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    Screenings reduce risk of breast cancer death by 47-60 percent: study


     

    A study from Sweden published in Cancer found that regular, organized breast cancer screening reduced the risk of dying by 60 percent within ten years of diagnosis and by 47 percent within 20 years of diagnosis.

    None of the physician generations before us and not even the current modern therapeutic regimens could control breast cancer to this extent, Dr. László Tabár, Department of Mammography, Falun Central Hospital, Falun, Sweden, and lead author told HCB News. "(Women) should attend high-quality screening regularly, and if they happen to have dense breasts, they should also ask for an ultrasound examination carried out [with] multimodality screening.

    It may come as a surprise that there has been controversy surrounding the value of early breast cancer screening. Dr. Dana Smetherman, M.D., chair of the American College of Radiology Breast Imaging Commission and section head, Breast Imaging at Ochsner Health System, explained that some in the medical community, as well as in the media, have claimed that since the 1980s the massive drop in breast cancer deaths have been solely due to advances in treatment. Smetherman, who did not participate in the study, recommends annual screening starting at age 40.

    This study should put an end to baseless claims that plummeting breast cancer deaths are not due to mammography screening, said Smetherman. In addition, by using a new methodology that calculates the annual incidence of fatal breast cancers, the impact of earlier diagnosis by mammography screening can be directly measured.

    Tabár said that there have been longstanding claims that breast cancer is a systemic disease from inception, and there is no early phase of breast cancer. This would mean that screening would not decrease mortality. For the study, he and his team tracked survival rates of two cohorts of Swedish patients who did or did not receive screenings over a 39-year period (1977-2015), as well as patients in a 19-year prescreening period (1958-1976).

    Today we have eight randomized control trials, each proving that early detection and treatment in the early phase of the disease leads to a significant decrease in breast cancer death, Tabár said.

    He added that with early detection, women could receive significantly less aggressive treatment for the disease, which also lowers treatment costs and suffering. Tabár recommends that mammography screenings be conducted at high-quality imaging centers staffed by radiologists specializing in breast imaging.

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