Abstract
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.
Keywords
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