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Featured researches published by P Whelehan.


Breast Cancer Research | 2010

Quantitative shear wave ultrasound elastography: initial experience in solid breast masses

Andrew Evans; P Whelehan; Kim Thomson; Denis McLean; Katrin Brauer; Colin A. Purdie; Lee Jordan; Lee Baker; Alastair M. Thompson

IntroductionShear wave elastography is a new method of obtaining quantitative tissue elasticity data during breast ultrasound examinations. The aims of this study were (1) to determine the reproducibility of shear wave elastography (2) to correlate the elasticity values of a series of solid breast masses with histological findings and (3) to compare shear wave elastography with greyscale ultrasound for benign/malignant classification.MethodsUsing the Aixplorer® ultrasound system (SuperSonic Imagine, Aix en Provence, France), 53 solid breast lesions were identified in 52 consecutive patients. Two orthogonal elastography images were obtained of each lesion. Observers noted the mean elasticity values in regions of interest (ROI) placed over the stiffest areas on the two elastography images and a mean value was calculated for each lesion. A sub-set of 15 patients had two elastography images obtained by an additional operator. Reproducibility of observations was assessed between (1) two observers analysing the same pair of images and (2) findings from two pairs of images of the same lesion taken by two different operators. All lesions were subjected to percutaneous biopsy. Elastography measurements were correlated with histology results. After preliminary experience with 10 patients a mean elasticity cut off value of 50 kilopascals (kPa) was selected for benign/malignant differentiation. Greyscale images were classified according to the American College of Radiology (ACR) Breast Imaging Reporting and Data System (BI-RADS). BI-RADS categories 1-3 were taken as benign while BI-RADS categories 4 and 5 were classified as malignant.ResultsTwenty-three benign lesions and 30 cancers were diagnosed on histology. Measurement of mean elasticity yielded an intraclass correlation coefficient of 0.99 for two observers assessing the same pairs of elastography images. Analysis of images taken by two independent operators gave an intraclass correlation coefficient of 0.80. Shear wave elastography versus greyscale BI-RADS performance figures were sensitivity: 97% vs 87%, specificity: 83% vs 78%, positive predictive value (PPV): 88% vs 84%, negative predictive value (NPV): 95% vs 82% and accuracy: 91% vs 83% respectively. These differences were not statistically significant.ConclusionsShear wave elastography gives quantitative and reproducible information on solid breast lesions with diagnostic accuracy at least as good as greyscale ultrasound with BI-RADS classification.


Radiology | 2012

Invasive Breast Cancer: Relationship between Shear-wave Elastographic Findings and Histologic Prognostic Factors

Andrew Evans; P Whelehan; Kim Thomson; Denis McLean; Katrin Brauer; Colin A. Purdie; Lee Baker; Lee Jordan; Petra Rauchhaus; Alastair M. Thompson

PURPOSE To compare the histologic prognostic feature of invasive breast cancer with mean stiffness as measured with shear-wave elastography. MATERIALS AND METHODS This retrospective study was exempted from ethical committee review. Patient consent for use of images for research was obtained. The study group comprised 101 consecutive women (age range, 38-91 years) with solid lesions identified during routine breast ultrasonography (US) performed between April 2010 and March 2011 and subsequently confirmed at histologic examination to be invasive cancers. Four elastographic images in two orthogonal planes were obtained of each lesion, and mean stiffness values were obtained from each image. Histologic findings following surgery were used for comparison, namely histologic grade, tumor type, invasive size, vascular invasion status, and lymph node status. Relationship between mean stiffness and histologic parameters was investigated by using a general linear model and multiple regression analysis. RESULTS High histologic grade (P < .0001), large invasive size (P < .0001), lymph node involvement (P < .0001), tumor type (P < .0001), and vascular invasion (P = .0077) all showed statistically significant positive association with high mean stiffness values. Multiple linear regression indicated that invasive size is the strongest pathologic determinant of mean stiffness (P < .0001), with histologic grade also having significant influence (P = .022). CONCLUSION In this study, breast cancers with higher mean stiffness values at shear-wave elastography had poorer prognostic features.


