CHICAGO - Breast-Specific Gamma Imaging (BSGI) has greater sensitivity and comparable specificity compared to mammography and ultrasound, according to a new study presented Tuesday at RSNA. A second study presented Tuesday showed that, unlike mammography, BSGI is as effective in detecting breast cancer in women with dense and non-dense breasts.
CHICAGO - Breast-Specific Gamma Imaging (BSGI) has greater sensitivity and comparable specificity compared to mammography and ultrasound, according to a new study presented Tuesday at RSNA. A second study presented Tuesday showed that, unlike mammography, BSGI is as effective in detecting breast cancer in women with dense and non-dense breasts.
BSGI, also known as Molecular Breast Imaging (MBI), was also shown to be a valuable adjunctive procedure when mammography and ultrasound don’t provide a confident cancer diagnosis, according to the first study, which included four institutions. The researchers included radiologists Jean M. Weigert of Bradley Memorial Hospital in New Britain, Conn.; Margaret L. Bertrand of the Solis Bertrand Breast Center in Greensboro, N.C.; Leora Lanzkowsky of Nevada Imaging in Las Vegas, Nev.; and Lillian H. Stern of Methodist Hospital in Philadelphia. BSGI was conducted with a Dilon 6800 high-resolution gamma camera.
"This study helped show the power of BSGI, especially in patients with indeterminate results on mammography or ultrasound," said Weigert, first author on the study. "Many suspicious areas can show up on an ultrasound. BSGI helps us focus on the areas of true positive and determine where to biopsy."
In the second study, researchers noted that BSGI is not affected by breast density, where mammography in women with dense breasts is limited and necessitates additional imaging. Mammography misses 35 percent to 45 percent of breast cancers in these women, said Rachel Brem, MD, first author of this study from The George Washington University Medical Center, Washington, D.C. "As we increasingly appreciate the importance breast density has on risk for developing breast cancer and the limitations of mammography, it is crucial that we find technologies that allow for the detection of breast cancer, regardless of risk," she said.
Researchers from The George Washington University Medical Center conducted a retrospective review of their BSGI database from January 2004 to August 2009. They evaluated 344 women with breast cancer, of whom breast density was available. The overall sensitivity of BSGI for breast cancer detection was 95.6 percent; 137 of 142 (96.5 percent) women with non-dense breasts, and 192 of 202 (95.1 percent) women with dense breasts had positive BSGI exams.
"The sensitivity of BSGI has been reported to be equal to MRI, but BSGI is performed with the patient comfortably seated. BSGI requires a fraction of the physician time for image interpretation, has a lower false positive rate, and can be performed in women who cannot undergo MRI, such as those with implantable devices and renal insufficiency. The integration of BSGI in clinical practice is a robust tool for the improved detection of the smallest cancers: those which are detected early, and are most curable," said Brem.
Can MRI-Based AI Bolster Biopsy Decision-Making in PI-RADS 3 Cases?
December 9th 2024In patients with PI-RADS 3 lesion assessments, the combination of AI and prostate-specific antigen density (PSAD) level achieved a 78 percent sensitivity and 93 percent negative predictive value for clinically significant prostate cancer (csPCa), according to research presented at the Radiological Society of North American (RSNA) conference.
The Reading Room: Artificial Intelligence: What RSNA 2020 Offered, and What 2021 Could Bring
December 5th 2020Nina Kottler, M.D., chief medical officer of AI at Radiology Partners, discusses, during RSNA 2020, what new developments the annual meeting provided about these technologies, sessions to access, and what to expect in the coming year.
RSNA 2020: Addressing Healthcare Disparities and Access to Care
December 4th 2020Rich Heller, M.D., with Radiology Partners, and Lucy Spalluto, M.D., with Vanderbilt University School of Medicine, discuss the highlights of their RSNA 2020 session on health disparities, focusing on the underlying factors and challenges radiologists face to providing greater access to care.
New Interventional Radiology Research Shows Merits of Genicular Artery Embolization for Knee OA
December 3rd 2024In a cohort of over 160 patients with knee osteoarthritis (OA), including grade 4 in nearly half of the cases, genicular artery embolization led to an 87 percent improvement in the quality of life index, according to research presented at the
Siemens Healthineers Debuts New Photon-Counting CT Systems at RSNA
December 2nd 2024Debuting at the Radiological Society of North American (RSNA) conference, the new photon-counting computed tomography (PPCT) scanners Naeotom Alpha.Pro and Naeotom Alpha.Prime reportedly combine rapid scan times with high-resolution precision.