Women over 70 risk breast cancer overdiagnosis with screening, US study
finds
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[August 08, 2023]
By Elissa Welle
NEW YORK (Reuters) - A new study is raising fresh questions about the
value of breast cancer screening in older women, finding that those 70
and older who underwent mammograms were more apt to be diagnosed with
tumors posing no threat to their health than those who did not screen.
The study by researchers at Yale Medical School, published on Monday in
the journal Annals of Internal Medicine, tracked 54,635 U.S. women 70
and older who received a mammogram - an X-ray of the breast - in 2002.
Women who opted for continued screening were compared to those who chose
not to be screened.
The researchers found that among women ages 70 to 74, up to 31% of
breast cancer cases found among those who underwent mammograms were
overdiagnosed - defined as the diagnosis of a medical condition,
typically through screening, that otherwise would not have led to
symptoms or problems in a person's lifetime.
As age increased, so did overdiagnosis, the study found. In women ages
74 to 84, that jumped to 47% - and to 54% in those 85 and older.
The study also did not find statistically significant reductions in
breast cancer deaths associated with screening.
The rationale for screening is to catch a disease at an earlier stage to
improve the chances of successful treatment. Overdiagnosis might lead to
unnecessary treatments and the accompanying financial and emotional
burdens.
A concern of continued screening in older women is detecting breast
cancers that would never become symptomatic, according to study lead
researcher Dr. Ilana Richman, an internal medicine physician at Yale
Medical School.
"At some point, it's unlikely that knowing about breast cancer earlier
is going to make much of a difference," Richman said.
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A woman undergoes a free mammogram
inside Peru's first mobile unit for breast cancer detection, in Lima
March 8, 2012. REUTERS/Enrique Castro-Mendivil/File Photo
The U.S. Preventive Services Task
Force, an expert panel that makes recommendations about clinical
preventive measures, has recommended that women ages 50 through 74
undergo screenings every two years. But it has said there is not
enough evidence to assess the harms and benefits of mammograms for
women ages 75 and up. The task force is reviewing a draft
recommendation to lower the starting age for regular mammograms to
40.
The American Cancer Society has recommended screening women over 55
if their life expectancy is more than 10 years, whereas the American
College of Physicians has recommended discontinuing screening women
over 74 for women whose life expectancy is 10 years or less.
"It's critical for older women who are thinking, 'Should I continue
screening,' to understand what is the full range of risks and
benefits," Richman said, adding, "I'm interested in what can we do
to help women understand their options."
Oncologists Drs. Otis Brawley and Rohan Ramalingam from Johns
Hopkins University wrote in an editorial accompanying the study that
physicians need new tools to objectively identify the stage and
severity of cancer.
(Reporting by Elissa Welle; Editing by Will Dunham and Caroline
Humer)
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