Electrical impedance scanning as a new breast cancer risk stratification tool for young women

  • Alexander Stojadinovic*
  • , Aviram Nissan
  • , Craig D. Shriver
  • , Elizabeth A. Mittendorf
  • , Mark D. Akin
  • , Vivian Dickerson
  • , Sarah Lenington
  • , Lawrence D. Platt
  • , Thomas Stavros
  • , Steven R. Goldstein
  • , Orah Moskovitz
  • , Zahava Gallimidi
  • , Scott I. Fields
  • , Arieh Yeshaya
  • , Tanir M. Allweis
  • , Raymond Manassa
  • , Itzhak Pappo
  • , Ron X. Ginor
  • , Ralph B. D'Agostino
  • , David Gur
  • *Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

32 Scopus citations

Abstract

Background: Electrical impedance scanning (EIS) measures changes in breast tissue associated with breast cancer (Br-Ca) development. The T-Scan(tm2000 (ED is designed to use EIS to identify women ages 30-39 with elevated risk of breast cancer (i.e., T-Scan+ women). Aim: To estimate the relative probability of breast cancer in a T-Scan+ woman compared to a randomly selected young woman. Methods: A prospective, two-cohort trial was conducted in pre-menopausal women. The Specificity (Sp)-Cohort evaluated T-Scan specificity in 1,751 asymptomatic women ages 30-39. The Sensitivity)Sn)-Cohort evaluated T-Scan sensitivity in 390 women ages 45-30 scheduled for biopsy. Specificity, sensitivity, and conservative estimate of disease prevalence were used to calculate relative probability. Results: In the Sp-Cohort, 93 of 1,751 women were T-Scan+ (Sp = 94.7%; 95% CI: 93.7-95.7%). In the Sn-Cohort, 23 of 87 biopsy-proven cancers were T-Scan+ (Sn = 26.4%; 95% CI: 17.4-35.4%). Given Sp = 94.7%, Sn = 26.4% and prevalence of 1.5 cancers/1,000 women (ages 30-39), the relative probability of a T-Scan+ woman having Br-Ca is 4.95: (95% CI: 3.16-7.14). Conclusion: EIS can identify a subset of young women with a relative probability of breast cancer almost five times greater than in the population of young women at-large. T-Scan+ women have a sufficiently high risk of Br-Ca to warrant further surveillance or imaging.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)112-120
Number of pages9
JournalJournal of Surgical Oncology
Volume97
Issue number2
DOIs
StatePublished - 1 Jan 2008
Externally publishedYes

UN SDGs

This output contributes to the following UN Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs)

  1. SDG 3 - Good Health and Well-being
    SDG 3 Good Health and Well-being

Keywords

  • Breast cancer
  • Electrical impedance
  • Screening

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