British Journal of Cancer | 2012

Differentiating benign from malignant solid breast masses: Value of shear wave elastography according to lesion stiffness combined with greyscale ultrasound according to BI-RADS classification

Andrew Evans; P Whelehan; Kim Thomson; Katrin Brauer; Lee Jordan; Colin A. Purdie; Denis McLean; Lee Baker; Sarah Vinnicombe; Alastair M. Thompson

Background:The aim of this study was to assess the performance of shear wave elastography combined with BI-RADS classification of greyscale ultrasound images for benign/malignant differentiation in a large group of patients.Methods:One hundred and seventy-five consecutive patients with solid breast masses on routine ultrasonography undergoing percutaneous biopsy had the greyscale findings classified according to the American College of Radiology BI-RADS. The mean elasticity values from four shear wave images were obtained.Results:For mean elasticity vs greyscale BI-RADS, the performance results against histology were sensitivity: 95% vs 95%, specificity: 77% vs 69%, Positive Predictive Value (PPV): 88% vs 84%, Negative Predictive Value (NPV): 90% vs 91%, and accuracy: 89% vs 86% (all P>0.05). The results for the combination (positive result from either modality counted as malignant) were sensitivity 100%, specificity 61%, PPV 82%, NPV 100%, and accuracy 86%. The combination of BI-RADS greyscale and shear wave elastography yielded superior sensitivity to BI-RADS alone (P=0.03) or shear wave alone (P=0.03). The NPV was superior in combination compared with either alone (BI-RADS P=0.01 and shear wave P=0.02).Conclusion:Together, BI-RADS assessment of greyscale ultrasound images and shear wave ultrasound elastography are extremely sensitive for detection of malignancy.


The Breast | 2013

The effect of mammography pain on repeat participation in breast cancer screening: A systematic review

P Whelehan; Andrew Evans; Mary Wells; Steve MacGillivray

Uptake is crucial to reducing breast cancer mortality through screening. This review synthesised all available evidence on mammography pain as a deterrent to subsequent breast screening. Ten databases were searched. Studies containing empirical data relating mammography pain to breast screening re-attendance were included (n = 20). In the most robust studies asking women why they had not re-attended, 25%-46% cited pain, equivalent to approximately 47,000-87,000 women per year in England. The most robust evidence for an association between pain experienced at a previous mammogram and subsequent rates of re-attendance suggests that women who previously experienced pain are more likely than those who did not to fail to re-attend: RR 1.34 (95% CI: 0.94-1.91). The complexity of the pain phenomenon and of screening behaviours must be recognised. However, there is sufficient evidence to conclude that painful mammography contributes to non-re-attendance. Given the importance of cumulative participation, effective pain-reducing interventions in mammography are needed.


British Journal of Cancer | 2013

Can shear-wave elastography predict response to neoadjuvant chemotherapy in women with invasive breast cancer?

Andrew Evans; Sharon Armstrong; P Whelehan; Kim Thomson; Petra Rauchhaus; Colin A. Purdie; Lee Jordan; Louise Jones; Alastair M. Thompson; Sarah Vinnicombe

