April 20, 2015

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New breast cancer screening analysis confirms biennial interval optimal for average risk women

Mammograms showing a normal breast (left) and a breast with cancer (right). Credit: Public Domain
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Mammograms showing a normal breast (left) and a breast with cancer (right). Credit: Public Domain

Results from a second comprehensive analysis of mammography screening, this time using data from digital mammography, confirms findings from a 2009 analysis of film mammography: biennial (every two years) screening offers a favorable balance of benefits to harm for women ages 50 to 74 who have an average risk of developing breast cancer.

A technical report of the analysis is posted on the US Preventive Services Task Force's website and is cited as one piece of evidence for its 2015 draft recommendations for screening with mammography.

The new results represent a unanimous consensus of six independent modeling research teams from eight academic institutions that are part of CISNET, the NCI-funded Cancer Intervention and Surveillance Modeling Network, as well as researchers from the Breast Cancer Surveillance Consortium (BCSC).

The new CISNET/BCSC study used the six different simulation models to analyze 10 different digital breast cancer screening strategies for the U.S. female population with varying risk levels and competing causes of death other than breast cancer.

"No individual woman should base her decision on when to screen for breast cancer on these model findings," says the paper's lead author, Jeanne S. Mandelblatt, MD, MPH, of Georgetown Lombardi Comprehensive Cancer Center, a CISNET member. "We are modeling the population. The right answer about when to start screening and how often to have mammography will be determined individually, based on a woman's own risk and her preference for going through possible false positive tests. No model can provide answers to that.

"The tradeoff a woman is faced with is that every time she undergoes a screening test, she runs a risk of having a false-positive result that might lead to more testing and biopsies, or perhaps overtreatment," Mandelblatt says. "Overtreatment occurs when a women gets surgery, chemotherapy, and/or radiation for a cancer that is not destined to become life threatening."

The researchers used their models to examine screening strategies with different starting ages (40, 45 or 50), stopping ages, and one- or two-year intervals between screening exams. The modeling uses national data on breast cancer incidence, risks for breast cancer, mammography characteristics, treatment effects, and risk of dying from other diseases and then estimates the lifetime impact (outcomes including benefits and harms) of mammography across the course of life.

The new analysis also incorporated four molecular subtypes of breast cancer based on hormone receptor and HER2 status, newer treatments, and information from digital screening and breast density. (Studies have suggested that women with dense breasts are more prone to cancer development. Tumors are also harder to find in dense tissue.)

Among the other modeling findings is that:

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