those of 10,753 patients imaged with digital mammography the prior year. Six radiologists trained in tomosynthesis interpretation reviewed the images.
Researchers found that, compared to conventional mammography, the average recall rate using tomosynthesis decreased from 10.40 percent to 8.78 percent, and the cancer detection rate increased from 4.28 to 5.24 per 1,000 patients, a 22 percent increase.
"Our study showed that we reduced our callback rate and increased our cancer detection rate," said Dr. Conant, the study's lead author. "The degree to which these rates were affected varied by radiologist. But importantly, the ratio of callback to cancer detection rate improved significantly for our radiologists."
The overall positive predictive value—the proportion of positive screening mammograms from which cancer was diagnosed—increased from 4.1 percent to 6.0 percent with tomosynthnesis, a 46% increase.
Since October 2011, all screening mammograms at Penn Medicine now include tomosynthesis, according to Dr. Conant.
"It's the most exciting improvement to mammography that I have seen in my career, even more important than the conversion from film-screen mammography to digital mammography," she said. "The coming years will be very exciting, as we see further improvements in this innovative technology."
INFORMATION:
Co-authors are Nandita Mitra, Ph.D., Anne Marie McCarthy, Ph.D., Despina Konto, Ph.D., Susan G. Roth, M.D., Susan P. Weinstein, M.D., Marie Synnestvedt, Ph.D., Mathew Thomas, B.S., and Fei Wan, Ph.D.
3D mammography increases cancer detection and reduces call-back rates, Penn study finds
2013-12-03
ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:
Our pupils adjust as we imagine bright and dark scenes
2013-12-03
Our pupils adjust as we imagine bright and dark scenes
Conjuring up a visual image in the mind — like a sunny day or a night sky — has a corresponding effect on the size of our pupils, as if we were actually seeing the image, according ...
How does persimmon leaf flavonoid promote brain ischemic tolerance?
2013-12-02
How does persimmon leaf flavonoid promote brain ischemic tolerance?
Meng Zhao
Studies have found that brain ischemic tolerance is associated with endothelial cells, inflammatory factor and intercellular adhesion molecule, but its mechanism of action role in prevention ...
Critical brain areas for sex hormone to induce diseases
2013-12-02
Critical brain areas for sex hormone to induce diseases
The human brain is anatomically and functionally sexually dimorphic. While specific debates on this topic have occurred for decades, sexual dimorphism is generally acknowledged with respect to brain size, cognitive ...
Periodontal tissue differentiation of SC is expected to repair peripheral nerve injury
2013-12-02
Periodontal tissue differentiation of SC is expected to repair peripheral nerve injury
In peripheral axonal regeneration, Schwann cells play an integral role and Schwann cells transplantation has been shown to enhance axonal outgrowth both in vitro and in vivo. ...
IceCube particle detector in Antarctica records high-energy neutrinos
2013-12-02
IceCube particle detector in Antarctica records high-energy neutrinos
Achievement gives hope for 'extreme astronomy'
BELLINGHAM, Washington, USA -- Scientists at a massive underground particle detector in Antarctica called the IceCube South Pole ...
Mediterranean diet without breakfast the best choice for diabetics
2013-12-02
Mediterranean diet without breakfast the best choice for diabetics
For patients with diabetes, it is better to eat a single large meal than several smaller meals throughout the day. This is the result of a current dietary study at Linköping University in Sweden.
In ...
Why tumors become resistant to chemotherapy?
2013-12-02
Why tumors become resistant to chemotherapy?
IDIBELL Researchers describe epigenetic changes that explain the lack of response to drugs in colon cancer
A common observation in oncology is the phenomenon that a patient with a tumor receives ...
Crossing continents -- where we drive affects how we drive
2013-12-02
Crossing continents -- where we drive affects how we drive
According to the International Transport Forum Malaysia has one of the highest death rates from road traffic accidents in the world. While the number of road deaths continues to rise in ...
CNIO scientists create the first large catalog of interactions between drugs and proteins
2013-12-02
CNIO scientists create the first large catalog of interactions between drugs and proteins
The catalog will serve to provide a reference tool for modern molecular pharmacology and for the study of the consequences of mutations in cancer
The three-dimensional ...
Researchers identify genetic fingerprints of endangered conifers
2013-12-02
Researchers identify genetic fingerprints of endangered conifers
The world's largest Podocarpaceae collection in Bochum
In the tropics and subtropics, many evergreen conifers are endangered. Biologists at the Ruhr-Universität Bochum (RUB) have ...