Affiliation:
1. Department of Radiology, Mayo Clinic , Rochester, MN, 55905, United States
Abstract
Abstract
Objectives
To describe the feasibility and evaluate the performance of multiphasic photon-counting detector (PCD) CT for detecting breast cancer and nodal metastases with correlative dynamic breast MRI and digital mammography as the reference standard.
Methods
Adult females with biopsy-proven breast cancer undergoing staging breast MRI were prospectively recruited to undergo a multiphasic PCD-CT using a 3-phase protocol: a non-contrast ultra-high-resolution (UHR) scan and 2 intravenous contrast-enhanced scans with 50 and 180 s delay. Three breast radiologists compared CT characteristics of the index malignancy, regional lymphadenopathy, and extramammary findings to MRI.
Results
Thirteen patients underwent both an MRI and PCD-CT (mean age: 53 years, range: 36-75 years). Eleven of thirteen cases demonstrated suspicious mass or non-mass enhancement on PCD-CT when compared to MRI. All cases with metastatic lymphadenopathy (3/3 cases) demonstrated early avid enhancement similar to the index malignancy. All cases with multifocal or multicentric disease on MRI were also identified on PCD-CT (3/3 cases), including a 4 mm suspicious satellite lesion. Four of five patients with residual suspicious post-biopsy calcifications on mammograms were detected on the UHR PCD-CT scan. Owing to increased field-of-view at PCD-CT, a 5 mm thoracic vertebral metastasis was identified at PCD-CT and not with the breast MRI.
Conclusions
A 3-phase PCD-CT scan protocol shows initial promising results in characterizing breast cancer and regional lymphadenopathy similar to MRI and detects microcalcifications in 80% of cases.
Advances in knowledge
UHR and spectral capabilities of PCD-CT may allow for comprehensive characterization of breast cancer and may represent an alternative to breast MRI in select cases.
Funder
Mayo Clinic from Siemens Healthineers
Publisher
Oxford University Press (OUP)
Cited by
1 articles.
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