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heblaj01 06-07-2006 08:20 AM

CAD Detects Breast Cancers That Are Most Challenging to Detect
 
http://www.arrs.org/scriptcontent/pr...5/r050301b.cfm



CAD Detects Breast Cancers That Are Most Challenging to Detect

A computer-aided detection system (CAD) can effectively detect breast cancers a radiologist is more apt to initially miss, a new study shows.

Small lesions are very challenging for the radiologist to detect, said Rachel F. Brem, MD, director of breast imaging at George Washington University in Washington, DC, and lead author of the study. The study of 201 women found that CAD was "highly effective in detecting even the smallest lesions, with a sensitivity of 92% for lesions of 5 mm or less," said Dr. Brem. CAD was most effective in detecting cancers measuring 11-15 mm (94%) and least effective in detecting cancers measuring 16-20 mm (80%), Dr. Brem said. Lesion size is important; "cancers smaller than or equal to 1 cm have a better prognosis than cancers greater than 1 cm," she said.

Subtle masses are also difficult to detect, Dr. Brem said. The study found that CAD had a sensitivity of 83% for the smallest masses (those measuring 1-5 mm). It was most sensitive for masses 11-15 mm (91%) and least sensitive for larger masses measuring greater than 20 mm (75%).

CAD systems assist the radiologist by "processing the breast films, using algorithms to detect suspicious areas and highlighting those areas," said Dr. Brem. This study shows that CAD can help in the most difficult-to-detect cases. CAD prompts the radiologist to re-examine the films, and the radiologist decides whether "true areas of concern are present at the highlighted locations before making the final diagnosis," she said.

The study also looked at the false-positive mark rate, i.e. the number of areas CAD highlighted that were not cancers. "A large number of false-positive marks can significantly hinder the usefulness of CAD by distracting the interpreting radiologist," Dr. Brem said. However, "our study showed 1.3 false-positive marks per image, a reasonable number that should not affect the radiologists interpretation, nor should it mean that more women would be called back for additional mammograms," Dr. Brem said.

CAD is "a useful tool for the improved detection of breast cancer. Based on this study, CAD could reduce the number of missed cancers, as well as positively impact breast cancer prognosis, without increasing the patient recall rate or the physician’s workload," Dr. Brem said.

The study appears in the March 2005 issue of the American Journal of Roentgenology.

AJR Mar 2005;184:893-896


Bev 06-07-2006 08:38 PM

Hi Hebla,

Asked my surgeon about this and she said for dense breasts it was more important to use digital mammography than cad on films. I still have negative feelings about mammorams in my case. I know it works wonders for some people but if you have dense breasts, a clear reading can mean your tumor is smaller than a bowling ball. BB

heblaj01 07-02-2006 07:06 AM

More evidence CAD imaging helps detect more & smaller breast tumours
 
http://www.ajronline.org/cgi/content/abstract/187/1/20
Improved Cancer Detection Using Computer-Aided Detection with Diagnostic and Screening Mammography: Prospective Study of 104 Cancers

Judy C. Dean1 and Christina C. Ilvento1

The important result of the study is in the smaller size of the detected lesions which means earlier diagnostic & treatment with no deterioration in accuracy.


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