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The spatial resolution of three-dimensional (3D) gradient-echo T1-weighted images, from 40 women with 25 malignant and 23 benign lesions, was purposely degraded to determine the role of spatial resolution in recording, analysis, and diagnosis of dynamic contrast-enhanced breast MRI. Images were recorded and analyzed at pixel resolution according to the 3TP method (Degani et al., Nat Med 1997;3:780-782). Reduction in spatial resolution degraded the appearance of foci with fast wash-in and fast washout dynamics. This resulted in an increase in false-negative diagnoses. The sensitivity for differentiating between malignant and benign lesions, using threshold criteria defined by the 3TP analysis, of 76% decreased to 60% and 24% for a 2- and 4-fold reduction in spatial resolution, respectively, without affecting significantly the high specificity (96-100%). In order to minimize false-negative diagnoses of contrast-enhanced breast MRI and maintain high specificity, it is essential to record and analyze the dynamic behavior at high spatial resolution. J. Magn. Reson. Imaging 2001;13:862-867.
Furman‐Haran et al. (Tue,) studied this question.