Does axillary lymph node size predict better metastatic involvement than apparent diffusion coefficient (ADC) value in women with newly diagnosed breast cancer? Academic Article in Scopus uri icon

abstract

  • © The Foundation Acta Radiologica 2020.Background: It has been demonstrated that the number of metastatic axillary lymph nodes (mALNs) influence disease-free and overall survival in patients with breast cancer. Purpose: To determine if the ALN size is more accurate than the ALN apparent diffusion coefficient (ADC) value to predict metastatic involvement in newly diagnosed breast cancer. Material and Methods: A total of 44 patients with breast cancer were included. Magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) examinations were performed on a 1.5-T system with sagittal T1-weighted fast spin-echo non-fat saturated, sagittal T2-weighted fast spin-echo non-fat saturated, axial diffusion-weighted imaging echo-planar (b values of 0 and 700 s/mm2), and non-contrast axial VIBRANT sequences. The size and the ADC value were obtained for ALN ipsilateral and contralateral to breast cancer. The reference standard was the histopathologic lymph node status. Results: mALN had a greater cortical thickness compared to contralateral non-mALN (10.3 ± 5.32 mm vs. 4 ± 1.17 mm, P ¿ 0.001). The threshold of ¿6.7 mm for predicting axillary metastatic involvement had a sensitivity and a specificity of 80.0% and 97.7%, respectively. The ADC value of mALN was significantly higher than the contralateral non-mALN (0.90 ± 0.12 × 10¿3mm2/s vs. 0.78 ± 0.12 × 10¿3mm2/s; P = 0.001). The threshold of ¿0.86 × 10¿3mm2/s had a sensitivity and a specificity of 66.7% and 76.7%, respectively. Conclusion: Our results indicate that the cortical thickness has a better diagnostic performance in the differentiation of metastatic and non-metastatic lymph nodes than the lymph node ADC.

publication date

  • November 1, 2020