Breast density scales: the metric matters

التفاصيل البيبلوغرافية
العنوان: Breast density scales: the metric matters
المؤلفون: Peter Brown, Sian Iles, Mohamed Abdolell, Judy S Caines, Kaitlyn Tsuruda
المصدر: The British journal of radiology. 90(1078)
سنة النشر: 2017
مصطلحات موضوعية: Adult, Scale (ratio), Receiver operating characteristic, Mean squared error, Short Communication, MAMMOGRAPHIC DENSITY, Breast Neoplasms, General Medicine, Middle Aged, 030218 nuclear medicine & medical imaging, 03 medical and health sciences, Risk model, 0302 clinical medicine, 030220 oncology & carcinogenesis, Statistics, Humans, Radiology, Nuclear Medicine and imaging, Female, Metric (unit), Breast density, Categorical variable, Mathematics, Aged, Breast Density, Mammography
الوصف: Measures of percent mammographic density (PMD) are often categorized using various density scales. The purpose of this study was to examine information loss associated with the use of categorical density scales.Baseline PMD was assessed at 1% precision for 2,374 females. The data were used to create 21-category, 4-category and 2-category density scales. R-squared and root mean square error were used to evaluate the effect of categorizing PMD. The area under the receiver operator characteristic curves were compared between cancer risk models employing solely categorical PMD scales and solely baseline PMD for a subset of females (424 cases, 848 controls).R-squared value decreased from 1.00 (1% PMD) to 0.56 (2-category scale), while root mean square error increased from 0.00 (1% PMD) to 10.83 (2-category scale). The area under the receiver operator characteristic curve decreased from 0.64 for a cancer risk model using 1% PMD to 0.58 for a risk model using a 21-category density scale (p0.0001), 0.55 for a 4-category Breast Imaging, Reporting and Data System-like scale (p0.0001) and 0.50 for a 2-category Breast Imaging, Reporting and Data System-like scale (high vs low) (p0.0001).Categorizing PMD measures into categorical density scales leads to a significant loss of information. Indeed, a simple high versus low split of PMD using a 50% cut point yields a cancer risk model with no discriminatory power. Advances in knowledge: Use of categorical mammographic density scales rather than continuous percent mammographic density measures leads to significant loss of information. Breast cancer risk models using categorical mammographic density scales perform more poorly than models using continuous PMD measures.
تدمد: 1748-880X
URL الوصول: https://explore.openaire.eu/search/publication?articleId=doi_dedup___::0dd50fa4e1be751678138d3c4f5914ef
https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/28707989
حقوق: OPEN
رقم الأكسشن: edsair.doi.dedup.....0dd50fa4e1be751678138d3c4f5914ef
قاعدة البيانات: OpenAIRE