Radiomics in photon-counting dedicated breast CT: potential of texture analysis for breast density classification

Author:

Landsmann AnnaORCID,Ruppert Carlotta,Wieler Jann,Hejduk Patryk,Ciritsis Alexander,Borkowski Karol,Wurnig Moritz C.,Rossi Cristina,Boss Andreas

Abstract

Abstract Background We investigated whether features derived from texture analysis (TA) can distinguish breast density (BD) in spiral photon-counting breast computed tomography (PC-BCT). Methods In this retrospective single-centre study, we analysed 10,000 images from 400 PC-BCT examinations of 200 patients. Images were categorised into four-level density scale (ad) using Breast Imaging Reporting and Data System (BI-RADS)-like criteria. After manual definition of representative regions of interest, 19 texture features (TFs) were calculated to analyse the voxel grey-level distribution in the included image area. ANOVA, cluster analysis, and multinomial logistic regression statistics were used. A human readout then was performed on a subset of 60 images to evaluate the reliability of the proposed feature set. Results Of the 19 TFs, 4 first-order features and 7 second-order features showed significant correlation with BD and were selected for further analysis. Multinomial logistic regression revealed an overall accuracy of 80% for BD assessment. The majority of TFs systematically increased or decreased with BD. Skewness (rho -0.81), as a first-order feature, and grey-level nonuniformity (GLN, -0.59), as a second-order feature, showed the strongest correlation with BD, independently of other TFs. Mean skewness and GLN decreased linearly from density a to d. Run-length nonuniformity (RLN), as a second-order feature, showed moderate correlation with BD, but resulted in redundant being correlated with GLN. All other TFs showed only weak correlation with BD (range -0.49 to 0.49, p < 0.001) and were neglected. Conclusion TA of PC-BCT images might be a useful approach to assess BD and may serve as an observer-independent tool.

Funder

Schweizerischer Nationalfonds zur Förderung der Wissenschaftlichen Forschung

Universität Zürich

Publisher

Springer Science and Business Media LLC

Subject

Radiology, Nuclear Medicine and imaging

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