ACR BI-RADS-MG 5th Edition 2013

ACR BI-RADS(R) atlas, Breast Imaging Reporting and Data System – ScienceOpen
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American College of Radiology U LT RA SO U N D…Transcript
ACR BI-RADS?(R) ATLAS ? BREAST ULTRASOUND
American College of Radiology 121
III. REPORTING SYSTEM
122 American College of Radiology
ACR BI-RADS?(R) ATLAS ? BREAST ULTRASOUND
American College of Radiology 123
A. REPORT ORGANIZATION
The report should be concise and organized using a structure such as that provided in Table 2 (below).
Assessments and management recommendations are discussed in item B of this chapter on the re-
porting system, as well as in the Guidance chapter and in answer to some specific questions among
the Frequently Asked Questions.
The indication for examination, relevant clinical history, and pertinent risk factor information should
be clearly stated. If the study is performed for follow-up of a specific mass or area of concern, this
should be described. The dates of any comparison examinations should be specified. As detailed in
the General Considerations section on Labeling and Measurement (see page 30), when a specific
sonographic finding is documented by recording a complete set of images, the longest horizontal
dimension should be reported first, followed by the vertical measurement, and the orthogonal hori-
zontal dimension last. Multiple simple cysts or a combination of multiple simple and complicated
cysts need not be reported individually. If any lesions have been biopsied previously, this should be
noted together with the prior biopsy results, if known. Correlation of any clinical, mammographic,
and MRI findings with the sonographic findings should be specifically stated in the report. For diag-
nostic evaluations involving US characterization of mammographic abnormalities or confirmation of
a mass suspected but not delineated mammographically, a single report integrating the two modali-
ties will clearly communicate a final assessment based on the highest likelihood of malignancy and
appropriate management recommendations.
Consistent use of BI-RADS?(R) descriptors for US, as for mammography and MRI, helps in lesion as-
sessment and clarifies communication with physicians and patients. Also, structured, software-
based reporting should be based on BI-RADS?(R) terminology.
For coding and reimbursement, consider the advisability of splitting the report combining the
findings of two or more concurrently performed imaging modalities or procedures into specific
sections or paragraphs, one for each type of examination. However, a single assessment and rec-
ommendation for patient management should reflect integration of the findings from all of the
imaging studies. Note that an assessment based on specific findings needing most urgent atten-
tion will have the greatest clinical utility.
1. INDICATION FOR EXAMINATION
The reason for performing the examination should be stated briefly at the beginning
of the report. The most common indications for breast US are confirmation and charac-
Table 2. Report Organization
Report Structure
1. Indication for examination
2. Statement of scope and technique of breast US examination
3. Succinct description of the overall breast composition (screening only)
4. Clear description of any important findings
5. Comparison to previous examination(s), including correlation with physical, mammography, or MRI findings
6. Composite reports
7. Assessment
8. Management
124 American College of Radiology
terization of a palpable mass or mammographic or MRI abnormality, guidance of inter-
ventional procedures, and as the initial imaging technique for young, pregnant, or lac-
tating patients. Additional applications are listed in the ACR Practice Guideline for the
Performance of the Breast Ultrasound Examination and include the extent of disease
evaluation supplementing mammography in high-risk women who are not candidates
for breast MRI or who have no easy access to MRI, and in breast imaging practices that
provide the service, supplementary whole-breast screening in order to increase cancer
detection in asymptomatic women with mammographically dense breasts.
2. STATEMENT OF SCOPE AND TECHNIQUE OF BREAST US EXAMINATION
The scope of examination and technique used should be stated, for example, whether the
examination was directed or targeted to a specific location, or whether it was performed
for supplementary screening. It is important, since US is a real-time examination, to indi-
cate who performed the examination (sonographer, sonographer and physician, physician
alone) or whether an automated whole-breast scanning system was used. If a lesion was
evaluated with color or power Doppler or with strain or shear-wave elastography, observa-
tions relevant to the interpretation should be reported.
In certain situations, it may be beneficial to describe the position of the patient during the
examination (e.g., ?The breasts were imaged in both supine and lateral decubitus position.?
or ?The patient was imaged in seated position, the position in which she feels the left breast
thickening best.?).
