AI Article Synopsis

  • Conventional mammography struggles to differentiate between different types of x-rays, necessitating breast compression to improve image clarity and separate overlapping structures.
  • The study evaluates the efficacy of diffraction-enhanced imaging (DEI) at varying levels of breast compression, using 11 tissue specimens and assessing lesion visibility as scored by five radiologists.
  • Results indicate that while fully compressed DEI images showed no significant difference in visibility compared to images with a 25% reduction in compression, there was a notable difference when comparing fully compressed images with those having a 50% reduction, particularly in scoring benign lesions, suggesting potential benefits in patient comfort and imaging accuracy.

Article Abstract

Rationale And Objectives: Conventional mammography can not distinguish between transmitted, scattered, or refracted x-rays, thus requiring breast compression to decrease tissue depth and separate overlapping structures. Diffraction-enhanced imaging (DEI) uses monochromatic x-rays and perfect crystal diffraction to generate images with contrast based on absorption, refraction, or scatter. Because DEI possesses inherently superior contrast mechanisms, the current study assesses the effect of breast compression on lesion characteristic visibility with DEI imaging of breast specimens.

Materials And Methods: Eleven breast tissue specimens, containing a total of 21 regions of interest, were imaged by DEI uncompressed, half-compressed, or fully compressed. A fully compressed DEI image was displayed on a soft-copy mammography review workstation, next to a DEI image acquired with reduced compression, maintaining all other imaging parameters. Five breast imaging radiologists scored image quality metrics considering known lesion pathology, ranking their findings on a 7-point Likert scale.

Results: When fully compressed DEI images were compared to those acquired with approximately a 25% difference in tissue thickness, there was no difference in scoring of lesion feature visibility. For fully compressed DEI images compared to those acquired with approximately a 50% difference in tissue thickness, across the five readers, there was a difference in scoring of lesion feature visibility. The scores for this difference in tissue thickness were significantly different at one rocking curve position and for benign lesion characterizations. These results should be verified in a larger study because when evaluating the radiologist scores overall, we detected a significant difference between the scores reported by the five radiologists.

Conclusions: Reducing the need for breast compression might increase patient comfort during mammography. Our results suggest that DEI may allow a reduction in compression without substantially compromising clinical image quality.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.acra.2009.10.020DOI Listing

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