Background:Response of invasive breast cancer to neoadjuvant chemotherapy (NAC) is variable, and prediction of response is imperfect. We aimed to ascertain whether tissue stiffness in breast cancers, as assessed by shear-wave elastography (SWE) before treatment, is associated with response.Methods:We retrospectively compared pre-treatment tumour mean tissue stiffness, with post-treatment Residual Cancer Burden (RCB) scores and its components in 40 women with breast cancer treated by NAC using Pearson’s correlation coefficient (CC), a general linear model and multiple linear regression. Subgroup analysis was carried out for luminal, HER2-positive and basal immuno-histochemical subtypes.Results:Statistically significant correlations were shown between stiffness and RCB scores and between stiffness and percentage tumour cellularity. The correlation between stiffness and percentage cellularity was strongest (CC 0.35 (P<0.0001) compared with CC 0.23 (P=0.004) for the RCB score). The results of a general linear model show that cellularity and RCB score maintain independent relationships with stiffness. By multiple linear regression, only cellularity maintained a significant relationship with stiffness.Conclusion:Pre-treatment tumour stiffness measured by SWE, has a statistically significant relationship with pathological response of invasive breast cancer to NAC.


Chronic Illness | 2008

Promoting early presentation of breast cancer: development of a psycho-educational intervention.

Caroline Burgess; A M Bish; H S Hunter; Paul M. Salkovskis; Michael J Michell; P Whelehan; Amanda Ramirez

Objectives: Women who delay presenting with breast cancer have a reduced chance of survival. Older women, who are at greater risk of developing breast cancer, are more likely to delay presenting with the disease. The aim of this developmental work was to design a psycho-educational intervention to promote early help-seeking by older women with breast cancer symptoms. We also aimed to demonstrate the feasibility of implementing the intervention with women attending for their final invited mammogram in the National Health Service (NHS) Breast Screening Programme. Methods: The intervention was designed to address the factors associated with delayed presentation by women with breast cancer. These risk factors were placed in a theoretical framework to understand patient delay. The intervention incorporated behavioural change techniques that, according to previous research, have been demonstrated to be effective. Results: The intervention was developed in two formats to be delivered by diagnostic radiographers: a booklet alone and a brief interview plus the booklet. The intervention was acceptable to both older women and healthcare professionals in the NHS Breast Screening Programme. Discussion: The intervention will be tested ultimately in a multicentre randomized controlled trial to determine whether it can reduce the proportion of older women who delay their presentation and thereby save lives.


Journal of Medical Screening | 2011

The number of women who would need to be screened regularly by mammography to prevent one death from breast cancer

Valerie Beral; Maggie Alexander; Stephen D Duffy; Ian O. Ellis; Rosalind Given-Wilson; Lars H Holmberg; S M Moss; Amanda Ramirez; Malcolm Reed; Caroline Rubin; P Whelehan; R. Wilson; Kenneth C. Young

The number of women who would need to be screened regularly by mammography to prevent one death from breast cancer depends strongly on several factors, including the age at which regular screening starts, the period over which it continues, and the duration of follow-up after screening. Furthermore, more women would need to be INVITED for screening than would need to be SCREENED to prevent one death, since not all women invited attend for screening or are screened regularly. Failure to consider these important factors accounts for many of the major discrepancies between different published estimates. The randomised evidence indicates that, in high income countries, around one breast cancer death would be prevented in the long term for every 400 women aged 50–70 years regularly screened over a ten-year period.


Journal of Psychosomatic Research | 2009

Promoting early presentation of breast cancer by older women: A preliminary evaluation of a one-to-one health professional-delivered intervention ☆

Caroline Burgess; Louise Linsell; Marcia Kapari; Lynne Omar; Michael J Michell; P Whelehan; Michael Richards; Amanda Ramirez

