American
Cancer Society eases mammogram recommendations
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[October 21, 2015]
By Andrew M. Seaman
(Reuters Health) - In a major shift, the
American Cancer Society is recommending that women at average risk of
breast cancer get annual mammograms starting at age 45 rather than at
age 40, and that women 55 and older scale back screening to every other
year.
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The new guidelines, published on Tuesday in JAMA, fall more closely
in line with guidelines from the U.S. Preventive Services Task
Force, a government-backed panel of experts that recommend biennial
breast cancer screening starting at age 50 for most women.
The Task Force's 2009 recommendations to reduce the frequency and
delay the start of mammogram screening were based on studies
suggesting the benefits of detecting cancers earlier did not
outweigh the risk of false positive results, which needlessly expose
women to additional testing, including a possible biopsy.
When the Task Force first recommended pushing back the start of
mammogram screening from 40 to age 50, many advocacy groups,
including the American Cancer Society, decried the change. Some
experts charged that it would result in more women dying from breast
cancer.
A recent draft of updated guidelines from the Task Force in April
that have not yet been finalized acknowledge some women in their 40s
may benefit, and say the decision of screening women in their 40s
should be based on individual discussions between a woman and her
doctor.
"You see this moving from a one-size-fits-all approach to something
that’s more personalized and more individualized, which is where
medicine is going," said Dr. Kevin Oeffinger, a primary care doctor
at Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center in New York, who chaired
the panel that crafted the new American Cancer Society guidelines.
The new ACS guidelines are the result of a review of new evidence on
the benefits and harms of breast cancer screening. It found that
younger women through age 54 benefit more from annual screening than
biennial screening. Oeffinger said biennial screening among women
older than age 55 is acceptable, because women's breasts tend to be
less dense and their cancers tend to grow more slowly after
menopause.
The ACS guidelines also recommend women continue screening as long
as they are healthy or until their life expectancy falls below 10
years. Dr. Avice O’Connell, director of women’s imaging at the
University of Rochester Medical Center in New York, said the new
guidelines are more moderate and consider women under age 50 more
seriously than those of the U.S. Preventive Task Force. "These new
guidelines provide much better guidance to the clinicians and public
of what should be done," said O'Connell, who was not involved with
the new guidelines.
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The differences between the two sets of guidelines shows there is no
single or correct answer for when and how often women should be
screened for breast cancer, said Dr. Nancy Keating of Brigham and
Women's Hospital in Boston.
Dr. Keating, who co-wrote a commentary accompanying the new
guidelines, said the differences between the two groups emphasize
the need to talk to patients and understand their preferences about
breast cancer screening.
The new ACS guidelines also recommend against clinical breast exams
in which doctors physically check a woman's breasts for lumps and
they stress that cost should not be a barrier to breast cancer
screening. For an uninsured woman, a mammogram of both breasts costs
about $300, according to Healthcare Bluebook.
The U.S. Preventive Services Task Force said in a statement the
group will review the evidence and guidelines from the American
Cancer Society as they finalize their recommendations.
(Reporting by Andrew M. Seaman; editing by Julie Steenhuysen and
Diane Craft)
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