Women are told to delay mammograms

Reba

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This goes against everything that the medics have been telling us for years.

Delay routine mammograms until age 50, US panel says

By Stephen Smith, Globe Staff

An influential scientific panel today jolted widely accepted beliefs about breast cancer screening, recommending that women in their 40s forgo routine mammograms and that older women undergo the test every other year instead of annually.

The US Preventive Services Task Force, established by the federal government to set standards on disease prevention and primary care, concluded that mammography saves relatively few lives in women 40 to 49, and that this benefit is eclipsed by the risks, including tests that erroneously detect tumors when none exist.

The task force used a similar analysis to determine that women from 50 to 74 -- when breast cancer becomes increasingly common -- should be screened, but that little was gained by performing mammograms on a yearly schedule. The panel also found that breast self-examinations are not useful, at any age.

The guidelines, published in the Annals of Internal Medicine, will likely sow considerable consternation among women and their doctors. Recommendations on who should be screened -- and when -- have vacillated for decades, although in recent years, most groups have championed breast cancer screening starting at 40. In fact, the Preventive Services Task Force seven years ago endorsed exactly such a policy. The American Cancer Society and the National Cancer Institute, the government's cancer research agency, continue to advise routine mammograms for this age group.

Women in their 40s clearly have heard, and heeded, that advice: Nearly two-thirds report in surveys that they had a mammogram in the past two years. The test costs about $100 and is covered by many insurance plans.

"My fear is that women will be very confused," said Dr. Eric Winer, top specialist in women's cancers at Dana-Farber Cancer Institute. "I don't think these are black and white choices."

The new guidelines stoked unusually harsh responses for the clubby world of academic medicine. Some prominent breast cancer specialists branded the recommendations as flat-out wrong, with one Boston radiologist, Dr. Daniel B. Kopans of Massachusetts General Hospital Cancer Center, predicting that the guidelines "will condemn women ages 40-49 to unnecessary deaths from breast cancer."

The mammography revisions come amid an intensifying debate about the merits of cancer screening in general. Screening is based on the notion that finding tumors early, when they are most treatable, saves lives. But many of the cancers identified are slow-growing and non-lethal, critics say, raising the question whether the tests identify enough life-threatening cancers to justify the anxiety and sometimes unnecessary surgeries prompted by inaccurate results; and the financial cost.

Screening advocates frame the debate differently: If a single life can be saved or prolonged through early detection, isn't that justification enough?

The Preventive Services Task Force regularly re-evaluates its recommendations on health practices, and the new standards rely on an analysis of many of the same studies used in formulating the 2002 guidelines.

But the panel received pivotal new information from researchers in Boston and elsewhere who developed scenarios to compare the benefits and harm of starting mammography at different ages and with different frequency. Delaying annual screening until age 50, this showed, would prevent one less cancer death per 1,000 women screened. But over a decade, there would also be 900 fewer cancer scares and 63 fewer unnecessary biopsies among these women.

"This evidence we present shines a light on screening for breast cancer, which is sobering in terms of the trade-offs and the amount of benefit," said Dr. Diana Petitti, vice chairwoman of the Preventive Services Task Force and a professor of biomedical informatics at Arizona State University.

Mammograms do identify lethal breast cancer in women in their 40s, the panel acknowledged. When the findings of previous mammogram studies were combined, it showed that women in that age group who undergo screening are 15 percent less likely to die of the disease than women who are not. But the analysis found that 1,904 women in their 40s have to be screened to prevent one breast cancer death, compared with 1,339 women in their 50s and 377 women in their 60s.

For women in their 40s, the panel said, mammography should be limited to women who have been identified as having a high risk of developing breast cancer, which kills about 40,000 US women each year.

There is insufficient evidence, the task force ruled, to reach a conclusion about the value of mammograms in women over 74 -- a change from its previous recommendation.

Using a similar risk-benefit approach, the task force found that conducting mammograms once every two years was 70 percent to 99 percent as effective as annual readings.

Prominent mammography specialists reacted with disdain to the task force's analyses, with some saying the guidelines are based on bad science motivated by a misplaced quest to save money.

"Let me ask you a question: How many cars do you have to put seat belts in to save a life? How many colons do you have to screen in order to save a life? How many people do you have to immunize for the flu in order to save a life?" said Dr. D. David Dershaw, a mammography specialist at Memorial Sloan-Kettering Cancer Center in New York. "These numbers are totally within the acceptable range of what we routinely do as part of a civilized society."