OBJECTIVE To test the early effects of a novel one-to-one health professional-delivered intervention designed to increase awareness and thereby promote early presentation of breast cancer among older women. METHODS Women attending their final routine appointment in the English NHS Breast Screening Programme received a booklet or a booklet supplemented by a brief interview, in addition to usual care. This was a within-group before-and-after evaluation of the two versions of the intervention. The primary outcome was change in the knowledge of breast cancer symptoms from baseline to 1 month postintervention. Secondary outcomes were knowledge of risk of developing breast cancer, confidence to detect a breast change, and likelihood of disclosure to someone close. Levels of cancer worry and any adverse effects caused by the intervention were also monitored. RESULTS One hundred seventy-six women received the booklet and 116 received the booklet-plus-interview. At 1-month postintervention, the mean number of breast cancer symptoms identified (out of 11) increased from 5.3 by 1 symptom (P<.001) in the booklet group and by 1.9 (P<.001) in the booklet-plus-interview group. Improvements were sustained at 6 months. Positive improvements were made in the knowledge of risk of developing breast cancer and the confidence to detect a breast change in both groups; however, neither version of the intervention had an impact on encouraging women to disclose to someone close immediately on discovery of a breast symptom. No adverse effects were reported, and there was no significant increase in the level of cancer worry. DISCUSSION Both versions of the intervention are worthy of testing in randomized trials to assess the impact on breast cancer awareness and ultimately on delayed presentation of breast cancer and mortality.


international conference on breast imaging | 2012

Comparison of breast doses for digital tomosynthesis estimated from patient exposures and using PMMA breast phantoms

David R. Dance; Celia Strudley; Kenneth C. Young; Jennifer M. Oduko; P Whelehan; E. H. Lindsay Mungutroy

A proposed European protocol for dosimetry in digital breast tomosynthesis (DBT) has been applied to estimate the average glandular breast dose (AGD) for two different DBT units. AGD was measured for the examination of series of women and for breast-simulating polymethyl methacrylate (PMMA) phantoms, thus assessing the suitability of the phantoms used for dosimetry in 2D mammography for DBT dosimetry. For the first system the mean values of the AGD for breast thicknesses of 21mm, 53mm and 90mm, were 1.21±0.06 (2 s.e.m), 2.12±0.07 and 4.90±0.11 mGy respectively. The corresponding values for the equivalent PMMA thicknesses of 20mm, 45mm and 70mm were 0.92, 2.08 and 4.65 mGy respectively. Similar agreement was found for the second system. It is concluded that the use of standard PMMA phantoms of appropriate thicknesses (as used for 2D dosimetry) to simulate the breast in DBT provides a reasonable estimate of the AGD.


Clinical Radiology | 2015

Value of shear-wave elastography in the diagnosis of symptomatic invasive lobular breast cancer

Yee Ting Sim; Sarah Vinnicombe; P Whelehan; Kim Thomson; Andrew Evans

AIM To investigate the contribution of shear-wave elastography (SWE) in diagnosing invasive lobular breast cancer (ILC) in symptomatic patients. MATERIALS AND METHODS A retrospective case-controlled study of 52 patients with ILC and 52 patients with invasive ductal cancer (IDC), matched for age and tumour size, was performed. Breast density and mammographic and greyscale ultrasound features were graded using Breast Imaging-Reporting and Data System (BI-RADS) classification by two radiologists, blinded to SWE and pathology findings. Forty-four benign lesions were also included. The sensitivity of SWE was assessed, using a cut-off value of 50 kPa for mean elasticity. Statistical significance was evaluated using Chi-square and Chi-square for trend tests. RESULTS Mean age for both ILC and IDC groups was 67 years. Mean size for ILC was 44 mm and IDC was 37 mm. The sensitivity for detection of ILC and IDC for mammography, greyscale ultrasound, and SWE were 79% versus 87%, 87% versus 98%, 94% versus 100%, respectively. SWE had significantly higher sensitivities than mammography for the detection of both ILC and IDC (p = 0.012 and p = 0.001, respectively). SWE was not significantly more sensitive than greyscale ultrasound for the detection of either tumour type. Four (8%) lobular cancers were benign/normal at both mammography and greyscale ultrasound, but suspicious on SWE. The incremental gain in sensitivity by using SWE in ILC was statistically significant compared to IDC (p = 0.01). CONCLUSION SWE can diagnose lobular cancers that have benign/normal findings on conventional imaging as suspicious.

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Andrew Evans

Royal Melbourne Hospital

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Alastair M. Thompson

University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center

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