Guest guest Posted September 18, 2003 Report Share Posted September 18, 2003 http://www.thestar.com/NASApp/cs/ContentServer?pagename=thestar/Layout/Article_T\ ype1 & c=Article & cid=1063663809074 & call_pageid=968867505381 & col=969048872038 Sep. 16, 2003. 06:21 AMBreast test results often false In mammograms, we rate poorly Result: Higher costs and anxiety ELAINE CAREY MEDICAL REPORTER Mammograms in Canada and the United States routinely produce more false positive readings than those in other developed countries, according to a new study. The number of mammograms deemed abnormal was 2 to 4 percentage points higher in North America, without any corresponding increase in the number of breast cancers detected, says the study, published today in the Journal of the National Cancer Institute. That leads to unnecessary follow-up procedures, higher medical costs and anxiety for patients, says the study by the University of Washington's Harborview Medical Center in Seattle. It estimates that those costs in the United States add up to an additional $750 million (U.S.) a year. The data looked at 32 studies of community-based mammogram programs in 18 countries, including 12,000 mammograms in British Columbia, which had one of the highest false positive rates in the world. Only 4.6 per cent of the Canadian women — or one in every 22 — who were told they had an abnormal mammogram actually had cancer, a rate of false positive tests slightly behind only those in Hong Kong, Portugal and New Mexico, the study found. Of the Canadian women who had a biopsy because of the mammogram reading, only 27.7 per cent had cancer. By comparison, more than half of North Carolina women who had biopsies based on mammograms had cancer, and more than two-thirds of those in the Netherlands, the country with the best mammogram record. " If you look at these numbers, I'd rather be in North Carolina, " said Dr. Cornelia Baines, a professor in the department of public health sciences at the University of Toronto. " You can see the relief on a woman's face when you tell her that eight of 10 abnormal mammograms are false readings, " she said. " But from a population point of view, eight out of 10 of these follow-ups are unnecessary. " The new study, by a respected research group, is " very, very sound in documenting persuasively this is a problem that is more important in North America than in Europe and other countries, " said Baines, a principal researcher on the Canadian National Breast Screening Study in the 1980s. " If you look at the countries and compare, you have to ask: Why are countries like Iceland and Australia so much better than Canada? " she said. " It goes back to the contrast between entrepreneurial medicine and population programs that are rigorously controlled. " While a number of other possible reasons are cited for the high false positive rate, " I feel strongly this is the unfortunate impact of medical malpractice, " said Dr. Joann Elmore, the study's lead investigator. Failure to detect cancer is the number-one cause of malpractice suits in the U.S., and breast cancer tops the list, she said in an interview. Doctors are afraid not to order more tests for even the slightest possibility of a problem with the mammogram. " Radiologists have it tough, and primary-care doctors are also sued for failing to follow up, " she said. Baines said malpractice is also an issue in Canada, although not to the same extent as in the U.S. " But it's still a factor any doctor would have in the back of their mind, " she said. Another factor is the quality of mammograms, which in the U.S. have been found to be " atrocious, " she said. " There are bad mammograms done in Toronto, too, but there are also good ones. " Financial incentives built into the health care system and how different doctors interpret the tests could be other reasons, the study suggests. Even in Canada, the fee-for-service system encourages more testing, and the Ontario and B.C. breast screening programs have been " basically persuaded that the screening has to occur in private doctors' offices, " Baines said. Elmore said she hypothesized that the study would find higher rates of abnormal mammograms in North America but also that they would detect more breast cancers, which they didn't. " It would be okay if the higher recall rate gave us more bang for our buck, but we didn't find that, " she said. " The majority of recalls were false positives. " The differences persisted in the North American studies even after controlling for the age of the women screened, the number of readers for each mammogram and the number of pictures taken in each mammogram. This isn't the first study to come up with surprising news about mammography. A study by Toronto doctors about a year ago showed no reduction in breast cancer death rates for women who get the screening test in their 40s. And an international uproar has surged in the past year about whether routine mammography saves lives. A Swedish study in the spring of 2002 found screening healthy women for breast cancer reduces deaths by 21 per cent, calling it a modest benefit. NEW WEB MESSAGE BOARDS - JOIN HERE. Alternative Medicine Message Boards.Info http://alternative-medicine-message-boards.info Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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