Digital Mammography Trial Results
Announced
Women with Dense Breasts, Women
Younger than 50, and Those Who are Perimenopausal May Benefit from
Digital Mammograms
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[NOV. 01, 2005]
Preliminary
results from a large clinical trial of digital versus film
mammography show no difference in detecting breast cancer for the
general population of women in the trial. However, women who have
dense breasts, who are pre- or perimenopausal (women who had a last
menstrual period within 12 months of their mammograms), or who are
younger than age 50 may benefit from having a digital rather than a
film mammogram.
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The results were reported Sept. 16 in a special online publication
of the New England Journal of Medicine and at a meeting of the
American College of Radiology Imaging Network in Pentagon City, Va.
The trial, sponsored by the National Cancer Institute, part of the
National Institutes of Health, was conducted by a network of
researchers led by the American College of Radiology Imaging
Network. "These results will give clinicians better guidance and
greater choice in deciding which women would benefit most from
various forms of mammography," said senior author Etta Pisano, M.D.,
of the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill.
Secondary goals measuring the relative cost-effectiveness of both
digital and film technologies and the effect on participant quality
of life due to the expected reduction of false positives are still
being assessed and will be reported at a later date.
"This digital mammography study demonstrates how new technologies
are expanding our ability to detect breast cancer earlier in more
women,” said Andrew C. von Eschenbach, M.D., director of the
National Cancer Institute. “The study corroborates NCI's commitment
to exploring advanced technologies in a wide range of clinical
applications and the critical role they can play in making cancer a
manageable disease."
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Starting in October 2001, the Digital Mammographic Imaging Screening
Trial enrolled 49,528 women who had no signs of breast cancer. Women
in the trial, at 33 sites in the United States and Canada, were
given both digital and film examinations. Examinations were
interpreted independently by two radiologists. Breast cancer status
was determined through available breast biopsy information within 15
months of study entry or through follow-up mammography 10 months or
later after study entry.
Digital mammography takes an electronic image of the breast and
stores it directly in a computer, allowing the recorded data to be
enhanced, magnified or manipulated for further evaluation. The
electronic image also can be printed on film. Film mammography units
use film to both capture and display the image. The sensitivity of
film mammography is somewhat limited in women with dense breasts, a
population at higher risk for breast cancer.
General Electric Medical Systems, Fuji Medical Systems, Fischer
Imaging and Hologic digital mammography systems were tested in the
trial. Of these, all except for the Fuji system are already approved
by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration and are available for
clinical use in the United States.
An estimated 211,240 women will be diagnosed with breast cancer in
the U.S. this year, making it the most commonly diagnosed cancer in
women. An estimated 40,410 women will die of the disease this year
in the United States.
[The National Cancer Institute] |