Abstract
Objective: To assess the diagnostic performance of breast magnetic resonance (MR) imaging as a function of gadolinium contrast dose using a retrospective reader study. Material and Methods: IRB approval was obtained prior to the start of this study and was HIPAA compliant. One-hundred and fifty MR breast examinations were included that were acquired between January 2001 and December 2006. Seventy-five patients received contrast doses (gadopentetate dimeglumine) by weight of 0.10 mmol/kg and 75 patients were imaged using fixed volumes of 20 ml. The images were assessed by two radiologists with performance calculated for each reader as well as a combined assessment. Dose response was measured by comparing performance between cases binned by dose: 0.10; and >0.13 mmol/kg. Statistical significance was calculated using a one-sided Z-test for differences in proportions with interobserver agreement calculated using Cohen's kappa statistics. Results: In the combined reader assessment with equivocal lesions classified as negative, sensitivity rose from 66% (19/29) to 92% (24/26, P < 0.01) and 95% (18/19, P < 0.01) with the specificity also increasing from 65% (32/49) to 87% (40/46, P < 0.01) and 86% (32/37, P = 0.01) corresponding to doses 0.10, >0.13 mmol/kg. With equivocal lesions classified as positive, sensitivity rose from 79% (23/29) to 92% (24/26, P < 0.10) and 95% (18/19, P < 0.10) Specificity also increased from 53% (26/49) to 72% (33/46, P < 0.05) and 70% (26/37, P = 0.05) with increasing dose. Interobserver agreement also improved at the higher doses.
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Le, T. M. T., McDonald, E. S., Isaac, G., Rosen, M. A., & Dougherty, L. (2020). Effect of contrast dose on diagnostic performance in DCE-MR breast imaging. Journal of Applied Clinical Medical Physics, 21(11), 188–194. https://doi.org/10.1002/acm2.13010
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