ABUS Flies Solo for Breast Screening

Is breast ultrasound ready for use as a primary breast screening modality – without mammography? Maybe not in developed countries, but researchers in China gave automated breast ultrasound a try, with results that are worth checking out in a new study in AJR

Mammography is unquestionably the primary imaging modality for first-line breast screening, with other technologies like ultrasound and MRI taking a supplemental role, such as for working up questionable cases or for women with dense breast tissue.

  • But the standard mammography-dominated paradigm might not be suitable for some resource-challenged countries that have yet to build an installed base of X-ray-based mammography systems. 

One of these countries is China, which not only has fewer mammography systems in rural areas but also has a population of women who have denser breast tissue, which can cause problems with conventional mammography. 

  • As a result, the Chinese National Breast Cancer Screening Program has adopted ultrasound as its primary screening modality, with women ages 35-69 eligible for screening breast ultrasound every 2-3 years. Mammography is reserved for additional workup. 

But handheld ultrasound has challenges of its own. It’s operator-dependent, and image interpretation requires experienced radiologists – also in short supply in some Chinese regions.

  • So the AJR researchers performed a study of 6k women who were screened with GE HealthCare’s Invenia ABUS 2.0 scanner, which uses ultrasound to scan women lying in the supine position. Images were sent via teleradiology to expert radiologists at a remote institution.

How did ABUS perform as a primary screening modality? The researchers found that after a single round of screening …

  • ABUS had a cancer detection rate of 4.0 cancers per 1k women (4.4 for women 40-69).
  • Sensitivity was 92% and specificity was 88%.
  • Abnormal interpretation rate was 12%.
  • 96% of detected cancers were invasive, and 74% were node-negative.
  • Two interval cancers were detected (rate of 0.33 per 1k).

How do the numbers compare to mammography? 

  • The cancer detection rate in the Breast Cancer Surveillance Consortium study was 5.1 cancers per 1k women, so not far off. 

The Takeaway

The results offer an interesting look at an alternative to the mammography-first breast screening paradigm used in developed countries, where ABUS is mostly used as a supplemental technology. For resource-challenged areas around the world, ABUS with teleradiology could solve multiple problems at once.

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