Yearly screening mammography starting at age 40 saves the most lives
Weill Cornell Medical College News Aug 25, 2017
Annual mammograms for women beginning at age 40 prevent the greatest number of breast cancer deaths, according a new study from Weill Cornell Medicine investigators. The findings, published Aug. 21 in the journal Cancer, may help settle an ongoing debate about when and how often women should undergo screening mammography.
Using breast cancer–specific computer models from the Cancer Intervention and Surveillance Modeling Network (CISNET) of the National Cancer Institute, the research team compared three prevailing mammography recommendations from the American College of Radiology/Society of Breast Imaging (ACR/SBI), the American Cancer Society (ACS) and the United States Preventative Services Task Force (USPSTF). The recommendations include annual screenings starting at age 40, annual screenings from ages 45–54 followed by biennial screenings from ages 55–79, and biennial screenings from ages 50–74, respectively.
ÂA lot of press focuses on the risks of screening, which are not unique to mammography, but not the benefits, said first author Dr. Elizabeth Arleo, an associate professor of radiology at Weill Cornell Medicine and a radiologist at NewYork–Presbyterian/Weill Cornell Medical Center. ÂThis is an important study with a bottom line that annual screening starting at age 40 saves the most lives.Â
The CISNET breast cancer models calculate screening mammography benefits in terms of averted breast cancer deaths and years of life gained by screening per 1,000 women; risks focus on the number of screening mammograms performed, benign recalls and benign biopsies. CISNET used data from a single–year cohort of women in the U.S. born in either 1960 or 1970 depending on the CISNET model.
Dr. Arleo and her team used both the 2009 and 2016 models to see how different screening guidelines would affect breast cancer specific mortality. The models showed that the ACR/SBIÂs recommendation of annual screenings beginning at age 40 led to a 39.6 percent reduction of death compared with women who did not undergo screening  the greatest reduction of all recommendations. In comparison, screening recommendations from the ACS and USPSTF resulted in 30.8 percent and 23–27 percent reduction, respectively.
Dr. Arleo said the results were Âpredictable and consistent with diverse data.
Health organizations have been providing conflicting guidelines about when women should start screening for breast cancer with much of the debate focusing on the value of mammograms in the face of false positives and over–diagnosis.
ÂHealthcare costs are steep, she said. ÂWhile some may consider cutting back on screening to lower these costs, our research shows that, in order to save the most lives from breast cancer deaths, annual screening mammography should start at age 40. We need a national consensus promoting this recommendation.Â
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Using breast cancer–specific computer models from the Cancer Intervention and Surveillance Modeling Network (CISNET) of the National Cancer Institute, the research team compared three prevailing mammography recommendations from the American College of Radiology/Society of Breast Imaging (ACR/SBI), the American Cancer Society (ACS) and the United States Preventative Services Task Force (USPSTF). The recommendations include annual screenings starting at age 40, annual screenings from ages 45–54 followed by biennial screenings from ages 55–79, and biennial screenings from ages 50–74, respectively.
ÂA lot of press focuses on the risks of screening, which are not unique to mammography, but not the benefits, said first author Dr. Elizabeth Arleo, an associate professor of radiology at Weill Cornell Medicine and a radiologist at NewYork–Presbyterian/Weill Cornell Medical Center. ÂThis is an important study with a bottom line that annual screening starting at age 40 saves the most lives.Â
The CISNET breast cancer models calculate screening mammography benefits in terms of averted breast cancer deaths and years of life gained by screening per 1,000 women; risks focus on the number of screening mammograms performed, benign recalls and benign biopsies. CISNET used data from a single–year cohort of women in the U.S. born in either 1960 or 1970 depending on the CISNET model.
Dr. Arleo and her team used both the 2009 and 2016 models to see how different screening guidelines would affect breast cancer specific mortality. The models showed that the ACR/SBIÂs recommendation of annual screenings beginning at age 40 led to a 39.6 percent reduction of death compared with women who did not undergo screening  the greatest reduction of all recommendations. In comparison, screening recommendations from the ACS and USPSTF resulted in 30.8 percent and 23–27 percent reduction, respectively.
Dr. Arleo said the results were Âpredictable and consistent with diverse data.
Health organizations have been providing conflicting guidelines about when women should start screening for breast cancer with much of the debate focusing on the value of mammograms in the face of false positives and over–diagnosis.
ÂHealthcare costs are steep, she said. ÂWhile some may consider cutting back on screening to lower these costs, our research shows that, in order to save the most lives from breast cancer deaths, annual screening mammography should start at age 40. We need a national consensus promoting this recommendation.Â
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