Automated whole breast scanners that acquire in 3-D are available for clinical use and can
be formatted in three planes. These scanners depict the entire breast in coronal, transverse,
and sagittal planes, with the coronal view similar to the coronal MRI view. Reporting of
these studies continue to evolve, but where possible the interpretation structure outlined
in Table 2 (see page 123) and the reporting procedures described earlier in this section
should be followed.
3. SUCCINCT DESCRIPTION OF THE OVERALL BREAST COMPOSITION (screening only)
Tissue composition patterns can be estimated more easily in the large FOVs of automat-
ed US scans but can also be discerned in the small FOV of a handheld US scan. The three
US descriptors for tissue composition described earlier in the US lexicon, ?homogeneous
background echotexture-fat,? ?homogeneous background echotexture-fibroglandular,?
and ?heterogeneous background echotexture? (Table 3) (below) correspond loosely to
the four density descriptors of mammography and the four fibroglandular tissue descrip-
tors of MRI. At US, breast tissue composition is determined by echogenicity. Subcutane-
ous fat, the tissue relative to which echogenicity is compared, is medium gray and darker
than fibroglandular tissue, which is light gray. Heterogeneous breasts show an admixture
of hypoechoic and more echogenic areas. Careful real-time scanning will help differenti-
ate a small hypoechoic area of normal tissue from a mass.
Table 3. Breast Tissue
Tissue Composition
a. Homogeneous background echotexture-fat
b. Homogeneous background echotexture-fibroglandular
c. Heterogeneous background echotexture
ACR BI-RADS?(R) ATLAS ? BREAST ULTRASOUND
American College of Radiology 125
4. CLEAR DESCRIPTION OF ANY IMPORTANT FINDINGS
The description of important findings should be made, in order of clinical relevance, using
lexicon terminology, and should include:
a. Characterization of a mass using the morphological descriptors of shape, margin, and ori-
entation. Note should be made of the lesion?s effect on the surrounding tissue, such as
architectural distortion. Feature categories, such as posterior features and echogenicity,
and techniques, such as color or power Doppler and elastography, may contribute infor-
mation to the analysis, but only pertinent positives need to be described. Recognition of
special case findings, such as simple and complicated cysts, clustered microcysts, intra-
mammary lymph nodes, and foreign bodies, should simplify interpretation. In reporting
screening examinations in asymptomatic women, as in mammography, characteristically
benign findings may be reported (assessment category 2), but it is not obligatory, and the
appropriate assessment would then be negative (assessment category 1).
b. For important findings, lesion size should be given in at
mensions are preferable, especially if the volume of a mass is compared with one or
more previous examinations. It is not necessary to report the measurements of every
small simple cyst, and if numerous cysts are present, especi location
and measurements of the largest cyst in each breast will suffice.
If a mass is measured, images should be recorded with and without calipers. Marginal
characteristics are one of the most important criteria to be applied in assessing the likeli-
hood of malignancy of a mass, and, particularly with small masses, caliper markings may
obscure the margin, hindering analysis.
c. Location of the lesion(s) should be indicated using a consistent and reproducible system,
such as clock-face location and distance from the nipple. When more than one mass or
abnormality is located in the same scan frame or in the same locale, measurement of the
distance from the skin to the center of the mass or its anterior aspect may help to differ-
entiate one lesion from another. This measurement may be particularly useful when one
mass is singled out for biopsy and others are depicted in the field.
There may be variability within breast imaging practices, and members of a group practice
should agree upon a consistent policy for documenting lesion location on subsequent
examinations. In some practices, for all examinations that follow the initial US study, the
lesion location annotation will be repeated without change. Other breast imagers may
report a different location to signify the same lesion but indicate in their reports that the
lesion is now seen at another clock-face position and distance from the nipple (these dif-
ferences are often related to positioning and technique). A more complete discussion of
this common scenario is provided in the Frequently Asked Questions, see page 142).
d. As at mammography, multiple bilateral circumscribed masses usually are assessed as
benign (category 2) unless one mass has different imaging features than all the oth-
ers. In the unusual circumstance in which the interpreting physician chooses to describe
multiple benign-appearing masses individually within the US report, the masses should
126 American College of Radiology
be listed by breast, by location within in the breast, and by size. The reader of the report
will be less confused, and, if surveillance is suggested as management, the performer of
the subsequent examination will appreciate a list rather than verbose text. For bilateral
findings, describe all the findings in each breast in a separate paragraph.
