Purpose: To examine one potential clinical application of dedicated devices for positron emission mammography.Background: Dedicated devices for breast imaging with FDG have technical specifications that appear well-suited for detecting small breast cancers, including registration with x-rays, high count sensitivity, and spatial resolution in the 2-3 mm range.Methods: In IRB-approved clinical trials, patients who were scheduled for biopsy for suspicious findings on x-ray mammograms were injected with 10-20 mCi FDG intravenously one to two hours prior to x-ray guided core biopsy or lumpectomy. Positron emission mammograms using a dedicated device were performed just before biopsy, and results compared to final histopathology.Results: Three patients whose cancers were missed on initial x-ray mammograms or whose mammograms contained subtle abnormalities that were not strongly suspicious for cancer, were shown to have very suspicious hot spots on positron emission mammograms. These patients were later confirmed to have cancer.Discussion: The role for dedicated devices for positron emission mammography is evolving. Finding cancers that are either mammographically occult or have low indices of suspicion is a potential application for this technique. Further clinical and technical work will be needed to better define the strengths and weaknesses of the device in this application.

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http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/s1095-0397(00)00061-3DOI Listing

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