I had to go to work and spend 2 hours with a bunch of oncology nurses....who cannot believe these recommendations! I hope it's okay to post this news report. The doctor quoted was my doctor who I saw after my first mammogram/biopsy/lumpectomy.
I want to wish those survivors who have posted continued good health and those dealing with this disease hope for a healthy future! We have come a long way in dealing with bc over the past decade.
Mayo: Don't skip the mammograms
11/17/2009 9:05:01 AM
Comments (25)
By Jeff Hansel
Post-Bulletin, Rochester MN
An independent government-appointed panel is challenging the current methods for breast cancer screening in women, citing evidence that the potential harm of having annual exams beginning at age 40 is greater than the benefit.
Mayo Clinic Key Messages
Mayo Clinic advice:
Keep your appointments for breast screening and discuss any concerns with health providers.
Be familiar with your breasts. If there are any changes, bring this to doctors' attention promptly.
Women at high risk for breast cancer due to family history and/or genetic profile should follow health-team advice.
(Source: Mayo Clinic)
Old way:
Mammograms every year starting at age 40
Breast self exams recommended
Task force recommends:
Mammograms every two years -- not starting until age 50 -- and continuing through age 74, except when a patient is at high risk (when screening would be done earlier). The choice of whether to start earlier than 50 "should be an individual one and take patient context into account, including the patient's values regarding specific benefits and harms."
Mayo Clinic, though, plans to keep following American Cancer Society advice of women age 40 and older have annual mammography screening, said Dr. Sandhya Pruthi, director of the Mayo Breast Diagnostic Clinic.
"This is not going to affect our practice. However, it's going to have patients up in arms," Pruthi said.
Patty Allen, co-founder of Join the Journey, a Rochester non-profit organization that raises money for cancer education, support and awareness, was aghast at the report.
"To come out with a statement like that's a big, fat waste of time -- is just the dumbest thing I've ever heard, that's my take on it. You're just reversing years of public education," Allen said. "... if it's based on science, what can I say, except I think it confuses people." It's unclear what will happen with insurance and Medicare coverage.
But the U.S. Preventive Services Task Force in its report says "false positives, unnecessary biopsies, and overdiagnosis" are problems for women under 50. Also, a breast self exam "does not reduce breast cancer mortality," says a task force article posted online in the Annals of Internal Medicine, the journal of the American College of Physicians.
Mayo, however, said, "data from multiple long-term studies show that routine mammography screening for breast cancer, and subsequent treatment, lowers a woman's risk of dying from the disease by at least 20 percent, compared with women who do not get screened." Pruthi continues to educate and encourage patients to do breast self exams. Also, mammography before age 50 has been shown to decrease mortality, she said, which the journal article acknowledges despite its recommendations.
The journal article says "to extend one woman's life," 1,904 women age 40 to 49 would have to get screened, versus 1,339 to have the same effect between ages 50 and 59 (because breast cancer risk rises with age).
"I was 48 with no risk factors, no history -- nothing. I just went in for a routine mammogram every year ... they found a cancer," said Allen.
When was the last time Pruthi diagnosed a 40-something woman with breast cancer?
"Today -- I see it every day. My colleagues and I diagnose women every day in their 30s and 40s."
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