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

Author:

Lloyd Rachel1ORCID,Walter Jane2,Pirikahu Sarah1ORCID,Cadby Gemma1ORCID,Hickey Martha3,Sampson David D.4ORCID,Karnowski Karol5ORCID,Hackmann Michael J.56ORCID,Saunders Christobel7,Lilge Lothar28ORCID,Stone Jennifer1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Genetic Epidemiology Group, School of Population and Global Health, The University of Western Australia, 35 Stirling Highway M431, Crawley, Western Australia 6009, Australia

2. University Health Network, Toronto, Ontario M5G 2M9, Canada

3. Department of Obstetrics and Gynaecology, University of Melbourne and the Royal Women’s Hospital, Melbourne, Victoria 3052, Australia

4. Surry Biophotonics, Advanced Technology Institute and School of Biosciences and Medicine, The University of Surrey, Guildford, Surrey GU2 7XH, United Kingdom

5. Optical and Biomedical Engineering Laboratory School of Electrical, Electronic and Computer Engineering, The University of Western Australia, Crawley, Western Australia 6009, Australia

6. School of Human Sciences, The University of Western Australia, Crawley 6009, Western Australia, Australia

7. Medical School, The University of Western Australia, Crawley, Western Australia 6009, Australia

8. Medical Biophysics, University of Toronto, Toronto, Ontario M5S 1A4, Canada

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.

Funder

National Breast Cancer Foundation

Cancer Australia

Cancer Council Western Australia

War Widow’s Guild of Western Australia Scholarship

Australian Government Research Training Program Scholarship

Publisher

AIP Publishing

Subject

Instrumentation

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