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New
advice:
Skip
mammograms
in 40s,
start at
50
By
STEPHANIE
NANO and
MARILYNN
MARCHIONE
Associated
Press
Writers
Most
women
don't
need a
mammogram
in their
40s and
should
get one
every
two
years
starting
at 50, a
government
task
force
said
Monday.
It's a
major
reversal
that
conflicts
with the
American
Cancer
Society's
long-standing
position.
Also,
the task
force
said
breast
self-exams
do no
good and
women
shouldn't
be
taught
to do
them.
For most
of the
past two
decades,
the
cancer
society
has been
recommending
annual
mammograms
beginning
at 40.
But the
government
panel of
doctors
and
scientists
concluded
that
getting
screened
for
breast
cancer
so early
and so
often
leads to
too many
false
alarms
and
unneeded
biopsies
without
substantially
improving
women's
odds of
survival.
"The
benefits
are less
and the
harms
are
greater
when
screening
starts
in the
40s,"
said Dr.
Diana
Petitti,
vice
chair of
the
panel.
The new
guidelines
were
issued
by the
U.S.
Preventive
Services
Task
Force,
whose
stance
influences
coverage
of
screening
tests by
Medicare
and many
insurance
companies.
But
Susan
Pisano,
a
spokeswoman
for
America's
Health
Insurance
Plans,
an
industry
group,
said
insurance
coverage
isn't
likely
to
change
because
of the
new
guidelines.
No
changes
are
planned
in
Medicare
coverage
either,
said
Dori
Salcido,
spokeswoman
for the
Health
and
Human
Services
department.
Experts
expect
the task
force
revisions
to be
hotly
debated,
and to
cause
confusion
for
women
and
their
doctors.
"Our
concern
is that
as a
result
of that
confusion,
women
may
elect
not to
get
screened
at all.
And
that, to
me,
would be
a
serious
problem,"
said Dr.
Len
Lichtenfeld,
the
cancer
society's
deputy
chief
medical
officer.
The
guidelines
are for
the
general
population,
not
those at
high
risk of
breast
cancer
because
of
family
history
or gene
mutations
that
would
justify
having
mammograms
sooner
or more
often.
The new
advice
says:
_Most
women in
their
40s
should
not
routinely
get
mammograms.
_Women
50 to 74
should
get a
mammogram
every
other
year
until
they
turn 75,
after
which
the
risks
and
benefits
are
unknown.
(The
task
force's
previous
guidelines
had no
upper
limit
and
called
for
exams
every
year or
two.)
_The
value of
breast
exams by
doctors
is
unknown.
And
breast
self-exams
are of
no
value.
Medical
groups
such as
the
cancer
society
have
been
backing
off
promoting
breast
self-exams
in
recent
years
because
of scant
evidence
of their
effectiveness.
Decades
ago, the
practice
was so
heavily
promoted
that
organizations
distributed
cards
that
could be
hung in
the
shower
demonstrating
the
circular
motion
women
should
use to
feel for
lumps in
their
breasts.
The
guidelines
and
research
supporting
them
were
released
Monday
and are
being
published
in
Tuesday's
issue of
the
Annals
of
Internal
Medicine.
The new
advice
was
sharply
challenged
by the
cancer
society.
"This is
one
screening
test I
recommend
unequivocally,
and
would
recommend
to any
woman 40
and
over,"
the
society's
chief
medical
officer,
Dr. Otis
Brawley,
said in
a
statement.
The task
force
advice
is based
on its
conclusion
that
screening
1,300
women in
their
50s to
save one
life is
worth
it, but
that
screening
1,900
women in
their
40s to
save a
life is
not,
Brawley
wrote.
That
stance
"is
essentially
telling
women
that
mammography
at age
40 to 49
saves
lives,
just not
enough
of
them,"
he said.
The
cancer
society
feels
the
benefits
outweigh
the
harms
for
women in
both
groups.
International
guidelines
also
call for
screening
to start
at age
50; the
World
Health
Organization
recommends
the test
every
two
years,
Britain
says
every
three
years.
