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Evaluation of mammographic density patterns: reproducibility and concordance among scales

BACKGROUND: Increased mammographic breast density is a moderate risk factor for breast cancer. Different scales have been proposed for classifying mammographic density. This study sought to assess intra-rater agreement for the most widely used scales (Wolfe, Tabár, BI-RADS and Boyd) and compare them...

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Autores principales: Garrido-Estepa, Macarena, Ruiz-Perales, Francisco, Miranda, Josefa, Ascunce, Nieves, González-Román, Isabel, Sánchez-Contador, Carmen, Santamariña, Carmen, Moreo, Pilar, Vidal, Carmen, Peris, Mercé, Moreno, María P, Váquez-Carrete, Jose A, Collado-García, Francisca, Casanova, Francisco, Ederra, María, Salas, Dolores, Pollán, Marina
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: BioMed Central 2010
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2946309/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/20836850
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1471-2407-10-485
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author Garrido-Estepa, Macarena
Ruiz-Perales, Francisco
Miranda, Josefa
Ascunce, Nieves
González-Román, Isabel
Sánchez-Contador, Carmen
Santamariña, Carmen
Moreo, Pilar
Vidal, Carmen
Peris, Mercé
Moreno, María P
Váquez-Carrete, Jose A
Collado-García, Francisca
Casanova, Francisco
Ederra, María
Salas, Dolores
Pollán, Marina
author_facet Garrido-Estepa, Macarena
Ruiz-Perales, Francisco
Miranda, Josefa
Ascunce, Nieves
González-Román, Isabel
Sánchez-Contador, Carmen
Santamariña, Carmen
Moreo, Pilar
Vidal, Carmen
Peris, Mercé
Moreno, María P
Váquez-Carrete, Jose A
Collado-García, Francisca
Casanova, Francisco
Ederra, María
Salas, Dolores
Pollán, Marina
author_sort Garrido-Estepa, Macarena
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: Increased mammographic breast density is a moderate risk factor for breast cancer. Different scales have been proposed for classifying mammographic density. This study sought to assess intra-rater agreement for the most widely used scales (Wolfe, Tabár, BI-RADS and Boyd) and compare them in terms of classifying mammograms as high- or low-density. METHODS: The study covered 3572 mammograms drawn from women included in the DDM-Spain study, carried-out in seven Spanish Autonomous Regions. Each mammogram was read by an expert radiologist and classified using the Wolfe, Tabár, BI-RADS and Boyd scales. In addition, 375 mammograms randomly selected were read a second time to estimate intra-rater agreement for each scale using the kappa statistic. Owing to the ordinal nature of the scales, weighted kappa was computed. The entire set of mammograms (3572) was used to calculate agreement among the different scales in classifying high/low-density patterns, with the kappa statistic being computed on a pair-wise basis. High density was defined as follows: percentage of dense tissue greater than 50% for the Boyd, "heterogeneously dense and extremely dense" categories for the BI-RADS, categories P2 and DY for the Wolfe, and categories IV and V for the Tabár scales. RESULTS: There was good agreement between the first and second reading, with weighted kappa values of 0.84 for Wolfe, 0.71 for Tabár, 0.90 for BI-RADS, and 0.92 for Boyd scale. Furthermore, there was substantial agreement among the different scales in classifying high- versus low-density patterns. Agreement was almost perfect between the quantitative scales, Boyd and BI-RADS, and good for those based on the observed pattern, i.e., Tabár and Wolfe (kappa 0.81). Agreement was lower when comparing a pattern-based (Wolfe or Tabár) versus a quantitative-based (BI-RADS or Boyd) scale. Moreover, the Wolfe and Tabár scales classified more mammograms in the high-risk group, 46.61 and 37.32% respectively, while this percentage was lower for the quantitative scales (21.89% for BI-RADS and 21.86% for Boyd). CONCLUSIONS: Visual scales of mammographic density show a high reproducibility when appropriate training is provided. Their ability to distinguish between high and low risk render them useful for routine use by breast cancer screening programs. Quantitative-based scales are more specific than pattern-based scales in classifying populations in the high-risk group.
