Measurement of breast-tissue x-ray attenuation by spectral mammography: solid lesions
Erik Fredenberg, Fleur Kilburn-Toppin, Paula Willsher, Elin Moa, Mats, Danielsson, David R. Dance, Kenneth C. Young, Matthew G. Wallis

TL;DR
This study measures x-ray attenuation of solid breast lesions using spectral mammography, aiming to improve differentiation between cysts and tumors, which could enhance screening accuracy.
Contribution
The paper adapts a spectral method to measure x-ray attenuation of solid breast lesions, providing new data and insights for lesion differentiation.
Findings
No significant attenuation difference between benign and malignant lesions.
Significant attenuation difference between cyst fluid and solid tumors.
Data supports potential clinical differentiation of cysts from tumors.
Abstract
Knowledge of x-ray attenuation is essential for developing and evaluating x-ray imaging technologies. For instance, techniques to distinguish between cysts and solid tumours at mammography screening would be highly desirable to reduce recalls, but the development requires knowledge of the x-ray attenuation for cysts and tumours. We have previously measured the attenuation of cyst fluid using photon-counting spectral mammography. Data on x-ray attenuation for solid breast lesions are available in the literature, but cover a relatively wide range, likely caused by natural spread between samples, random measurement errors, and different experimental conditions. In this study, we have adapted the previously developed spectral method to measure the linear attenuation of solid breast lesions. A total of 56 malignant and 5 benign lesions were included in the study. The samples were placed in a…
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