Annual Mammograms Don't Reduce
Breast Cancer Deaths, Study Contends: Alternatives promising!
Wednesday, February 12, 2014
“Mammograms
may boost breast cancer risk in women with faulty gene,” the Daily Mail
reports.
The value of yearly mammograms is under fire once again,
with a long-running Canadian study contending that annual screening in women aged
40 to 59 does not lower breast cancer death rates.
For 25 years, the researchers
followed nearly 90,000 women who were randomly assigned either to get screening
mammograms or not.
"Mammography detected many
more invasive breast cancers," said lead researcher Dr. Cornelia Baines,
professor emeriti at the University of Toronto's Dalla Lana School of Public
Health. "Survival time was longer in women getting mammography."
"[However], the number of
deaths from breast cancer was the same in both groups at 25 years," she
said.
"It is increasingly being
recognized that there are significant harms from screening, and that screening
can do much less now than 40 years ago because of improved therapy,"
Baines added. "Twenty-two percent of the mammography group with
screen-detected invasive beast cancer were over-diagnosed and unnecessarily
inflicted with therapy." Less risky and more definitive testing with blood, urine and thermography is providing a more advanced screen tool and is becoming more available to women.
Over-diagnosis is defined as
the detection of harmless cancers that will not cause symptoms or problems
during a patient's lifetime. Additionally, exposure to radiation may be contributing to cancer rates in women who get frequent mammograms.
The study, which began in 1980
in 15 screening centers in six Canadian provinces, was published Feb. 11 in the
online edition of the journal BMJ.
Women who managed a low glucose diet were shown to have lower risk for cancer and it was detected much sooner with blood, urine and thermography testing than those who were tested with mammography alone.
Women who managed a low glucose diet were shown to have lower risk for cancer and it was detected much sooner with blood, urine and thermography testing than those who were tested with mammography alone.
Women in the mammography group
had a total of five mammograms -- one a year for five years. Those aged 40 to
49 in the mammography group and all women aged 50 to 59 in both groups also had
an annual physical exam. Women aged 40 to 49 in the no-mammography group had a
single physical exam followed by typical care.
During the next 25 years, 3,250
women who got screening mammographies were diagnosed with breast cancer,
compared with 3,133 in the no-mammography group, according to the study. While
500 women in the mammography group died during the follow up, 505 in the
no-mammography group did.
In 2009, the U.S. Preventive
Services Task Force updated its recommendations on screening mammograms,
suggesting them for women aged 50 to 74 every two years. Among women aged 40 to
49, the task force recommended only a discussion with a woman's doctor on the
pros and cons of screening. The discussion also lead to conversations regarding the low exposure and advanced warning of the CaProfile testing and thermography.
The new report isn't a
surprise, said Dr. Carol Lee, chairwoman of the college's breast imaging
communications committee. "When it was first reported 20 years ago, it
didn't show a benefit," she said.
Lee said she is "concerned
[the new study] is going to discourage women from having mammograms." (Hopefully it will also encourage doctors and women to seek lest risky and more accurate testing with blood and urine testing shown more sensitive with much higher predictive factor than x-rays like mammograms)
In an editorial accompanying
the study, experts from the University of Oslo, the Harvard School of Public
Health and other institutions agreed with the Canadian researchers that the
rationale for screening needs to be reassessed by policy makers. If the decision about women's health is based on the profit of an industry, it behooves women to take a more active role in the decision making process and seek alternatives to evaluation like the CaProfile and thermograms.
Baines said her research points
to the value of offering screening mammograms only to those at higher risk of
breast cancer.
SOURCES: Cornelia Baines, M.D., professor emeriti, Dalla Lana
School of Public Health, University of Toronto; Carol Lee, M.D., chairwoman,
breast imaging communications committee, American College of Radiology; Feb.
11, 2014, BMJ, online
This story appears to suggest that mammograms
increase women's risk of developing breast cancer. In fact, the research
looked at whether exposure to radiation in general (including X-rays
and CT scans) increased the risk of breast cancer in women who had a
genetic mutation known to increase breast cancer risk. It found
that exposure to radiation before the age of 30 increased risk of
disease in these already high-risk women.
