Comparison of Automated Breast Ultrasound and Hand-Held Breast Ultrasound in the Screening of Dense Breasts
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Revista Brasileira de Ginecologia e Obstetrícia
Abstract
Objective To compare hand-held breast ultrasound (HHBUS) and automated breast
ultrasound (ABUS) as screening tool for cancer.
Methods A cross-sectional study in patients with mammographically dense breasts
was conducted, and both HHBUS and ABUS were performed. Hand-held breast
ultrasound was acquired by radiologists and ABUS by mammography technicians
and analyzed by breast radiologists. We evaluated the Breast Imaging Reporting and
Data System (BI-RADS) classification of the exam and of the lesion, as well as the
amount of time required to perform and read each exam. The statistical analysis
employed was measures of central tendency and dispersion, frequencies, Student t
test, and a univariate logistic regression, through the odds ratio and its respective 95%
confidence interval, and with p < 0.05 considered of statistical significance.
Results A total of 440 patients were evaluated. Regarding lesions, HHBUS detected 15 (7.7%)
BI-RADS 2, 175 (89.3%) BI-RADS 3, and 6 (3%) BI-RADS 4, with 3 being confirmed by biopsy as
invasive ductal carcinomas (IDCs), and 3 false-positives. Automated breast ultrasound identified
12 (12.9%) BI-RADS 2, 75 (80.7%) BI-RADS 3, and 6 (6.4%) BI-RADS 4, including 3 lesions
detected by HHBUS and confirmed as IDCs, in addition to 1 invasive lobular carcinoma and 2
high-risk lesions not detected by HHBUS. The amount of time required for the radiologist to
read the ABUS was statistically inferior compared with the time required to read the HHBUS
(p< 0.001). The overall concordance was 80.9%. A total of 219 lesions were detected, from
those 70 lesions by both methods, 126 only by HHBUS (84.9% not suspicious by ABUS) and 23
only by ABUS.