Magnetic resonance imaging
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Multicenter Study Comparative Study
Magnetic resonance imaging contrast-enhanced relaxometry of breast tumors: an MRI multicenter investigation concerning 100 patients.
Dynamic contrast-enhanced magnetic resonance imaging (DCE-MRI) using extracellular contrast agents has proved to be useful for the characterization of breast tumors. DCE-MRI has demonstrated a high sensitivity (around 95%) but a rather poor and controversial specificity, varying, according to the different studies, from 45% to 90%. In order to increase (a) the specificity and (b) the robustness of this quantitative approach in multicenter evaluation (five MRI units), a quantitative approach called dynamic relaxometry has been developed. ⋯ Higher K(trans) values were observed in infiltrative ductal carcinomas than in infiltrative lobular carcinomas, in agreement with data published by other groups. Specificity of DCE-MRI has been increased up to 85%, with a sensitivity of 95% with K(trans)/v(e) and enhancement index I (ratio of initial slope by maximum relaxation rate enhancement). A multiparametric data analysis of the calculated parameters opens the way to include quantitative image-based information in new nosologic approaches to breast tumors.