Despite the media headlines, when exposure to
mammograms alone was studied, the increase in risk was not significant,
suggesting this finding could be the result of chance.
The researchers speculate that women with specific
mutations may be more sensitive to the effects of radiation. They suggest that
alternative techniques that do not use radiation (such as MRI or ultrasound)
should be used with women known to have genetic risk factors for breast cancer.
Reassuringly, MRI is already used for breast cancer screening in young,
high-risk women.
It is important that the findings don’t deter
women from attending breast cancer screening. Mammography has been demonstrated
to reduce the risk of dying from breast cancer. Any small increased risk from
radiation exposure is likely to be outweighed by the benefit of detecting
breast cancers early.
Breast cancer screening
The NHS Breast Screening Programme currently
invites women aged between 50 and 70 to attend for breast screening every three
years. The programme is gradually being extended to include women aged 47 to
73.
Women who are considered to be at higher risk of breast cancer are
offered screening more frequently.
Where did the
story come from?
The study was conducted by researchers from the
Netherlands Cancer Institute and various other institutions in Europe and the
US. Funding was provided by the Euratom Programme, Fondation de France and
Ligue National Contre le Cancer, Cancer Research UK and the Dutch Cancer
Society.
The study was published in the peer-reviewed British
Medical Journal.
The research looked at all forms of diagnostic radiation
and did not focus only on mammography.
In fact the link between mammography screening and
higher cancer risk in women with these genetic mutations who had received a
mammogram before the age of 30 was not statistically significant.
The newspaper does not make clear that the use of
screening methods not involving radiation for high-risk women is recommended
‘best practice’ in England (the same is not true in other European countries).
However, access to MRI scanners can be limited so the waiting time for an MRI
scan is often longer than for a mammogram.
What kind of
research was this?
This was a retrospective observational cohort study looking
at whether increased exposure to radiation, such as X-rays and CT scans, was
associated with increased risk of breast cancer in women with a mutation in
BRCA1 or BRCA2, which puts them at higher risk of breast cancer.
The researchers say that previous observational
studies have noticed a link between exposure to radiation for diagnostic
purposes, and increased risk of breast cancer in women with BRCA1/2 mutations.
However, they say that these studies have given inconclusive results and have
limitations such as small sample numbers, a lack of information on radiation
dose and look at only a single type of diagnostic procedure.
This study aimed to explore this association further,
looking at different types of diagnostic radiation procedures and doses of
radiation used, and analysing whether the age at which the women were exposed
to radiation had any effect. A cohort is an appropriate study design to look at
whether a particular exposure (in this case radiation) increases the risk of a
particular outcome (in this case breast cancer).
What did the
research involve?
This study included 1,993 women (aged over 18) who
were identified to be carriers of the BRCA1 or BRCA2 mutation. The women were
recruited to this study between 2006 and 2009, and were all participating in
three larger nationwide cohort studies of mutation carriers in France, the UK
and the Netherlands.
They asked the women to complete detailed
questionnaires containing questions on lifetime exposure to the following
radiological diagnostic procedures, including the reasons they had them done:
·
fluoroscopy – a
type of ‘real time’ X-ray showing continuous images (for example, a barium
examination to help diagnose digestive conditions)
·
conventional
radiography (X-ray) of the chest or shoulders
·
mammography
·
computed
tomography (CT scan) of the chest or shoulders
·
other diagnostic
procedures involving the chest or shoulders that use ionising radiation (such
as bone scans)
For fluoroscopy, radiography and mammography, they
were asked about:
·
ever/never
exposure
·
age at first
exposure
·
number of
exposures before the age of 20 years
·
exposures at ages
20-29 and 30-39 years
·
age at last
exposure
For the other types of radiological examination
they were just asked about their age at exposure and number of exposures. The
researchers also estimated the cumulative radiation dose to the breast.
Diagnoses of breast cancer were recorded through
national registries or medical records. The main outcome of interest was risk
of breast cancer according to cumulative radiation dose to the breast, and
according to age at exposure.
