Samei Ehsan, Saunders Robert S, Baker Jay A, Delong David M
Duke Advanced Imaging Laboratories, Department of Radiology, Duke University Medical Center, 2424 Erwin Rd, Suite 302, Durham, NC 27705, USA.
Radiology. 2007 May;243(2):396-404. doi: 10.1148/radiol.2432061065. Epub 2007 Mar 13.
To experimentally determine the relationship between radiation dose and observer accuracy in the detection and discrimination of simulated lesions for digital mammography.
This HIPAA-compliant study received institutional review board approval; the informed consent requirement was waived. Three hundred normal craniocaudal images were selected from an existing database of digital mammograms. Simulated mammographic lesions that mimicked benign and malignant masses and clusters of microcalcifications (3.3-7.4 cm in diameter) were then superimposed on images. Images were rendered without and with added radiographic noise to simulate effects of reducing the radiation dose to one half and one quarter of the clinical dose. Images were read by five experienced breast imaging radiologists. Results were analyzed to determine effects of reduced dose on overall interpretation accuracy, detection of microcalcifications and masses, discrimination between benign and malignant masses, and interpretation time.
Overall accuracy decreased from 0.83 with full dose to 0.78 and 0.62 with half and quarter doses, respectively. The decrease associated with transition from full dose to quarter dose was significant (P < .01), primarily because of an effect on detection of microcalcifications (P < .01) and discrimination of masses (P < .05). The level of dose reduction did not significantly affect detection of malignant masses (P > .5). However, reduced dose resulted in an increased mean interpretation time per image by 28% (P < .0001).
These findings suggest that dose reduction in digital mammography has a measurable but modest effect on diagnostic accuracy. The small magnitude of the effect in response to the drastic reduction of dose suggests potential for modest dose reductions in digital mammography.
通过实验确定数字乳腺摄影中模拟病变检测与鉴别时辐射剂量与观察者准确性之间的关系。
本符合健康保险流通与责任法案(HIPAA)的研究获得了机构审查委员会的批准;豁免了知情同意要求。从现有的数字乳腺摄影数据库中选取了300张正常头尾位图像。然后将模拟的乳腺摄影病变(模拟良性和恶性肿块以及微钙化簇,直径3.3 - 7.4厘米)叠加在图像上。对图像进行处理,分别呈现无额外射线噪声以及添加射线噪声后的图像,以模拟将辐射剂量降低至临床剂量的二分之一和四分之一时的效果。由五位经验丰富的乳腺影像放射科医生阅读这些图像。分析结果以确定剂量降低对总体解读准确性、微钙化和肿块的检测、良性与恶性肿块的鉴别以及解读时间的影响。
总体准确性从全剂量时的0.83分别降至半剂量时的0.78和四分之一剂量时的0.62。从全剂量到四分之一剂量的转变所导致的准确性下降具有显著性(P < 0.01),主要是因为对微钙化检测(P < 0.01)和肿块鉴别(P < 0.05)产生了影响。剂量降低水平对恶性肿块的检测没有显著影响(P > 0.5)。然而,剂量降低导致每张图像的平均解读时间增加了28%(P < 0.0001)。
这些发现表明,数字乳腺摄影中的剂量降低对诊断准确性有可测量但适度的影响。在剂量大幅降低的情况下,这种影响程度较小表明数字乳腺摄影中存在适度降低剂量的潜力。