• Med Phys · Jul 2017

    Breast-density measurement using photon-counting spectral mammography.

    • Henrik Johansson, Miriam von Tiedemann, Klaus Erhard, Harald Heese, Huanjun Ding, Sabee Molloi, and Erik Fredenberg.
    • Philips Health Systems, Mammography Solutions, Torshamnsgatan 30A, 164 40, Kista, Sweden.
    • Med Phys. 2017 Jul 1; 44 (7): 3579-3593.

    PurposeTo evaluate a method for measuring breast density using photon-counting spectral mammography. Breast density is an indicator of breast cancer risk and diagnostic accuracy in mammography, and can be used as input to personalized screening, treatment monitoring and dose estimation.MethodsThe measurement method employs the spectral difference in x-ray attenuation between adipose and fibro-glandular tissue, and does not rely on any a priori information. The method was evaluated using phantom measurements on tissue-equivalent material (slabs and breast-shaped phantoms) and using clinical data from a screening population (n=1329). A state-of-the-art nonspectral method for breast-density assessment was used for benchmarking.ResultsThe precision of the spectral method was estimated to be 1.5-1.8 percentage points (pp) breast density. Expected correlations were observed in the screening population for thickness versus breast density, dense volume, breast volume, and compression height. Densities ranged between 4.5% and 99.6%, and exhibited a skewed distribution with a mode of 12.5%, a median of 18.3%, and a mean of 23.7%. The precision of the nonspectral method was estimated to be 2.7-2.8 pp. The major uncertainty of the nonspectral method originated from the thickness estimate, and in particular thin/dense breasts posed problems compared to the spectral method.ConclusionsThe spectral method yielded reasonable results in a screening population with a precision approximately two times that of the nonspectral method, which may improve or enable applications of breast-density measurement on an individual basis such as treatment monitoring and personalized screening.© 2017 American Association of Physicists in Medicine.

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