Harvey J A, Fajardo L L, Innis C A
Department of Radiology, University of Arizona and University Medical Center, Tucson 85724.
AJR Am J Roentgenol. 1993 Dec;161(6):1167-72. doi: 10.2214/ajr.161.6.8249720.
We examined differences between blinded and retrospective reviews of screening mammograms obtained before a mammogram that resulted in the diagnosis of an impalpable breast carcinoma.
We reviewed 152 previous mammograms in 73 patients in whom impalpable breast carcinomas were subsequently detected on later mammograms. The earlier studies were interpreted in two ways: (1) blindly (without knowledge that carcinoma was subsequently detected) and (2) retrospectively (with the mammogram showing the carcinoma for comparison). The two interpretations were then compared with regard to the presence of carcinoma, recommendations for biopsy, parenchymal density, histologic characteristics of the tumor, lymph node status, and film quality.
When we did a blinded review of the mammograms obtained before the diagnostic mammograms, the previous study was interpreted as showing evidence of carcinoma in 30 patients (41%). For the remaining 43 patients (59%), the findings of the most-recent previous mammogram were interpreted as normal or benign by the blinded reviewers; however, the retrospective reviewers thought evidence of cancer was visible in 25 of these patients (34%). Differences between blinded and retrospective interpretations were statistically significant. In patients in whom evidence of tumor was thought to be present on retrospective review but not on blinded review, the majority of mammographic abnormalities were asymmetric densities on the most-recent previous examination. This was true whether or not the retrospective reviewers thought that the mammographic finding warranted earlier biopsy. The histologic characteristics and lymph node status among patients in whom mammograms were interpreted retrospectively as showing evidence of tumor were no different from those among patients with no evidence of tumor.
Our results show that impalpable breast carcinomas are frequently evident in retrospect on previous mammograms. However, because many are manifested only as an asymmetric density, these may not necessarily be true radiologic errors. Failure to detect a retrospectively visible abnormality on a screening mammogram is not necessarily negligent, and retrospective reviews do not reflect the everyday practice of screening mammography.
我们研究了在导致不可触及乳腺癌诊断的乳房X光检查之前所获得的筛查乳房X光片的盲法回顾与回顾性回顾之间的差异。
我们回顾了73例患者的152份先前乳房X光片,这些患者后来在乳房X光检查中被检测出不可触及的乳腺癌。早期的研究有两种解读方式:(1)盲法(不知道随后检测出癌症)和(2)回顾性(将显示癌症的乳房X光片用于比较)。然后比较两种解读在癌症的存在、活检建议、实质密度、肿瘤的组织学特征、淋巴结状态和胶片质量方面的情况。
当我们对诊断性乳房X光检查之前获得的乳房X光片进行盲法回顾时,先前的研究在30例患者(41%)中被解读为显示有癌症证据。对于其余43例患者(59%),盲法审查者将最近一次先前乳房X光检查的结果解读为正常或良性;然而,回顾性审查者认为其中25例患者(34%)有癌症迹象。盲法和回顾性解读之间的差异具有统计学意义。在回顾性审查认为有肿瘤证据而盲法审查认为没有的患者中,大多数乳房X光异常在最近一次先前检查中表现为不对称密度。无论回顾性审查者是否认为乳房X光检查结果值得早期活检,都是如此。回顾性解读乳房X光片显示有肿瘤证据的患者的组织学特征和淋巴结状态与没有肿瘤证据的患者没有差异。
我们的结果表明,不可触及的乳腺癌在回顾先前的乳房X光片时常常很明显。然而,由于许多仅表现为不对称密度,这些不一定是真正的放射学错误。在筛查乳房X光检查中未能检测到回顾性可见的异常不一定是疏忽,并且回顾性审查并不能反映筛查乳房X光检查的日常实践。