After an intensive review, the American Cancer Society in 2003 recommended that women start having mammograms at 40. The group's chief medical officer, Dr. Otis W. Brawley, stands by that policy.

"As someone who has long been a critic of those overstating the benefits of screening, I use these words advisedly: This is one screening test I recommend unequivocally, and would recommend to any woman 40 and over, be she a patient, a stranger, or a family member," Brawley said.

But a Dartmouth researcher who has challenged the reflexive orthodoxy that cancer screening is always desirable hailed the Preventive Services Task Force recommendations.

"Even if you don't care about money, you have to consider the trade-off of benefits to harms, and all screening has harms," said Dr. H. Gilbert Welch, professor of medicine at the Dartmouth Institute for Health Policy and Clinical Practice. "The recognition that this is a trade-off has become more broadly understood, and that's a really good thing."
Delay routine mammograms until age 50, US panel says - White Coat Notes - Boston.com

What do you think?

For AD women: will this change how often you go for mammograms?
 
I think at age 30 is more reasonable age than at a much later than age 30. My dr was nagging me to go to see dr when i was 33.
 
I believe that women should continue to follow the ACS recommendations and get the mammograms. Young women do get breast cancer and it's best to find it as early as possible. The inconvenience of false positives and further testing is a reasonable precaution.

There is some talk in the medical community about cutting back on pap smears, too. I don't think that's a good idea, either. The reason that cervical cancer is less common and highly treatable is because of routine pap smears. Why wipe out that progress?

Here are the ACS recommendations:

ACS :: American Cancer Society Guidelines for the Early Detection of Cancer
 
I'm concerned that women will have to pay more out of pocket for these tests to continue.

At VA hospitals they have cut out doing routine colonoscopies and eye exams, so they may decide that the mammograms aren't necessary either. :(
 
And who's bright idea it is to cut back on preventative care to reduce costs?

The tests are cheaper than the actual late-term treatments themselves.
 
Even when you have a problem, you have to push the drs to do something about it. I had a tumor that turned out to be benign in my 30's. I saw 4 doctors before I found anyone who would take me seriously. The 4th dr removed it. The other doctors patted me on the head and told me not to worry about it. That doctor said that the tumor was active and that it was good that he removed it.

Women, if you find a problem, keeping going to doctors until they believe you and give you treatment! I worry about women who don't have options to see other doctors and get more opinions.
 
my mother died of breast cancer at 57. Diagnosed when she was 54 but knew there was something wrong long before that (she waited two years before seeing a doctor).

If 45 (or at least a few years before menopause age) is the appropriate age to start test instead of 40 , I would be ok by it. But start testing at the age 50 may be too late for some like my mother.

But every women should be tested for any kind of cancer during their childbearing age because if you find out you are pregnant AND you have cancer, you will have to face the most difficult decision to make: chemo and hurt the baby, no chemo and hurt yourself, or abortion.
 
my mother died of breast cancer at 57. Diagnosed when she was 54 but knew there was something wrong long before that (she waited two years before seeing a doctor).

If 45 (or at least a few years before menopause age) is the appropriate age to start test instead of 40 , I would be ok by it. But start testing at the age 50 may be too late for some like my mother.

But every women should be tested for any kind of cancer during their childbearing age because if you find out you are pregnant AND you have cancer, you will have to face the most difficult decision to make: chemo and hurt the baby, no chemo and hurt yourself, or abortion.
I'm very sorry that you lost your mom so young. I had a friend who died of breast cancer right after her 50th birthday.

I'm afraid waiting until age 50 for mammograms will be too late for many women.
 
I had a friend recently die of stage 4 breast cancer. She was in her 40's. She tried clinical trials for cancer treatment but could not continue. She had taken fertility drugs without being able to get pregnant. There's a clear link between that and cancer. Drs limit how long a woman can take fertility drugs, but apparently that wasn't enough in her case. She was an amazing person and she is sorely missed.
 
Even when you have a problem, you have to push the drs to do something about it. I had a tumor that turned out to be benign in my 30's. I saw 4 doctors before I found anyone who would take me seriously. The 4th dr removed it. The other doctors patted me on the head and told me not to worry about it. That doctor said that the tumor was active and that it was good that he removed it.

