Patients
undergoing conventional mammography paired with tomosynthesis had significantly
lower screening recall rates than those receiving mammography alone, according
to a study published in the December issue of Radiology.
The impact on recall rates was
particularly strong for those younger than 50 and those with dense breasts,
reflecting tomosynthesis’ ability to reduce false-positives in that patient
population.
“Recent work has evaluated the
performance of tomosynthesis in a variety of observer performance studies,
which collectively have established that the combination of digital breast
tomosynthesis with conventional digital mammography can decrease screening mammography
recall rates without having a negative effect on sensitivity in the detection
of malignancy,” wrote Brian M. Haas, MD, of Yale University School of Medicine
in New Haven, Conn., and colleagues.
Haas and colleagues created a study to
evaluate the performance of breast tomosynthesis in clinical practice by
identifying which patients experienced the greatest reduction in screening
mammography recall rates and to assess the cancer detection rate.
Participants were selected from patients
presenting for screening mammography in a one year period between October 2011
and September 2012 at four clinical sites. These sites all used digital
mammography and included breast imaging clinics in an academic tertiary care
hospital, two outpatient radiology centers, and a mobile van-based mammography
unit. Tomosynthesis was the preferred method of screening when available, and
was performed in combination with mammography when feasible.
Eight breast imaging radiologists
interpreted the exams. Recall rates were calculated for the two groups and
stratified by breast density and age. During the study, 13,158 patients
underwent screening mammography, 6,100 underwent tomosynthesis plus
mammography, and 7,058 underwent digital mammography alone.
The overall recall rates for patients in
the tomosynthesis group were 8.4 percent and 12 percent for the conventional
imaging group. When the recall rates were stratified according to breast
density, results demonstrated reduced recall rates for the combination compared
with mammography alone for all breast density groups. Significant differences
were found for scattered fibroglandular breast density, heterogeneously dense
breasts, and extremely dense breasts.
When stratified according to patient age,
reduced recall rates were evident with tomosynthesis plus mammography for all
age groups. Significant differences were found in patients younger than 40,
patients 40 to 40 years old, and patients 60 to 69 years old.
Both younger age and greater breast
density were significantly associated with higher risk of recall.
There was a 9.5 percent increase in the
cancer detection rate with tomosynthesis; 2,018 women would need to be screened
with tomosynthesis to detect one additional cancer beyond that detected by
mammography individually.
“When adopted, tomosynthesis promises to
alter the mammography workflow by decreasing screening rates and to
subsequently improve the mammography experience for many women,” wrote Haas and
colleagues.
Steere, Anna. "Two are better than one: Adding tomosynthesis decreases recall rates." HealthImaging. 24 November 2013.
Web. 3 December 2013. <http://www.healthimaging.com/topics/womens-health>.
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