10:30 |
362. |
A Novel
MRI Method for Breast Cancer Detection Based on Diffusion
Tensor Tracking of the Ductal Trees
Erez Eyal1,
Myra Shapiro-Feinberg2, Edna Furman Haran1,
Dov Grobgeld1, Talia Golan3, Yaakov
Itzchak3, Raphael Catane3, Moshe Papa4,
Hadassa Degani1
1Weizmann Institute
of Science, Rehovot, Israel; 2Meir Medical
Center, Kfar Saba, Israel; 3Sheba Medical Center,
Tel Hashomer, Israel; 4Sheba Medical Center, Tel Hashomer, Israel
Mammary malignancies
typically develop from the ductal epithelial cells, and
spread within the ducts. Consequently, the ductal structures
are an important area of investigation of both normal breast
development and malignant breast transformation. Our goal is
to characterize the anisotropic water diffusion properties
in the mammary ductal trees tissue using diffusion tensor
MRI and to utilize this method to detect breast cancer. The
results show that DTI based MRI reveals the diffusion
anisotropy in the mammary ducts and can track changes in the
diffusion tensor components due to cancer growth. |
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10:42 |
363. |
Gadofosveset as a Negative Contrast Agent for Detecting
Metastatic Axillary Lymph Nodes in Breast Cancer Patients on
Diffusion and T2* Weighted Images - A Proof of Principle
- not available
Mies
A. Korteweg1, Fredy Visser1,2, Daniel
L. Polders1, Taro Takahara1, Willem
P.Th.M. Mali1, Wouter B. Veldhuis1
1Radiology,
University Medical Center Utrecht, Utrecht, Netherlands;
2Philips Healthcare, Best, Netherlands
This abstract describes the
pathology-controlled, retrospective, gadofosveset-enhanced
3T MRI characterization of axillary lymph nodes in breast
cancer patients. Gadofosveset was hypothesized to accumulate
in a higher concentration in healthy than in metastatic
nodes. It was shown that the mean absolute T2* relaxation
time and the post contrast signal intensity of the lesion to
spinal cord ratio on diffusion-weighted (DWI) scans were
significantly higher in metastatic compared to non-metastatic
nodes. The preliminary results suggest that gadofosveset
increased the transverse relaxation rate in healthy nodes
causing a negative contrast effect on DWI scans, selectively
preserving the signal of metastatic lymph nodes. |
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10:54 |
364. |
Vascular
and Cellular Biomarkers from Intravoxel Incoherent Motion (IVIM)
MRI in Locally Advanced Breast Cancer Lesions
Eric Edward Sigmund1,
Linda Moy1, Gene Cho1, Sungheon Kim1,
Myra Finn1, Jens Hesselberg Jensen1,
Melanie Moccaldi1, Daniel Sodickson1,
Robert Schneider2, Silvia Formenti3
1Radiology,
New York University Langone Medical Center, New York, NY,
United States; 2Microbiology, New York University
Langone Medical Center, New York, NY, United States; 3Radiation
Oncology, New York University Langone Medical Center, New
York, NY, United States
Diffusion-weighted imaging (DWI)
is playing an increasing important role in breast cancer
lesion characterization, most commonly marking restricted
diffusion in tumor cellularity. Intravoxel incoherent
motion (IVIM) MRI is a DWI variant ideally providing markers
not only of cellularity, but also tumor vascularity and
blood velocity. In this study we acquired IVIM data in N=25
breast cancer patients at 3 T and compared these markers
with contrast-enhanced MRI and biopsy diagnosis. Robust
quantification of the IVIM parameter set clearly
differentiated lesions from the weakly perfused normal
fibroglandular tissue and may be helpful for future
quantitative lesion grading. |
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11:06 |
365. |
Identifying Breast Calcification by Using Susceptibility
Weighted Imaging: Optimizing Parameters for Detection of
Calcifications at 3T
Ali Fatemi1,
Colm Boylan2,3, Michael D. Noseworthy1,4
1Medical Physics and
Applied Radiation Sciences, McMaster University, Hamilton,
Ontario, Canada; 2Diagnostic Imaging, St.
Joseph's Healthcare, Hamilton, Ontario, Canada; 3Radiology,
McMaster University, Hamilton, Ontario, Canada; 4Electrical
and Computer Engineering, School of Biomedical Engineering,
McMaster University, Hamilton, Ontario, Canada
We have optimized corrected
phase images acquired at 3T with a dedicated breast coil to
detect breast microcalcification. Corrected phase images
demonstrating calcifications correlate well with x-ray
mammography. |
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11:18 |
366. |
High
Resolution T2 Breast Imaging Using FADE
Kristin L.
