Controversies in Screening with Mammography
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.3109/02841869709001336Abstract
Screening with mammography in order to detect early curable breast cancer has been widely used during the last 2–3 decades. Especially an overview of 4 randomised trials in Sweden has shown a convincing short-term relative reduction of the breast cancer mortality while the long-term absolute effect on this mortality has been impossible to study due to screening of the control groups after some years. There is, however, rather general consensus about the value of screening in women above 50 years of age whereas screening in the age group 40–49 is still controversial due to the low rate of mammographically demonstrable cancers and the high rate of recalls for supplementary mammography, clinical examinations and biopsies in relation to cancers found. Recent follow-up of the pooled Swedish randomised trials have shown an about 20% almost significant reduction of the breast cancer mortality in women aged 40–49 at randomisation but the design of these trials does not allow an adequate estimation of the extra benefit obtained by starting periodical screening at age 40 instead of at age 50. The author proposes that screening in the age group 40–49 should be regarded as experimental and subject to proper randomised trials of a type on-going in UK and planned within UICC.