Measurement of breast-tissue x-ray attenuation by spectral imaging: fresh and fixed normal and malignant tissue
Erik Fredenberg, Paula Willsher, Elin Moa, David R. Dance, Kenneth C., Young, Matthew G. Wallis

TL;DR
This study measures x-ray attenuation in normal and malignant breast tissues using spectral imaging, providing new data on tissue differences and effects of formalin fixation to improve mammography accuracy.
Contribution
It offers novel spectral attenuation measurements for fresh and fixed breast tissues, addressing gaps in existing data and assessing fixation effects on tissue attenuation.
Findings
Attenuation varies significantly among tissue types.
Formalin fixation slightly alters tissue attenuation.
Discrimination between tissue types remains feasible.
Abstract
Knowledge of x-ray attenuation is essential for developing and evaluating x-ray imaging technologies. In mammography, measurement of breast density, dose estimation, and differentiation between cysts and solid tumours are example applications requiring accurate data on tissue attenuation. Published attenuation data are, however, sparse and cover a relatively wide range. To supplement available data we have previously measured the attenuation of cyst fluid and solid lesions using photon-counting spectral mammography. The present study aims to measure the attenuation of normal adipose and glandular tissue, and to measure the effect of formalin fixation, a major uncertainty in published data. A total of 27 tumour specimens, seven fibro-glandular tissue specimens, and 15 adipose tissue specimens were included. Spectral (energy-resolved) images of the samples were acquired and the image…
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