The main analyses focused on a smaller subset of
women who were diagnosed with cancer more recently (1,122 women). If the
researchers looked at women who were diagnosed prior to study recruitment, then
there may have been other women who were diagnosed at the same time, and who
would also have been eligible for the study, but who had died so were not
able to take part. If radiation exposure was linked to poorer cancer outcomes
(women with higher radiation exposure were more likely to die), then the study
could be over-representative of people with less radiation exposure. This
problem is called survivor bias. Therefore, by looking only at women with more
recent diagnoses they hoped to include a representative sample of women from
all levels of radiation exposure.
What were the
basic results?
Radiography was the most common diagnostic procedure,
with 48% of the cohort (919) reporting having had an X-ray. A third of women in
the cohort had had a mammogram, and the average age at first mammogram was 29.5
years old. The average number of procedures performed before the age of 40 was
2.5 X-rays and 2.4 mammograms. The average estimated cumulative radiation dose
was 0.0140 Grays (Gy), ranging from 0.0005 to 0.6130Gy. Of the entire cohort,
848 of 1,993 (43%) went on to develop breast cancer.
Any exposure to diagnostic radiation before the
age of 30 was associated with an increased risk of breast cancer (hazard
ratio 1.90, 95% confidence interval [CI]
1.20 to 3.00). There was evidence of a dose-response pattern with a trend for
increasing risk with each increasing estimated cumulative radiation dose.
There was a suggestion that mammography before the
age of 30 was also associated with an increased risk of breast cancer, but the
link was not statistically significant. While the researchers estimated the
hazard ratio at 1.43 it could have been as low as 0.85 (the CI was calculated
at 0.85 to 2.40) meaning that mammograms may actually reduce cancer risk.
How did the
researchers interpret the results?
The researchers conclude that in their large
European cohort study, carriers of BRCA1/2 mutations had increased risk of
breast cancer if exposed to diagnostic radiation before the age of 30. They say
that their results “support the use of non-ionising radiation imaging techniques
(such as magnetic resonance imaging) as the main tool for surveillance in young
women with BRCA1/2 mutations”.
Conclusion
This study suggests that women who carry the
genetic mutation BRCA1/2 may have increased risk of breast cancer if they are
exposed to diagnostic radiation before the age of 30. The cohort has looked at
a range of diagnostic procedures and radiation doses, finding that risk was
increased even at low radiation doses. The researchers call for diagnostic
imaging techniques that do not involve radiation (such as MRI) to be considered
in higher risk women with BRCA1/2 mutations, and this seems an appropriate
suggestion which will need further consideration. Increase and accumulative effect on cancer rates needs further evaluation and discussion and should include alternative, accurate and effective ways of measuring cancer without radiation.
The study benefits from the fact that it involved
a large number of women with BRCA1/2 mutations.
The media has focused upon the finding of an
increased risk specifically with mammography prior to the age of 30. This link
was not in fact statistically significant. However, as mammography does involve
radiation, a link is plausible. All screening programmes involve a balance of
weighing up the risks of screening against the benefits, but the benefits of
screening, which include earlier diagnosis of breast cancer and improved chance
of successful treatment and survival, are likely to outweigh the risks.
The results do support the use of MRI for
surveillance of young women with BRCA1/2 mutations, and MRI is in fact already
used in the NHS Breast Cancer Screening Programme for the screening of younger,
higher risk women, though it does depend on resources and availability. The NHS
advises that mammography is more reliable for detecting breast cancers in older
breast tissue. The Department of Health’s Advisory Committee on Breast Cancer
Screening is currently developing a practical guideline for the NHS on the
surveillance of women considered to be at a higher risk of breast cancer.
Overall, it is important that the findings do not
deter women from attending for breast cancer screening. The Department of
Health reports that around a third of breast cancers are currently diagnosed
through screening and breast cancer screening is estimated to save 1,400 lives
a year. For most women the benefits of mammography screening are likely to
outweigh any small increased risk from radiation exposure. For higher risk
women, guidelines are likely to consider the risk of increased radiation
exposure and the need for using techniques such as MRI, which do not involve
radiation.
Links to the science
Pijpe A, Andrieu N, Easton DF, et al. Exposure to diagnostic radiation and risk of breast
cancer among carriers of BRCA1/2 mutations: retrospective cohort study
(GENE-RAD-RISK). BMJ. Published online September 6 2012
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