Now, keep up to date
with daily feeds of newly posted stories
about America's Seniors...click on the box
to the left
Mammograms
may detect some Cancers that would gave
regressed
Newswise — Breast cancer rates increased
significantly in four Norwegian counties
after women there began undergoing
mammography every two years, according to a
report in the November 24 issue of Archives
of Internal Medicine, one of the JAMA/Archives
journals.
Rates among regularly screened women
remained higher than rates among women of
the same age who were screened only once
after six years, suggesting that some of the
cancers detected by mammography may have
spontaneously regressed had they not been
discovered and treated.
Throughout Europe, the start of screening
mammography programs has been associated
with increased incidence of breast cancer,
according to background information in the
article.
“If all of these newly detected cancers were
destined to progress and become clinically
evident as women age, a fall in incidence
among older women should soon follow,” the
authors write.
“The fact that this decrease is not evident
raises the question: What is the natural
history of these additional screen-detected
cancers?”
Per-Henrik Zahl, M.D., Ph.D., of the
Norwegian Institute of Public Health, Oslo,
and colleagues examined breast cancer rates
among 119,472 women age 50 to 64 who were
all invited to participate in three rounds
of screening mammograms between 1996 and
2001 as part of the Norwegian Breast Cancer
Screening Program.
They compared these to rates among a control
group of 109,784 women age 50 to 64 in 1992,
who would have been invited for screening if
the program had existed at that time.
Cancers were tracked for six years using a
national registry, and at the end of that
time all participants were invited to
undergo a one-time screening to assess
breast cancer prevalence.
As anticipated, breast cancer rates were
higher among screened women than among the
control group before the final prevalence
screening.
“Even after prevalence screening in
controls, however, the cumulative incidence
of invasive breast cancer remained 22
percent higher in the screened group,” the
authors write.
Of every 100,000 screened women, 1,909 had
breast cancer during the six-year period,
compared with 1,564 of every 100,000 in the
control group. Screened women were more
likely to have breast cancer at every age.
“Because the cumulative incidence among
controls never reached that of the screened
group, it appears that some breast cancers
detected by repeated mammographic screening
would not persist to be detectable by a
single mammogram at the end of six years,”
the authors write.
“This raises the possibility that the
natural course of some screen-detected
invasive breast cancers is to spontaneously
regress.”
“Although many clinicians may be skeptical
of the idea, the excess incidence associated
with repeated mammography demands that
spontaneous regression be considered
carefully,” they continue.
“Spontaneous regression of invasive breast
cancer has been reported, with a recent
literature review identifying 32 reported
cases. This is a relatively small number
given such a common disease.
"However,
as some observers have pointed out, the fact
that documented observations are rare does
not mean that regression rarely occurs. It
may instead reflect the fact that these
cancers are rarely allowed to follow their
natural course.”
The findings do not answer the question of
whether mammograms prevent deaths from
breast cancer, the authors note.
“Instead, our findings simply provide new
insight on what is arguably the major harm
associated with mammographic screening,
namely, the detection and treatment of
cancers that would otherwise regress,” they
conclude.
Editorial: Results
Emphasize Our Lack of Knowledge Regarding
Cancer’s Natural History
“Despite the appeal of early detection of
breast cancer, uncertainty about the value
of mammography continues,” write Robert M.
Kaplan, Ph.D., of the University of
California, Los Angeles, and Franz Porzsolt,
M.D., Ph.D., of Clincal Economics University
of Ulm, Germany, in an accompanying
editorial.
“In this issue of the Archives, Zahl et al
use a clever study design in an attempt to
estimate the value of screening.”
“Perhaps the most important concern raised
by the study by Zahl et al is that it
highlights how surprisingly little we know
about what happens to untreated patients
with breast cancer,” Drs. Kaplan and
Porzsolt continue.
“In addition to not knowing the natural
history of breast cancer for younger women,
we also know very little about the natural
history for older women.
"We
know from autopsy studies that a significant
number of women die without knowing that
they had breast cancer (including ductal
carcinoma in situ).
"The
observation of a historical trend toward
improved survival does not necessarily
support the benefit of treatment.”
“If the spontaneous remission hypothesis is
credible, it should cause a major
re-evaluation in the approach to breast
cancer research and treatment. Certainly it
is worthy of further evaluation,” they
conclude.
...
...
...