Title of article
Biologic significance of false-positive magnetic resonance imaging enhancement in the setting of ductal carcinoma in situ
Author/Authors
Anjali S. Kumar، نويسنده , , Daniel F. Chen، نويسنده , , Alfred Au، نويسنده , , Yunn-Yi Chen، نويسنده , , Jessica Leung، نويسنده , , Elisabeth R. Garwood، نويسنده , , Jessica Gibbs، نويسنده , , Nola Hylton، نويسنده , , Laura J. Esserman، نويسنده ,
Issue Information
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2006
Pages
5
From page
520
To page
524
Abstract
Background
Imaging patterns of benign proliferative processes often complicate the assessment of ductal carcinoma in situ (DCIS) by magnetic resonance imaging (MRI). We investigated the pathologic and biologic characteristics of false positive enhancement by breast MRI.
Methods
DCIS (n = 45), benign (n = 5), and false-positive (MRI enhancement and nonmalignant pathology) (n = 10) cases were characterized by immunohistochemistry and MRI features.
Results
For DCIS cases, images that overestimated pathologic size had heterogeneous enhancement on MR, were estrogen receptor positive, and were low grade by pathology. False-positives had higher rates of proliferation, angiogenesis, and inflammation compared with benign tissue but lower values than DCIS. Benign proliferative processes accounted for all false-positive and size overestimated cases.
Conclusions
Lesions that enhance on MRI have higher proliferation, angiogenesis, and inflammation compared with nonproliferative breast tissue. Benign proliferative processes often enhance on MRI and are difficult to differentiate from low-grade, ER+ DCIS lesions. False-positive MRI enhancement may reflect a spectrum of change within high-risk tissue.
Keywords
Breast carcinoma in situ , magnetic resonance imaging , benign breast disease
Journal title
The American Journal of Surgery
Serial Year
2006
Journal title
The American Journal of Surgery
Record number
618428
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