Paper
6 July 2018 Detection of the abnormal gist in the prior mammograms even with no overt sign of breast cancer
Ziba Gandomkar, Ernest U. Ekpo, Sarah J. Lewis, Karla K. Evans, Kriscia Tapia, Phuong-Dung Trieu, Jeremy M. Wolfe, Patrick C. Brennan
Author Affiliations +
Proceedings Volume 10718, 14th International Workshop on Breast Imaging (IWBI 2018); 1071804 (2018) https://doi.org/10.1117/12.2318321
Event: The Fourteenth International Workshop on Breast Imaging, 2018, Atlanta, Georgia, United States
Abstract
Can radiologists distinguish prior mammograms with no overt signs of cancer from women who were later diagnosed with breast cancer from the prior mammograms of women reported as normal and subsequently confirmed to be cancerfree? Twenty-three radiologists and breast physicians viewed 200 craniocaudial mammograms for a half-second and rated whether the woman would be recalled on a scale of 0 (clearly normal) to 100 (clearly abnormal). The dataset included five categories of mammograms, with each category containing 40 cases. The categories were Cancer (current cancer-containing mammograms), Prior-Vis (prior mammograms with visible cancer signs), Contra (current ‘normal’ mammograms contralateral to the cancer), Prior-Invis (priors without visible cancer signs), and Normal (priors of normal cases). For each radiologist, four pairs of analyses were performed to evaluate whether the radiologists could distinguish mammograms in each category from the normal mammograms: Cancer vs Normal, Prior-Vis vs Normal, Contra vs Normal, and Prior-Invis vs Normal. The Area under Receiver Operating Characteristic curves (AUC) was calculated for each paired grouping and each radiologist. Wilcoxon Signed Rank test showed the AUC values were above-chance for all comparisons: Cancer (z=4.20, P<0.001); Prior-Vis (z=4.11, P<0.001); Contra (z=4.17, P<0.001); Prior-Invis (z=3.71, P<0.001). The results suggest that radiologists can distinguish patients who were diagnosed with cancer from individuals without breast cancer at an above-chance level based on a half-second glimpse of mammogram even before the lesion becomes apparently visible (Prior-Invis). Apparently, something about the breast parenchyma can look abnormal before the appearance of a localized lesion
© (2018) COPYRIGHT Society of Photo-Optical Instrumentation Engineers (SPIE). Downloading of the abstract is permitted for personal use only.
Ziba Gandomkar, Ernest U. Ekpo, Sarah J. Lewis, Karla K. Evans, Kriscia Tapia, Phuong-Dung Trieu, Jeremy M. Wolfe, and Patrick C. Brennan "Detection of the abnormal gist in the prior mammograms even with no overt sign of breast cancer ", Proc. SPIE 10718, 14th International Workshop on Breast Imaging (IWBI 2018), 1071804 (6 July 2018); https://doi.org/10.1117/12.2318321
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Cited by 3 scholarly publications.
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KEYWORDS
Mammography

Cancer

Breast

Breast cancer

Biopsy

Signal detection

Medical imaging

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