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18 March 2008Impact of dose on observer performance in breast tomosynthesis using breast specimens
The purpose of this study was to investigate the effect of dose on lesion detection and characterization in breast
tomosynthesis (BT), using human breast specimens. Images of 27 lesions in breast specimens were acquired on a BT
prototype based on a Mammomat Novation (Siemens) full-field digital mammography (FFDM) system. Two detector
modes - binned (2×1 in the scan direction) and full resolution - and four BT exposure levels - approximately 2×, 1.5×,
1×, and 0.5× the total mAs at the same beam quality as used in a single FFDM view with a Mammomat Novation unit
under automatic exposure control (AEC) conditions - were examined. The exposure for all BT scans was equally
divided among 25 projections. An enhanced filtered back projection reconstruction method was applied with a constant
filter setting. A human observer performance study was conducted in which the observers were forced to select the
minimum (threshold) exposure level at which each lesion could be both detected and characterized for assessment of
recall or not in a screening situation. The median threshold exposure level for all observers and all lesions corresponded
to approximately 1×, which is half the exposure of what we currently use for BT. A substantial variation in exposure
thresholds was noticed for different lesion types. For low contrast lesions with diffuse borders, an exposure threshold of
approximately 2× was required, whereas for spiculated high contrast lesions and lesions with well defined borders, the
exposure threshold was lower than 0.5×. The use of binned mode had no statistically significant impact on observer
performance compared to full resolution mode. There was no substantial difference between the modes for the detection
and characterization of the lesion types.
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Pontus Timberg, Magnus Båth, Ingvar Andersson, Tony Svahn, Mark Ruschin, Bengt Hemdal, Sören Mattsson, Anders Tingberg, "Impact of dose on observer performance in breast tomosynthesis using breast specimens," Proc. SPIE 6913, Medical Imaging 2008: Physics of Medical Imaging, 69134J (18 March 2008); https://doi.org/10.1117/12.770274