Quantitative Assessment of Breast-Tumor Stiffness Using Shear-Wave Elastography Histograms.
Ismini E PapageorgiouNektarios A ValousStathis HadjidemetriouUlf K TeichgräberAnsgar MalichPublished in: Diagnostics (Basel, Switzerland) (2022)
Purpose: Shear-wave elastography (SWE) measures tissue elasticity using ultrasound waves. This study proposes a histogram-based SWE analysis to improve breast malignancy detection. Methods: N = 22/32 (patients/tumors) benign and n = 51/64 malignant breast tumors with histological ground truth. Colored SWE heatmaps were adjusted to a 0-180 kPa scale. Normalized, 250-binned RGB histograms were used as image descriptors based on skewness and area under curve (AUC). The histogram method was compared to conventional SWE metrics, such as (1) the qualitative 5-point scale classification and (2) average stiffness (SWEavg)/maximal tumor stiffness (SWEmax) within the tumor B-mode boundaries. Results: The SWEavg and SWEmax did not discriminate malignant lesions in this database, p > 0.05, rank sum test. RGB histograms, however, differed between malignant and benign tumors, p < 0.001, Kolmogorov-Smirnoff test. The AUC analysis of histograms revealed the reduction of soft-tissue components as a significant SWE biomarker ( p = 0.03, rank sum). The diagnostic accuracy of the suggested method is still low (Se = 0.30 for Se = 0.90) and a subject for improvement in future studies. Conclusions: Histogram-based SWE quantitation improved the diagnostic accuracy for malignancy compared to conventional average SWE metrics. The sensitivity is a subject for improvement in future studies.
Keyphrases
- end stage renal disease
- soft tissue
- deep learning
- magnetic resonance imaging
- diffusion weighted imaging
- chronic kidney disease
- newly diagnosed
- systematic review
- current status
- ejection fraction
- diffusion weighted
- magnetic resonance
- peritoneal dialysis
- blood pressure
- heart rate
- computed tomography
- body composition
- liquid chromatography tandem mass spectrometry
- loop mediated isothermal amplification
- quantum dots
- patient reported