Women, if you find a problem, keeping going to doctors until they believe you and give you treatment! I worry about women who don't have options to see other doctors and get more opinions.
Whew, I'm glad it turned out OK for you. I'm sorry that you had to struggle to get the attention that you needed.
 
I had a friend recently die of stage 4 breast cancer. She was in her 40's. She tried clinical trials for cancer treatment but could not continue. She had taken fertility drugs without being able to get pregnant. There's a clear link between that and cancer. Drs limit how long a woman can take fertility drugs, but apparently that wasn't enough in her case. She was an amazing person and she is sorely missed.
Another loss too young, too soon. :(
 
Thanks, Reba. I was lucky to have the resources to keep going.

Here's what younger women need to know:

What Is Different About Breast Cancer in Younger Women?

Diagnosing breast cancer in younger women (under 40 years old) is more difficult because their breast tissue is generally denser than the breast tissue in older women. By the time a lump in a younger woman's breast can be felt, the cancer often is advanced.

In addition, breast cancer in younger women may be aggressive and less likely to respond to treatment. Women who are diagnosed with breast cancer at a younger age are more likely to have a mutated (altered) BRCA1 or BRCA2 gene.

Delays in diagnosing breast cancer also are a problem. Many younger women who have breast cancer ignore the warning signs -- such as a breast lump or unusual discharge -- because they believe they are too young to get breast cancer.

Many women assume they are too young to get breast cancer and tend to assume a lump is a harmless cyst or other growth. Some health care providers also dismiss breast lumps in young women as cysts and adopt a "wait and see" approach.

Breast Cancer in Young Women
 
This goes against everything that the medics have been telling us for years.


Delay routine mammograms until age 50, US panel says - White Coat Notes - Boston.com

What do you think?

For AD women: will this change how often you go for mammograms?

This is exactly what rationing looks like. This is the beginning of rationed care. We know that mammography screening in women in their 40s saves lives. But to recommend holding off until after age 50 is simply medically irresponsible.
 
I'm very sorry that you lost your mom so young. I had a friend who died of breast cancer right after her 50th birthday.

I'm afraid waiting until age 50 for mammograms will be too late for many women.

thanks.Life is just not the same without her. It's like an empty hole. it's been 5 years, but it seem like yesterday she died. I think I would handle it better if she was little older.
 
To be honest, if insurances are forced to foot the bills of cancer patients, with no weasely loopholes, then you know damn well they will do anything to make sure their clients take preventative steps and cover those costs of the tests-- they will foot the bills for mammograms and pep tests just to avoid having to pay for the cancer treatments.

So someone need to pick up the slacks here.
 
thanks.Life is just not the same without her. It's like an empty hole. it's been 5 years, but it seem like yesterday she died. I think I would handle it better if she was little older.
I know what you mean. My mom was not quite 67 years old when she died, and that seemed way too young, too soon to me. It was 16 years ago. I still miss her. Every Christmas I see things in stores and think, "Mom would enjoy one of those" or I go somewhere and think, "Mom would like this place" or my grandsons would do something interesting and I think, "I wish Mom could see the boys do that." She would have adored my grandsons. :aw: Sigh....
 
Sometimes women also delay tests because if the dr finds something and they lose their insurance, they become uninsurable. If the dr finds cancer, she may not be able to pay for treatment because of such high deductibles. It's a hard situation.

One of my kid's preschool teachers have really bad cervical cancer. She didn't take care of herself and have pap smears (always focused on her kids' medical needs). She had radiation treatment that was barbaric because it was her only option. Please don't forget your pap smears! It's treatable when detected early. If we don't take care of ourselves, we can't take care of others.
 
I know what you mean. My mom was not quite 67 years old when she died, and that seemed way too young, too soon to me. It was 16 years ago. I still miss her. Every Christmas I see things in stores and think, "Mom would enjoy one of those" or I go somewhere and think, "Mom would like this place" or my grandsons would do something interesting and I think, "I wish Mom could see the boys do that." She would have adored my grandsons. :aw: Sigh....

yes, I did that today. I saw a woodcraft of Elvis in a store and told my husband I would love to buy that for mom (she loved Elvis, The last trip she took was in Graceland and she LOVED it)
 
yes, I did that today. I saw a woodcraft of Elvis in a store and told my husband I would love to buy that for mom (she loved Elvis, The last trip she took was in Graceland and she LOVED it)
:hug: :P
 
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