Guest guest Posted October 17, 2005 Report Share Posted October 17, 2005 16 Oct 2005 22:40:35 -0000 " Cancer Decisions " < THE MOSS REPORTS Newsletter (10/16/05) ---------------------- Ralph W. Moss, Ph.D. Weekly CancerDecisions.com Newsletter #206 10/16/05 ---------------------- THE MOSS REPORTS CANCER DECISIONS NEWSLETTER It is a modern day mantra, endlessly repeated and unquestioningly accepted, that screening for cancer offers the best chance of early detection and therefore saves lives. But is this really true? Last week I began a discussion of the rationale for, and the scientific basis of, screening mammography. That discussion continues this week. To read this week's newsletter, please click or go to: http://www.cancerdecisions.com/101605.html MAMMOGRAPHY – THE HIDDEN DOWNSIDE, PART TWO Last week I began a discussion of mammography. That discussion continues this week. Mammography Does Not Predict Cure Before a breast malignancy becomes detectable by mammography it has typically been present for 8 years. It is also worth remembering that simply because a tumor is detected by mammography does not necessarily mean that it will be cured. For example, half of the breast cancer deaths recorded in two important Swedish studies of screening were among women whose tumors had first been discovered by mammography (Duffy 1991). Consider this: while 6 out of 1,000 50-year old women may die in the next 10 years if they do not have mammography, as many as 4 in 1,000 will still die even though they have had regular mammograms. The benefit conferred by mammography for this group of 1,000 women therefore works out to just 2 lives saved over a period of 10 years. Mammography is also not very sensitive, particularly for younger women. In younger women the breast tissue tends to be denser than it is in postmenopausal women, making the recorded film image much more difficult to interpret. This in turn can lead to an increased likelihood of misinterpretation of the radiographic image. The same is true of a substantial proportion of postmenopausal women who are taking estrogen supplements or hormone replacement therapy. These supplements can increase breast density, making mammograms just as hard to read as those of younger women with dense breast tissue. The advent of digital mammography, in which the traditional X-ray film is replaced by a digitized, computer-enhanced image of the breast, may make the imaging of denser breast tissue more accurate, and according to a study published in the New England Journal of Medicine in September 2005 this technique has already shown itself to be better than traditional film mammography at identifying suspicious lesions in women with radiographically dense breast tissue (Pisano 2005). Mammography has a high false positive rate – that is, an area may be labeled suspicious, and further tests, including biopsy (the removal and examination of a sample of tissue for diagnostic purposes), may be initiated, only to find that it was a false alarm, and there is no abnormality. Mammography, in other words, is by no means fail-safe, and over time, a very significant number of women who undergo mammography will experience at least one false positive test. One study found that if 32 million American women aged 40 to 79 years old received breast cancer screening annually for 10 years, 16 million of those women would have at least one false positive mammogram – i.e., the chance of a woman receiving a false positive test over 10 years of regular mammography is around 60 percent (Elmore1998). If you have ever been through one or more of these " false alarms " you will know the psychological harm that they do. Your life, and often that of your entire family, is put in abeyance, as you hold your breath awaiting the verdict of the radiologists and pathologists in your case. This agony can go on for weeks. The chance of a false positive is compounded by the human factor: all mammograms must be 'read' (i.e., interpreted) by a radiologist, and for many reasons (not least the fear of litigation) a radiologist may err on the side of over-diagnosis, thus adding to the probability of a false positive reading. In one study, for example, almost 60 percent of responding radiologists reported that their awareness of the potential for lawsuits moderately to greatly increased the number of their recommendations for further tests, including breast biopsies (Elmore 2005). Abnormal mammograms are far more common in the US than elsewhere in the world: approximately 11 percent of all mammograms are declared abnormal in the US versus only 2 to 5 percent in Europe. This is not because breast abnormalities are more common in the US than elsewhere, but because there is a marked tendency to over-diagnose breast cancer in this country. Furthermore, skill at reading mammograms varies widely depending on the particular setting in which the mammogram is performed. In the best teaching hospitals and large cancer centers radiologists may well come up to higher standards of excellence than they do in the setting of community health and screening centers. A 2002 New York Times article on this subject exposed some alarming disparities between the two settings (Moss 2002). Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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