Despite the urgings of national health
organizations for women to have annual or biannual mammograms after the
age of 40, uncertainty and controversy about the procedure persists.
Based on cumulative evidence, screening mammography has become standard
health care in many countries. However, the value of the procedure has
been challenged by two Danish researchers who reviewed the major
clinical trials of screening mammography declared that five of the
seven trials were flawed and that none demonstrated that it saved
lives.
The report, originally published in the Lancet in January 2000, was
written by Peter Gotzsche and Ole Olsen from the Nordic Cochrane Center
in Copenhagen. It found that most of the seven studies reviewed were
invalid, in part because they failed to assign women to screened and
non-screened groups. The two studies that did randomize women
correctly, the researchers said, showed no value to mammography. Cancer
experts from around the world overwhelmingly denounced this report.
Even the researchers' own institution distanced itself from the report,
stating that the findings had not been submitted to the Nordic Cochrane
Center's usual rigorous review.
After the storm of criticism, the Danish authors have reevaluated their
original data and declared that it "confirmed and strengthened" their
original conclusions, stating that "screening mammography is
unjustified because there is no reliable evidence that it reduces
mortality."
Many women are now wondering if they should continue to have annual
mammograms. After all, for many years women were told to do self
examinations of their breasts, but recently that advice was
discontinued after a large study found it completely ineffective at
reducing the death rate from breast cancer.
However, other experts have challenged the iconoclastic report and
contend that mammography is lifesaving. The American Cancer Society
found no reason to alter its recommendation for annual mammographic
screening for women over 40 years of age. The National Cancer Institute
found that the screening test contributed to a pronounced drop in the
death rate from breast cancer. The study, published in The New England
Journal of Medicine, concludes that 28 to 65 percent of the sharp
decrease in breast cancer deaths from 1990 to 2000 was due to
mammograms. The remainder was due to powerful new drugs to treat breast
cancer.
In the era since mammography has become widely used, the size of tumors
at the time of detection has declined along with the death rate from
breast cancer. During the early 1980's, when only 13 percent of women
in the United States received mammograms, the average tumor size at
detection was about three centimeters. By the late 1990's, 60 percent
of women were having regular mammograms, and the average tumor size had
shrunk to two centimeters, according to data from the Cancer Society
and the National Center for Health Statistics.
This seemingly small difference in tumor size is extremely significant
in terms of prognosis. On average, the larger a tumor is, the longer
(or faster) it has been growing, with a subsequent correlation between
tumor size and metastasis. More aggressive, debilitating treatment must
be undertaken against large tumors, and even with this, survival
chances of women with large tumors are worse than those of women with
smaller tumors.
Of course, there are always exceptions, and some small tumors are
aggressive and spread early, while some larger tumors are slow-growing
and remain localized. Currently, it is impossible to distinguish
between them by mammography. Even after biopsy and microscopic exam, it
is difficult to predict how a tumor will grow.
There have been claims made that the recent reduction in breast cancer
mortality, nearly 2 percent a year since 1990, is due to improved drugs
and treatment. However, there is evidence that early detection has made
a major contribution. A 29-year follow-up of breast cancer deaths in
two Swedish counties published in 2001 revealed a 63 percent decline in
the death rate from breast cancer in women who were offered
mammography, and no decline in the death rate in unscreened women, even
though the same improved treatments were available to all.
Currently, all major U.S. medical organizations recommend screening
mammography for women 40 and older, claiming that the procedure reduces
breast cancer mortality by 20 to 35 percent in women ages 50 to 59 and
slightly less in women 40 to 49 at 14 years follow-up.
Mammography is an imperfect screening tool. It sometimes produces
false-negative results: in women under 50, mammography is likely to
miss 20 to 25 percent of existing cancers, and in women over 50, it
misses 8 to 10 percent. Because of this, when a woman or her physician
feels a suspicious breast lump that does not appear on a mammogram, it
should be examined by some other means, such as biopsy.
Article Source:
http://www.articlesbase.com/careers-articles/womens-health-and-
the-mammogram-controversy-44277.html About the Author
Frank Vanderlugt is interested in women's health Mammogram Controversy. |