5. COMPARISON TO PREVIOUS EXAMINATION(S), INCLUDING CORRELATION WITH PHYSICAL,
MAMMOGRAPHY, OR MRI FINDINGS
Breast US should be correlated with physical findings, mammography, MRI, or other imag-
ing studies, if performed. If no statement of comparison is included in the US report, it will
be assumed that no comparison was made. Note that some report templates include a
?comparison? heading, in which the word ?none? (if appropriate) may be entered.
When correlating US findings with those seen at mammography and/or MRI, the opera-
tor performing handheld scanning should correlate the size and location of lesions and
match the type and arrangement of tissues surrounding the lesion in order to reduce the
likelihood of misregistration (identifying a different lesion or lesions at different imaging
modalities). In doing this, allowance for positional changes should be made going from
upright with mammography and prone with MRI to supine or supine-oblique with US. If
it is determined that a sonographic finding corresponds to a palpable abnormality, or to a
mammographic or MRI finding, this should be stated explicitly in the US report. If the US
finding is new or has no correlate, this should also be stated in the report.
If the US examination was performed as part of a surveillance protocol to assess a previously
identified finding, or if the finding was reported on a previous examination, the current report
should describe any changes. An increase of 20% or more in the longest dimension of a prob-
ably benign solid mass within 6 months may prompt biopsy.1 An increase of only 1?2 mm in
lesion size may be related to differences in scanning technique or patient positioning.
6. COMPOSITE REPORTS
When more than one type of examination is performed concurrently (on the same day), it is
preferable that the examinations be reported together.
The findings for each examination
should be described in separate paragraphs with an overall assessment and management
recommendations for the combined examinations. In general, when the assessments for two
examinations differ, the overall assessment (and concordant management recommendations)
should reflect the more abnormal of the individual assessments (whatever management is
expected to come first, supplemented by likelihood of maligancy), according to the following
hierarchy of increasing abnormality: category 1, 2, 3, 6, 0, 4, 5 (Table 4, see page 127).
Exceptions to this rule occur when the characteristically benign features of a given imag-
ing finding on one examination supersede the less specifically benign features of the same
finding on the other examination. An example is that of a partially circumscribed, noncalci-
fied mass at mammography, superseded by simple cyst at US.
ACR BI-RADS?(R) ATLAS ? BREAST ULTRASOUND
American College of Radiology 127
BI-RADS Assessment
Degree of Abnormality
Abnormality Hierarchy
7. ASSESSMENT
The report should conclude with a concise summary of pertinent US findings with a final
assessment using BI-RADS?(R) US categories 1?6 and the phrases associated with them. If re-
port of a US examination is integrated with that of a concurrently performed mammogra-
phy examination, the combined final assessment should reflect the highest likelihood of
malignancy assessed at the two examinations. Clear and consistent communication is a
goal that can be achieved for breast US by using the same assessment categories and simi-
lar wording described in the BI-RADS?(R) Mammography section.
In some cases, the interpreting physician may render an incomplete assessment (category
0) in order to request additional examination(s), such as mammography, comparison with
previous but currently unavailable examinations, or additional physican-performed real-time
scanning after either a sonographer-produced, real-time or automated whole-breast screen-
ing US examination.
8. MANAGEMENT
Management recommendations should be included in every report. Clear recommendations
should be made as to the next course of action. Recommendations may include routine age-
appropriate screening, surveillance imaging for a probably benign mass, annual follow-up after
percutaneous or surgical biopsy, and clinical management. If an imaging-guided interventional
procedure is recommended, the type of imaging for the procedure might also be suggested, for
example, stereotactic, US, or MRI guidance.
128 American College of Radiology
B. ASSESSMENT CATEGORIES
Table 5. Concordance Between BI-RADS?(R) Assessment Categories and Management Recommendations.
