Yamaguchi K, Hara Y, Kitano I, Hamamoto T, Kiyomatsu K, Yamasaki F, Egashira R, Nakazono T, Irie H. Tumor-stromal ratio (TSR) of invasive breast cancer: correlation with multi-parametric breast MRI findings.
Br J Radiol 2019;
92:20181032. [PMID:
30835501 DOI:
10.1259/bjr.20181032]
[Citation(s) in RCA: 9] [Impact Index Per Article: 1.8] [Reference Citation Analysis] [Abstract] [Track Full Text] [Journal Information] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Indexed: 01/02/2023] Open
Abstract
OBJECTIVE
To correlate the tumor-stromal ratio (TSR) of invasive breast cancer and MRI findings.
METHODS
This study was approved by our institutional review board. 126 consecutive patients with surgically proven invasive breast cancer were included. All patients underwent MRI exams including short-tau inversion-recovery (STIR) T 2 weighted imaging, diffusion-weighted imaging (DWI) and post-contrast dynamic imaging. The mean signal intensity (SI) and apparent diffusion coefficient (ADC) value of each lesion were measured. To objectively evaluate the STIR images, the ratio of the SI of the lesion to the muscle (L/M ratio) was also measured. Percentages of MRI kinetic parameters obtained from dynamic images were also measured. The TSR was defined as the percentage of the stromal component, and categorized into high-stroma (> 50%) and low-stroma (< 50%) groups. Intergroup differences in the SI, L/M ratio, ADC value and percentages of kinetic parameters were examined.
RESULTS
The SI and L/M ratio of the high-stroma group were significantly lower than those of the low-stromal group (208.64 vs 331.86 for SI, 5.69 vs 9.31 for L/M ratio) (p < 0.001). The high-stroma group had significantly lower percentages of a washout pattern (25% vs 34.7 %) (p = 0.012) and significantly higher percentages of a persistent pattern (36.92% vs 28.26 %) (p = 0.044). There were no significant correlations between the TSR and ADC value.
CONCLUSION
STIR and dynamic sequence of breast MRI reflects the stromal component of invasive breast cancer.
ADVANCES IN KNOWLEDGE
This is the first study to correlate TSR and MRI findings. STIR and post-contrast dynamic study correlated with the stromal component of breast cancer.
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