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spelling pubmed-29463092010-09-28 Evaluation of mammographic density patterns: reproducibility and concordance among scales Garrido-Estepa, Macarena Ruiz-Perales, Francisco Miranda, Josefa Ascunce, Nieves González-Román, Isabel Sánchez-Contador, Carmen Santamariña, Carmen Moreo, Pilar Vidal, Carmen Peris, Mercé Moreno, María P Váquez-Carrete, Jose A Collado-García, Francisca Casanova, Francisco Ederra, María Salas, Dolores Pollán, Marina BMC Cancer Research Article BACKGROUND: Increased mammographic breast density is a moderate risk factor for breast cancer. Different scales have been proposed for classifying mammographic density. This study sought to assess intra-rater agreement for the most widely used scales (Wolfe, Tabár, BI-RADS and Boyd) and compare them in terms of classifying mammograms as high- or low-density. METHODS: The study covered 3572 mammograms drawn from women included in the DDM-Spain study, carried-out in seven Spanish Autonomous Regions. Each mammogram was read by an expert radiologist and classified using the Wolfe, Tabár, BI-RADS and Boyd scales. In addition, 375 mammograms randomly selected were read a second time to estimate intra-rater agreement for each scale using the kappa statistic. Owing to the ordinal nature of the scales, weighted kappa was computed. The entire set of mammograms (3572) was used to calculate agreement among the different scales in classifying high/low-density patterns, with the kappa statistic being computed on a pair-wise basis. High density was defined as follows: percentage of dense tissue greater than 50% for the Boyd, "heterogeneously dense and extremely dense" categories for the BI-RADS, categories P2 and DY for the Wolfe, and categories IV and V for the Tabár scales. RESULTS: There was good agreement between the first and second reading, with weighted kappa values of 0.84 for Wolfe, 0.71 for Tabár, 0.90 for BI-RADS, and 0.92 for Boyd scale. Furthermore, there was substantial agreement among the different scales in classifying high- versus low-density patterns. Agreement was almost perfect between the quantitative scales, Boyd and BI-RADS, and good for those based on the observed pattern, i.e., Tabár and Wolfe (kappa 0.81). Agreement was lower when comparing a pattern-based (Wolfe or Tabár) versus a quantitative-based (BI-RADS or Boyd) scale. Moreover, the Wolfe and Tabár scales classified more mammograms in the high-risk group, 46.61 and 37.32% respectively, while this percentage was lower for the quantitative scales (21.89% for BI-RADS and 21.86% for Boyd). CONCLUSIONS: Visual scales of mammographic density show a high reproducibility when appropriate training is provided. Their ability to distinguish between high and low risk render them useful for routine use by breast cancer screening programs. Quantitative-based scales are more specific than pattern-based scales in classifying populations in the high-risk group. BioMed Central 2010-09-13 /pmc/articles/PMC2946309/ /pubmed/20836850 http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1471-2407-10-485 Text en Copyright ©2010 Garrido-Estepa et al; licensee BioMed Central Ltd. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0 This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Garrido-Estepa, Macarena
Ruiz-Perales, Francisco
Miranda, Josefa
Ascunce, Nieves
González-Román, Isabel
Sánchez-Contador, Carmen
Santamariña, Carmen
Moreo, Pilar
Vidal, Carmen
Peris, Mercé
Moreno, María P
Váquez-Carrete, Jose A
Collado-García, Francisca
Casanova, Francisco
Ederra, María
Salas, Dolores
Pollán, Marina
Evaluation of mammographic density patterns: reproducibility and concordance among scales
title Evaluation of mammographic density patterns: reproducibility and concordance among scales
title_full Evaluation of mammographic density patterns: reproducibility and concordance among scales
title_fullStr Evaluation of mammographic density patterns: reproducibility and concordance among scales
title_full_unstemmed Evaluation of mammographic density patterns: reproducibility and concordance among scales
title_short Evaluation of mammographic density patterns: reproducibility and concordance among scales
title_sort evaluation of mammographic density patterns: reproducibility and concordance among scales
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2946309/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/20836850
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1471-2407-10-485
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