Assessment Management Likelihood of Cancer
Category 0: Incomplete ? Need
Additional Imaging Evaluation
Recall for additional
Category 1: Negative Routine screening Essentially 0% likelihood of malignancy
Category 2: Benign Routine screening Essentially 0% likelihood of malignancy
Category 3: Probably Benign Short-interval (6-month)
follow-up or continued
surveillance
> 0% but ?¤ 2% likelihood of malignancy
Category 4: Suspicious
Category 4A: Low suspicion for
malignancy
Category 4B: Moderate suspicion for
malignancy
Category 4C: High suspicion for
malignancy
Tissue diagnosis > 2% but
2% to ?¤ 10% likelihood of malignancy
> 10% to ?¤ 50% likelihood of
malignancy
but ?¤ 2% likelihood of malignancy. For US, there is robust evidence that a solid mass with a cir-
cumscribed margin, oval shape, and parallel orientation (most commonly fibroadenoma), and
an isolated complicated cyst have a likelihood of malignancy in the defined (?¤ 2%) probably
benign range, for which short-interval (6-month) follow-up sonography and then periodic so-
nographic surveillance may represent appropriate management.2?4 Similar data have been re-
ported for clustered microcysts, but these data are less strong because they involve many fewer
cases.2 The use of assessment category 3 for sonographic findings other than these three should be
considered only if the radiologist has personal experience to justify a watchful-waiting approach,
preferably involving observation of a sufficient number of cases of an additional sonographic find-
ing to suggest a likelihood of malignancy within the defined (?¤ 2%) probably benign range.
130 American College of Radiology
This edition of the BI-RADS?(R) Atlas also emphasizes the recommendation that a category 3 assess-
ment should not
rather, this should be done only after completion of a full
diagnostic breast imaging examination. This recommendation is appropriate for screening mam-
mography, for which batch interpretation usually is utilized, because in this setting there is no
opportunity to complete the diagnostic workup before interpreting the screening examination.
However, screening US almost always is interpreted online, so a full diagnostic examination also
is completed while the patient remains in the breast imaging facility, and a single breast imaging
report may be issued that combines the findings of both screening and diagnostic components
of the examination. Hence, there is no purpose in recommending against category 3 assessment
at screening US because the diagnostic workup would be completed simultaneously. This issue
is discussed in more detail in Frequently Asked Question #2 for US in the Follow-up and Outcome
Monitoring section, see FOM on page 62). Note that for auditing purposes, the screening compo-
nent of a category 3-assessed screening US examination will be audit-positive, not only because
additional nonstandard (diagnostic) images will be recorded but also because a category 3 as-
sessment at screening is defined as being audit-positive.
For category 3 assessments, the initial short-term follow-up interval is usually 6 months, involv-
ing the breast(s) containing the probably benign finding(s). Assuming stability at this 6-month
examination, a category 3 assessment again is rendered with a management recommendation
for a second short-interval follow-up examination in 6 months. Again assuming stability at this
second short-interval follow-up, the examination is once more assessed as category 3, but now
the recommended follow-up interval usually is lengthened to 1 year due the already-observed
12-month stability. Note that although the 1-year follow-up coincides with the routine screening
interval in the United States, a category 3 assessment is rendered, to indicate that the period of
imaging surveillance is still underway. As with surveillance using mammography, after 2?3 years
of stability, the final assessment category should be changed to benign (BI-RADS?(R) category 2). A
benign evaluation may also be rendered before completion of
category 3 analysis if, in the opin-
ion of the interpreter , the finding has no chance of malignancy and is thus a category 2.
Category 4: Suspicious
This category is reserved for findings that do not have the classic appearance of malignancy but
are sufficiently suspicious to justify a recommendation for biopsy. The ceiling for category 3 as-
sessment is a 2% likelihood of malignancy, and the floor for category 5 assessment is 95%, so cat-
egory 4 assessments cover the wide range of likelihood of malignancy in between. Thus, almost
all recommendations for breast interventional procedures will come from assessments made us-
ing this category. By subdividing category 4 into 4A, 4B, and 4C, as recommended in and using
the cut points indicated in the Guidance chapter, it is hoped that patients and referring clinicians
will more readily make informed decisions on the ultimate course of action. An example of sepa-
rating the BI-RADS?(R) assessment category from the management recommendation (new to fifth
edition ? see Follow-up and Outcome Monitoring section) occurs when a simple cyst, correctly
assessed as BI-RADS?(R) 2, undergoes cyst aspiration for pain control.
