
Role of proton MR spectroscopy in the high field magnet (3T) in diagnosis of indeterminate breast masses (BIRDS 3 & 4)
Author(s) -
Naglaa Mohamed Abdel Razek,
Amr Osama Azab,
Omar Omar,
Hisham M. Soliman
Publication year - 2012
Publication title -
the egyptian journal of radiology and nuclear medicine /the egyptian journal of radiology and nuclear medicine
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.19
H-Index - 13
eISSN - 2090-4762
pISSN - 0378-603X
DOI - 10.1016/j.ejrnm.2012.08.003
Subject(s) - medicine , mammography , indeterminate , in vivo magnetic resonance spectroscopy , biopsy , radiology , breast tissue , nuclear medicine , spectroscopy , magnetic resonance imaging , breast cancer , mathematics , pure mathematics , physics , quantum mechanics , cancer
BackgroundSince 80% of abnormalities found in the breast are benign upon biopsy, New techniques must provide more precise evaluation of these indeterminate lesions .MR spectroscopy is one of the available new techniques on MRI, it refers to the measurement of biochemical compounds in the tissue using specialized sequences.PurposeTo evaluate the role of MR spectroscopy using the state of the art high field magnet (3Tesla) as a diagnostic method in indeterminate breast lesions (BIRADS 3 and 4 lesions) aiming at decreasing the un-necessary breast intervention.Material & methodIn this study 240 female patients classified as BIRADS 3 & 4 by sono-mammography (Sono-MX) were examined by MRI using the multiphase dynamic sequence and proton MR spectroscopy using a high field magnet (3Tesla). Single voxel technique after adequate shimming was used.ResultsEighty eight cases (35%) were malignant (based on the presence of high choline peak in the spectrum) and 152 cases (65%) were benign (no choline peak). MR-spectroscopy has increased the sensitivity & specificity of Dynamic MR-Mammography for diagnosis of probable lesion from 93.6% (88/94) and 77.9% (152/195) to 96.7% (88/91) and 95.5% (152/159), False positive results were found in 4 cases and False negative results were found in 7 cases.ConclusionMR Proton spectroscopy in the high field magnet (3T) offered additional information that increased the sensitivity and specificity of the conventional dynamic MRI in evaluating probable breast lesions and hence reduced the need for unnecessary intervention