Introduction: Breast cancer is the most common cancer in Indian women, accounting for 25–31% of cases in urban areas. Mammography and ultrasonography are traditional tools for breast lesion evaluation, but mammography 1 sensitivity falls to 48% in dense breasts. Its limitations-such as incomplete axillary assessment and underestimation of disease-are overcome by MRI. DCE-MRI offers high sensitivity for detecting malignant lesions and helps distinguish scar from tumour after breast-conserving therapy. 2,3 As per American and European guidelines, breast MRI is the most sensitive modality for breast cancer detection. To evaluate the Aim/Purpose: role of dynamic contrast-enhanced MRI in detecting breast lesions and correlating with histopathology. This Material And Methods: prospective analytical study was conducted at GIMSR Hospital in patients aged 18–90 years who underwent contrast-enhanced MRI on a 1.5T Philips scanner for lesions evaluation or screening, with subsequent histopathological correlation. Results: Kinetic curves significantly correlated with histopathology: Type I (benign 35.3%), Type II (benign 52.9%, malignant 11.4%), Type III (malignant 88.6%) (p<0.001). BIRADS also showed strong association: benign mainly I–III, malignant predominantly IV (34.1%) and V (65.9%) (p<0.001). Conclusion: Dynamic contrast analysis showed that rapid initial enhancement and washout patterns were highly predictive of malignancy (p<0.001). Type III curves had the strongest correlation. Using BI-RADS IV as the malignancy cut-off, MRI demonstrated 100% sensitivity and 76.4% specificity, with PPV of 91.6% and NPV of 100%.
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Peethamber Lokanandi
Mohd Abdul Rawoof
Munazzah Meraj
Indian Journal Of Applied Research
Institute of Medical Sciences
GITAM University
Dr. D. Y. Patil Medical College, Hospital and Research Centre
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Lokanandi et al. (Wed,) studied this question.
www.synapsesocial.com/papers/68ecc715d1cc7436f7d189e5 — DOI: https://doi.org/10.36106/ijar/3902204
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