Category 5: Highly Suggestive of Malignancy
These assessments carry a very high probability (?? 95%) of malignancy. This category initially was
established to involve lesions for which 1-stage surgical treatment could be considered without
preliminary biopsy in an era when preoperative wire localization was the primary breast interven-
tional procedure. Nowadays, given the widespread acceptance of imaging-guided percutaneous
biopsy, 1-stage surgery rarely if ever is performed. Rather, current oncologic management almost
ACR BI-RADS?(R) ATLAS ? BREAST ULTRASOUND
American College of Radiology 131
always involves tissue diagnosis of malignancy via percutaneous tissue sampling to facilitate
treatment options, such as when sentinel node imaging is included in surgical management or
when neoadjuvant chemotherapy is administered prior to surgery. Therefore, the current ratio-
nale for using a category 5 assessment is to identify lesions for which any nonmalignant percu-
taneous tissue diagnosis is considered discordant, resulting in the recommendation for repeat
(usually vacuum-assisted or surgical) biopsy. Also note that whereas the fourth edition simply
indicated that ?appropriate action should be taken? as management for category 5 assessments,
the fifth edition provides the more directed management recommendation that ?biopsy should
be performed in the absence of clinical contraindication.? This new text unequivocally specifies
tissue diagnosis as the interpreting physician?s management recommendation for category 5
assessments, appropriately and effectively transferring the burden of establishing a contraindi-
cation to this recommendation to the referring clinician.
Category 6: Known Biopsy-Proven Malignancy
This category is reserved for examinations performed after biopsy proof of malignancy (imaging
performed after percutaneous biopsy but prior to surgical excision), in which there are no abnor-
malities other than the known cancer that might need additional evaluation.
132 American College of Radiology
C. WORDING THE REPORT
When performed concurrently, breast US examinations are sometimes reported separately from
mammography examinations and sometimes reported as part of a combined examination. In both
situations, the current examination should be compared to prior examination(s) when appropriate.
The indication for examination, such as screening or diagnostic (targeted), should be stated. The re-
port should be organized with a brief description of the composition of the breast (screening only)
and any pertinent findings, followed by the assessment and management recommendations. Any
verbal discussions between the interpreting physician and the referring clinician or patient should
be documented in the original report or in an addendum to the report.
The report should be succinct, using terminology from the latest approved lexicon without em-
bellishment. Definitions of lexicon terms for mammographic findings should not appear in the
report narrative. Following the impression section and the (concordant) management recom-
mendation section of the report, both the assessment category number and text for the assess-
ment category should be stated. Other aspects of the report should comply with the ACR Practice
Guideline for Communication of Diagnostic Imaging Findings.5
REFERENCES
1. Gordon PB, Gagnon FA, Lanzkowsky L. Solid breast masses diagnosed as fibroadenoma at fine needle aspira-
tion biopsy: acceptable rates of growth at long-term follow-up. Radiology ):233?238.
2 Berg WA, Sechtin AG, Marques H, Zhang Z. Cystic breast lesions and the ACRIN 6666 experience. Radiol Clin
North Am ?987.
3. Berg WA, Blume JD, Cormack JB, Mendelson EB, Madsen EL. Lesion detection and characterization in a breast
US phantom: results of the ACRIN 6666 Investigators. Radiology 3?702.
4. Sickles EA. Periodic mammographic follow-up of probably benign lesions: results in 3,184 consecutive cases.
Radiology 1991(2); 179:463?468.
5. American College of Radiology. ACR practice guideline for communication of diagnostic imaging findings.
(http://www.acr.org/~/media/ACR/Documents/PGTS/guidelines/Comm_Diag_Imaging.pdf). Accessed No-
vember 11, 2013.
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