| Literature DB >> 31767929 |
S Samiei1,2,3, T J A van Nijnatten4, H C van Beek5, M P J Polak5, A J G Maaskant-Braat6, E M Heuts7, S M J van Kuijk8, R J Schipper7, M B I Lobbes4,9, M L Smidt7,9.
Abstract
Preoperative differentiation between limited (pN1; 1-3 axillary metastases) and advanced (pN2-3; ≥4 axillary metastases) nodal disease can provide relevant information regarding surgical planning and guiding adjuvant radiation therapy. The aim was to evaluate the diagnostic performance of preoperative axillary ultrasound (US) and breast MRI for differentiation between pN1 and pN2-3 in clinically node-positive breast cancer. A total of 49 patients were included with axillary metastasis confirmed by US-guided tissue sampling. All had undergone breast MRI between 2008-2014 and subsequent axillary lymph node dissection. Unenhanced T2-weighted MRI exams were reviewed by two radiologists independently. Each lymph node on the MRI exams was scored using a confidence scale (0-4) and compared with histopathology. Diagnostic performance parameters were calculated for differentiation between pN1 and pN2-3. Interobserver agreement was determined using Cohen's kappa coefficient. At final histopathology, 67.3% (33/49) and 32.7% (16/49) of patients were pN1 and pN2-3, respectively. Breast MRI was comparable to US in terms of accuracy (MRI reader 1 vs US, 71.4% vs 69.4%, p = 0.99; MRI reader 2 vs US, 73.5% vs 69.4%, p = 0.77). In the case of 1-3 suspicious lymph nodes, pN2-3 was observed in 30.4% on US (positive predictive value (PPV) 69.6%) and in 22.2-24.3% on MRI (PPV 75.7-77.8%). In the case of ≥4 suspicious lymph nodes, pN1 was observed in 33.3% on US (negative predictive value (NPV) 66.7%) and in 38.5-41.7% on MRI (NPV 58.3-61.5%). Interobserver agreement was considered good (k = 0.73). In clinically node-positive patients, the diagnostic performance of axillary US and breast MRI is comparable and limited for accurate differentiation between pN1 and pN2-3. Therefore, there seems no added clinical value of preoperative breast MRI regarding nodal staging in patients with positive axillary US.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31767929 PMCID: PMC6877558 DOI: 10.1038/s41598-019-54017-0
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.379
Figure 1Images of the axilla of a 52-year-old female patient with a 34 mm large invasive ductal carcinoma in her left breast, which was treated with mastectomy and ALND. For both US and MRI (reader 1 and 2) N1 axillary lymph node disease was reported. The white arrow indicates the suspicious lymph node on US and MRI. Histopathology of the ALND reported pN2–3 (largest diameter, 14 mm). (a) Axillary US (b) Transversal unenhanced T2-weighted breast MRI.
Figure 2Images of the axilla of a 55-year-old female patient with a 31 mm large invasive lobular carcinoma in her right breast, which was treated with mastectomy and ALND. For both US and MRI (reader 1 and 2) N2–3 axillary lymph node disease was reported. Histopathology of the ALND reported pN2–3 (largest diameter, 50 mm). (a) Axillary US (b) Transversal unenhanced T2-weighted breast MRI.
Patient, tumour, and treatment characteristics.
| All patients (n = 49) | |
|---|---|
| Age (years) (mean; range) | 57 [34–79] |
| Clinical tumour size (mm) (mean; range) | 35 [4–100] |
| T1 | 9 (18.4) |
| T2 | 31 (63.2) |
| T3 | 9 (18.4) |
| Breast-conserving surgery | 8 (16.3) |
| Mastectomy | 41 (83.7) |
| pN1 | 33 (67.3) |
| pN2 | 9 (18.4) |
| pN3 | 7 (14.3) |
| Ductal | 40 (81.6) |
| Lobular | 8 (16.3) |
| Mixed ductal and lobular | 1 (2.1) |
| Unifocal | 36 (73.5) |
| Multifocal and/or multicentric | 13 (26.5) |
| 1 | 4 (8.2) |
| 2 | 26 (53.1) |
| 3 | 19 (38.7) |
| ER + HER2+ | 3 (6.1) |
| ER + HER2− | 33 (67.4) |
| ER-HER2 + | 6 (12.2) |
| Triple negative | 7 (14.3) |
Abbreviations: ER, Estrogen Receptor; HER2, Human Epidermal growth factor Receptor 2; Triple negative, negative for ER, PR, and HER2.
Diagnostic performance of axillary US and standard breast MRI for differentiation between pN1 and pN2–3.
| US (n = 49) | MRI reader 1 (n = 49) | p-valuea US vs MRI1 | MRI reader 2 (n = 49) | p-valueb US vs MRI2 | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Sensitivity | 97.0% (32/33) [84.2–99.9] | 84.8% (28/33) [68.1–94.9] | 0.10 | 84.8% (28/33) [68.1–94.9] | 0.10 |
| Specificity | 12.5% (2/16) [1.6–38.3] | 43.8% (7/16) [19.8–70.1] | 0.03 | 50.0% (8/16) [24.7–75.3] | 0.01 |
| PPV | 69.6% (32/46) [54.2–82.3] | 75.7% (28/37) [58.8–88.2] | 0.13 | 77.8% (28/36) [60.8–89.9] | 0.06 |
| NPV | 66.7% (2/3) [9.4–99.2] | 58.3% (7/12) [27.7–84.8] | 0.77 | 61.5% (8/13) [31.6–86.1] | 0.85 |
| Accuracy | 69.4% (34/49) [54.6–81.7] | 71.4% (35/49) [56.7–83.4] | 0.99 | 73.5% (36/49) [58.9–85.1] | 0.77 |
Abbreviations: US, ultrasound; PPV, positive predictive value; NPV, negative predictive value; MRI1, MRI reader 1; MRI2, MRI reader 2.
aMcNemar and generalised score test for comparison of diagnostic performance parameters between US and breast MRI of reader 1.
bMcNemar and generalised score test for comparison of diagnostic performance parameters between US and breast MRI of reader 2.
Data in parenthesis are absolute numbers. Data in brackets are 95% confidence intervals.
Diagnostic performance of standard breast MRI for differentiation between pN1 and pN2–3 if ultrasound showed 1–3 suspicious axillary lymph nodes.
| MRI reader 1 (n = 46) | MRI reader 2 (n = 46) | |
|---|---|---|
| Sensitivity | 84.4% (27/32) [67.2–94.7] | 84.4% (27/32) [67.2–94.7] |
| Specificity | 35.7% (5/14) [12.8–64.9] | 42.9% (6/14) [17.7–71.1] |
| PPV | 75.0% (27/36) [57.8–87.9] | 77.1% (27/35) [59.9–89.6] |
| NPV | 50.0% (5/10) [18.7–81.3] | 54.5% (6/11) [23.4–83.3] |
| Accuracy | 69.6% (32/46) [54.2–82.3] | 71.7% (33/46) [56.5–84.0] |
Abbreviations: PPV, positive predictive value; NPV, negative predictive value.
Data in parenthesis are absolute numbers. Data in brackets are 95% confidence intervals.