Breast cancer screening demystified
The following commentary is by Dr. Ellen Warner, an oncologist at Sunnybrook Health Sciences Centre, associate scientist at Sunnybrook Research Institute and professor of medicine at the University of Toronto. Her piece also appeared in the Globe and Mail on December 2.
How is it possible? For decades, regular mammograms were
touted as a woman's best defense against the scourge of breast cancer. Last
week, women were told that according to new guidelines from the Canadian Task
Force on Preventive Health Care, mammograms are useless for women in their 40s
and only somewhat helpful for older women.
We've been through this before. Until about 10 years ago,
women were told that female hormones taken after menopause would delay aging
and prevent heart disease and stroke. Then new research studies showed that
doctors had it all wrong. Hormones didn't prevent these diseases and definitely
increased the risk of breast cancer.
It would be logical to assume that the new mammography
recommendations are the result of new studies. But they're not. The Task Force
simply took nine studies done 20 to 50 years ago and drew different conclusions
from the old results. Cynics are screaming that money will be saved, but millions
of Canadian women will be denied a potentially life-saving service.
So let's look at the results of the old studies. For women
over 50, there was about a one-in-four reduction in breast cancer deaths with mammography.
For women in their 40s, a smaller benefit was seen, and only when the data from
all the studies was combined together. There are several reasons why mammography
wasn't more effective. It couldn't detect 20 per cent to 50 per cent of the
cancers. It found many cancers that were already incurable. But most of the
cancers were cured, regardless of how they were detected.
Nothing magical happens at age 50, but, as women age,
mammography is more likely to save lives with fewer downsides. Breast cancer
becomes more common, the composition of the breast changes, making cancers more
visible, and there are fewer hormone fluctuations to cause false positives that
lead to unnecessary tests. One only has to screen 400 women in their 60s for 10
years to save one life, compared to 2,000 women in their 40s. On the other
hand, the younger that woman, the greater the number of productive years added
to her life.
The previous guidelines recommended mammography for all
women ages 50 to 69. For a woman 40 to 49, the decision was to be
individualized based on her own preferences after discussion with her doctor. In
fact, the new guidelines are not that different than the old ones. Mammography
is not only still recommended for women ages 50 to 69, but the age limit has
been extended to 74. While the previous recommended frequency was every year or
two, it's now every two to three years (most studies show every year is unnecessary
and a few show that every three years is safe). For women in their 40s, there
is a weak recommendation for not screening routinely, but this does not mean
that a woman can't have mammograms.
As for monthly breast self-examination, we've known for
years that it doesn't save lives. Unlike mammography, which may detect a cancer
years before it causes symptoms, monthly self-examination probably doesn't find
a lump more than a few weeks earlier than it would otherwise have been found. No
study completed to date has looked at whether annual physical examination of
the breast by a physician saves lives, but it's doubtful that it would if
monthly self-examination doesn't work.
So why the flurry of media coverage? Why the outcry from
experts and the public?
One argument is that these new recommendations are based
on data from outdated mammography. Today's mammography, particularly digital
mammography (think digital camera), finds half the cancers missed by film mammography
in women in their 40s and in older women with "dense breasts." Had the old
studies used today's techniques many more lives would have been saved. However,
over the last 20 years there has also been a marked improvement in breast
cancer cure rates due to treatment advances. It can then be argued that
aggressive, fast-growing cancers, which still can't be cured with today's
treatments, also happen to be the cancers least likely to be detected by
mammography because they grow large enough to cause symptoms between mammograms
(even if done every year), whereas the slower-growing cancers picked up by
mammography (with any techniques) would be cured with today's treatments even
if detected years later without screening.
Unfortunately, there is data to support both the "more
mammography" and "less mammography" camps and, given today's costs and the rate
of change of technology, a new mammography study that could settle the issue
will never be done. Given this uncertainty, it is imperative that high quality
mammography be accessible to any woman age 40 or older who chooses to have it. I
also disagree with the Task Force and believe that there is sufficient evidence
to support digital over conventional mammography.
Finally, every woman should see her doctor to have a
breast cancer risk assessment as the new guidelines apply only to average risk
women. Women with a family history of breast cancer, or other important risk
factors, may need earlier, more frequent or additional screening. And every
woman should be "breast aware" and report any change in
the appearance or feel of her breasts to her doctor.