RSNA 2011 

Abstract Archives of the RSNA, 2011


SSA01-03

Reasons for Failed Cancer Detection in the ACRIN 6666 Screening Protocol: Mammography, US, and MRI

Scientific Formal (Paper) Presentations

Presented on November 27, 2011
Presented as part of SSA01: ISP: Breast Imaging (Ultrasound)

Participants

Wendie A. Berg MD, PhD, Presenter: Research grant, Naviscan, Inc Researcher, Naviscan, Inc Speaker, SuperSonic Imagine Researcher, SuperSonic Imagine Medical Advisory Board, Koninklijke Philips Electronics NV Author, Gamma Medica Ideas, License, Merge Healthcare
Ellen Bachman Mendelson MD, Abstract Co-Author: Scientific Advisory Board, Hologic, Inc Research support, Siemens AG Speakers Bureau, Siemens AG Medical Advisory Board, Quantason, LLC Consultant, Quantason, LLC Speakers Bureau, SuperSonic Imagine Research support, SuperSonic Imagine Medical Advisory Board, Toshiba Corporation
H. Carisa Le-Petross MD, Abstract Co-Author: Nothing to Disclose
Zheng Zhang PhD, Abstract Co-Author: Nothing to Disclose
Helga Marques MS, Abstract Co-Author: Nothing to Disclose
Amanda Adams MPH, Abstract Co-Author: Nothing to Disclose

PURPOSE

To determine sources of false negative mammography, sonography (US), and MRI in the ACRIN 6666 protocol; in particular we sought to determine whether primary factors were lack of depiction or errors in interpretation.

METHOD AND MATERIALS

Three experienced breast imaging radiologists independently reviewed breast imaging performed the year prior to and year of diagnosis for each of 130 malignant lesions (110 women) in the 21-site ACRIN 6666 protocol (100 invasive, median size 10.0 mm) of screening US. After initial review blinded to other imaging and pathology, observers reviewed pathologic findings and recorded imaging findings evident only in retrospect. Factors affecting lesion detection were recorded, including: technical (outside FOV, poor soft tissue contrast, motion, other), detection (“busy breasts”, poor lesion to background contrast, seen on only one view, difficult location, large breast), and interpretation issues (looks benign, multiple similar findings, at scar, very subtle). Results were compared to initial site interpretations.

RESULTS

For 67/130 (52%) malignancies missed by mammography, 16 were evident on prospective review (5 masses, 7 calcifications, 2 calcified masses, 1 suspicious node, 1 asymmetry/distortion), 3 seen only in retrospect (1 calcifications and 2 asymmetries), and 48 not depicted; 5/19 were also seen on prior year mammogram. Initial mammographic (overlapping) errors were: 7 technical, 13 detection, 7 interpretation issues. For 71/130 (55%) malignancies missed by initial ultrasound, 14 were evident prospectively, 1 only retrospectively, and 56 not depicted; 2/15 were depicted on prior year US. Initial US (overlapping) errors were: 6 technical, 8 detection, 9 interpretation factors. Targeted US depicted another 10/71 (14%) malignancies (2 not within initial FOV). Of 19 cancers imaged by MRI, 5 (26%) were missed on initial site interpretation. Of those 5, 1 (20%) mass was seen on prospective review (interpretive error), none in retrospect, and 4 not depicted.

CONCLUSION

28% (19/67) mammographically missed cancers were interpretive errors as were 21% (15/71) sonographically missed cancers and 20% (1/5) MRI misses. Another 14% (10/71) missed cancers were seen on targeted US. (Funded by The Avon Foundation and grants CA 80098 and CA 79778 from the National Cancer Institute)

CLINICAL RELEVANCE/APPLICATION

Errors in interpretation of screening US were similar in prevalence (21% of misses) to errors in mammographic and MRI interpretation. Automated scanning and computer-assisted detection and diagnosis

Cite This Abstract

Berg, W, Mendelson, E, Le-Petross, H, Zhang, Z, Marques, H, Adams, A, Reasons for Failed Cancer Detection in the ACRIN 6666 Screening Protocol: Mammography, US, and MRI.  Radiological Society of North America 2011 Scientific Assembly and Annual Meeting, November 26 - December 2, 2011 ,Chicago IL. http://archive.rsna.org/2011/11006596.html