Granlund1,2, Ernesto Staroswiecki1,2,
Marcus T. Alley1, Bruce L. Daniel1,
Brian A. Hargreaves1
1Radiology, Stanford University,
Stanford, CA, United States; 2Electrical
Engineering, Stanford University, Stanford, CA, United
States
High resolution breast MRI is
useful for distinguishing benign and malignant tumors. The
FADE sequence allows us to acquire two images during a
single scan with different image contrasts, the first image
having high SNR and the second image having T2 weighting. A
second pair of images can then be acquired with different
crusher areas to evaluate the diffusivity of different
tissues. Phantom studies were performed to confirm sources
of image contrast. The technique was then evaluated in two
patients and it was found that the FADE sequence highlighted
tumors with both high T2 and restricted diffusion. |
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11:30 |
367. |
Time
Intensity Curve Analysis of Malignant Enhancing Breast
Lesions: Atypical Findings More Frequent in Smaller Lesions
Dorothee Barbara Engel1,
Winifred Dunbar2, Fred Kelcz2
1Clinical Radiology
and Nuclear Medicine, University Medical Center Mannheim,
Mannheim, Germany; 2Radiology, School of Medicine
and Public Health, Madison, WI, United States
Dynamic contrast-enhanced (DCE)
breast MRI has become the mainstay for assessing breast
problems not resolved by mammography and ultrasound. A
signal intensity vs. time curve showing rapid gadolinium
contrast uptake and delayed washout is typically associated
with malignancy, but our study of 81 malignant spanning a
wide size range showed that the “typical pattern” was only
in lesions > 1 cm. A delayed persistent pattern may be seen
in up to 20% of sub-centimeter lesions. Radiologists should
be aware of these exceptions and emphasize morphology over
contrast enhancement for small lesions. |
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11:42 |
368. |
Approaching Complete Separation of Benign and Malignant
Breast Lesions by DCE-MRI: Impact on Healthcare Costs
Wei Huang1,
Patricia A. Carney1, Luminita Alina Tudorica1,
Yiyi Chen1, Xin Li1, Elizabeth A.
Morris2, Ian J. Tagge1, Sunitha Thakur2,
Maayan Korenblit2, Jason A. Koutcher2,
Charles S. Springer1
1Oregon Health &
Science University, Portland, OR, United States; 2Memorial
Sloan Kettering Cancer Center, New York, NY, United States
Shutter-Speed Model (SSM)
analyses of breast DCE-MRI data from 98 suspicious lesions
show significantly improved diagnostic accuracy compared to
Standard Model (SM) analyses and clinical MRI protocols.
The difference in Ktrans derived from the two models, ¦¤Ktrans
[¡Ô Ktrans(SSM) ¨C Ktrans(SM)], has near perfect specificity
at 100% sensitivity. The cost effectiveness of replacing
unnecessary benign biopsies with SSM DCE-MRI is significant. |
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11:54 |
369. |
Can
Proton MR Spectroscopy Provide Useful Information for
Characterizing Estrogen Receptor Status in Breast Cancer?
Hyeon-Man Baek1,
Jeon-Hor Chen2,3, Orhan Nalcioglu2,
Min-Ying Su2
1Radiology, UT
Southwestern Medical Center, Dallas, TX, United States;
2Center for Function Onco-Imaging, University of
California-Irvine, Irvine, CA, United States; 3Radiology,
China Medical University Hospital, Taichung, Taiwan
ER-negative cancer was more
aggressive, with bigger tumor size, more prominent tumor
infiltration showing non-mass-type enhancements on magnetic
resonance imaging (MRI) features. The aim of our study was
to determine whether in vivo 1H-MRS can provide useful
information for characterizing ER status in breast cancer.
On the basis of the criterion (i.e., CRB < 100%), tCho
detection rate was higher in ER-negative group (16/20, 80%)
than in ER-positive group (15/27, 56%), but not reaching
significant level (P = 0.083). The ER-positive group had a
lower mean tCho concentration than the ER-negative group,
but no significant difference was observed (2.01 vs. 2.24
mmol/kg, P = 0.677). The reason why our finding was not
significant might be due to the heterogeneity of the breast
cancer tissue. |
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12:06 |
370. |
Predicting Long Term Survival for Breast Cancer Patients by
HR MAS Metabolic Profiling During Neoadjuvant Chemotherapy
Maria Dung Cao1,
Beathe Sitter1, Tone Frost Bathen1,
Per Eystein Lønning2,3, Steinar Lundgren1,4,
Ingrid Susanne Gribbestad1
1Department of
Circulation and Medical Imaging, Norwegian University of
Science and Technology (NTNU), Trondheim, Norway; 2Department
of Oncology, Haukeland University Hospital, Bergen, Norway;
3University of Bergen, Bergen, Norway; 4Department
of Oncology, St.Olav University Hospital, Trondheim, Norway
HR MAS MR metabolic profiling
was performed in paired samples from locally advanced breast
cancer patients obtained pre (n=19) and post (n=19)
doxorubicine treatment. PLSDA analysis of HR MAS spectra
showed classification between patients with long time
survival (≥5 years), and patients who died of cancer
recurrence within 5 years. Our results suggest distinct
metabolic profiles of these two patient groups. High tCho,
most significant GPC, levels before treatment correlated to
long time survival, while high glycine and lactate levels
were associated with poorer outcome. |
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12:18 |
371. |
MRI
Characterization of Dissected Sentinel Lymph Nodes of Breast
Cancer Patients at 7T
- not available
Mies A. Korteweg1,
Jaco J.M. Zwanenburg1, Vincent O. Boer1,
Richard van Hillegersberg2, Paul J. van Diest3,
Peter R. Luijten1, Willem P.Th.M. Mali1,
Wouter B. Veldhuis1
1Radiology,
University Medical Center Utrecht, Utrecht, Netherlands;
2Surgery, University Medical Center Utrecht,
Utrecht, Netherlands; 3Pathology, University
Medical Center Utrecht, Utrecht, Netherlands
We describe the
pathology-correlated 7T MRI characterization of dissected
sentinel lymph nodes of breast cancer patients. The mean
absolute ADC and T1, T2, T2* relaxation times were
determined. Nodal dimensions and the presence of a fatty
hilus was scored. In 20 patients 83 nodes were excised and
scanned, 17 contained metastases. Blood- and lymph vessels
and an in-transit metastasis inside a lymph vessel were
identified on MRI. While the location of intranodal
metastases could not be delineated morphologically, there
was a significant difference in T2 and T2* relaxation times
between metastatic and non-metastatic nodes. |
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