Breast
cancer
is the
most
common
cancer
and the
second
leading
cause of
cancer
deaths
in
American
women.
More
than
192,000
new
cases
and
40,000
deaths
from the
disease
are
expected
in the
U.S.
this
year.
Mammograms
can find
cancer
early,
and
two-thirds
of women
over 40
report
having
had the
test in
the
previous
two
years.
But how
much
they cut
the risk
of dying
of the
disease,
and at
what
cost in
terms of
unneeded
biopsies,
expense
and
worry,
have
been
debated.
In most
women,
tumors
are
slow-growing,
and that
likelihood
increases
with
age. So
there is
little
risk by
extending
the time
between
mammograms,
some
researchers
say.
Even for
the
minority
of women
with
aggressive,
fast-growing
tumors,
annual
screening
will
make
little
difference
in
survival
odds.
The new
guidelines
balance
these
risks
and
benefits,
scientists
say.
The
probability
of dying
of
breast
cancer
after
age 40
is 3
percent,
they
calculate.
Getting
a
mammogram
every
other
year
from
ages 50
to 69
lowers
that
risk by
about 16
percent.
"It's an
average
of five
lives
saved
per
thousand
women
screened,"
said
Georgetown
University
researcher
Dr.
Jeanne
Mandelblatt.
Starting
at age
40 would
prevent
one
additional
death
but also
lead to
470
false
alarms
for
every
1,000
women
screened.
Continuing
mammograms
through
age 79
prevents
three
additional
deaths
but
raises
the
number
of women
treated
for
breast
cancers
that
would
not
threaten
their
lives.
"You
save
more
lives
because
breast
cancer
is more
common,
but you
diagnose
tumors
in women
who were
destined
to die
of
something
else.
The
overdiagnosis
increases
in older
women,"
Mandelblatt
said.
She led
six
teams
around
the
world
who used
federal
data on
cancer
and
mammography
to
develop
mathematical
models
of what
would
happen
if women
were
screened
at
different
ages and
time
intervals.
Their
conclusions
helped
shape
the new
guidelines.
Several
medical
groups
say they
are
sticking
to their
guidelines
that
call for
routine
screening
starting
at 40.
"Screening
isn't
perfect.
But it's
the best
thing we
have.
And it
works,"
said Dr.
Carol
Lee, a
spokeswoman
for the
American
College
of
Radiology.
She
suggested
that
cutting
health
care
costs
may have
played a
role in
the
decision,
but
Petitti
said the
task
force
does not
consider
cost or
insurance
in its
review.
The
American
College
of
Obstetricians
and
Gynecologists
also has
qualms.
The
organization's
Dr. Hal
Lawrence
said
there is
still
significant
benefit
to women
in their
40s,
adding:
"We
think
that
women
deserve
that
benefit."
But Dr.
Amy
Abernethy
of the
Duke
Comprehensive
Cancer
Center
agreed
with the
task
force's
changes.
"Overall,
I think
it
really
took
courage
for them
to do
this,"
she
said.
"It does
ask us
as
doctors
to
change
what we
do and
how we
communicate
with
patients.
That's
no small
undertaking."
Abernethy,
who is
41, said
she got
her
first
mammogram
the day
after
her 40th
birthday,
even
though
she
wasn't
convinced
it was
needed.
Now she
doesn't
plan to
have
another
mammogram
until
she is
50.
Barbara
Brenner,
executive
director
of the
San
Francisco-based
Breast
Cancer
Action,
said the
group
was
"thrilled"
with the
revisions.
The
advocacy
group
doesn't
support
screening
before
menopause,
and will
be
changing
its
suggested
interval
from
yearly
to every
two
years,
she
said.
Mammograms,
like all
medical
interventions,
have
risks
and
benefits,
she
said.
"Women
are
entitled
to know
what
they are
and to
make
their
best
decisions,"
she
said.
"These
guidelines
will
help
that
conversation."
___
Medical
Writer
Marilynn
Marchione
reported
from
Milwaukee.
___
On the
Net:
Government
advice:
http://www.ahrq.gov/clinic/uspstf/uspsbrca.htm
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