New guidelines back mammograms starting at
age 40
By Julie Steenhuysen – Mon Jan 4 Reuters
CHICAGO (Reuters) – Mammograms should begin at
40 for women with an average risk of breast cancer and by 30 for
high-risk women, according to guidelines released on Monday by two groups that
specialize in breast imaging, contradicting controversial guidelines from a
U.S. advisory panel last year.
The joint
recommendations from the American College of Radiology and the Society of
Breast Imaging take into account the success of annual mammography screening
starting at 40, said Dr. Carol Lee of Memorial Sloan-Kettering Cancer Center in
New York, whose study appears in the Journal of the American College of Radiology.
"The significant
decrease in breast cancer mortality, which amounts to nearly 30 percent since
1990, is a major medical success and is due largely to earlier detection of
breast cancer through mammography screening," Lee said in a statement.
The recommendations have
been in the works for about two years, but they serve in part as a rebuttal to
guidelines issued in November by the U.S. Preventive Services Task Force, which
recommended against routine breast mammograms for women in their 40s to spare
them some of the worry and expense of extra tests to distinguish between cancer
and harmless lumps.
Those recommendations
contradicted years of messages about the need for routine breast cancer
screening starting at age 40, sparking a rebellion from breast cancer
specialists who argued the guidelines would confuse women and result in more
deaths from breast cancer.
"Amidst all the furor, the ACR and the SBI stand firmly behind their
recommendation that screening mammography should be performed annually beginning
at age 40 for women at average risk for breast cancer," Lee and colleagues
wrote.
The recommendations also
cover the use of magnetic resonance imaging or MRI and breast
ultrasound in women who are at high risk of breast cancer because
they have mutations in the BRCA1 or BRCA2 genes or a family history of breast
cancer.
In these women, breast
mammograms should begin by age 30, but not before age 25, when the risk of
radiation exposure from the mammograms begins to outweigh the benefits of
screening.
Dr. Phil Evans of the
University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center in
Dallas and president of the Society for Breast Imaging, said the guidelines are
based on the latest clinical trial data.
"Where the data was
not present, we looked at recommendations that reflect expert consensus
opinion," he said in a telephone interview.
He said they also help
fill in some gaps in terms of how to screen high-risk women. In women who have
BRCA mutations, the group recommends annual MRI screening, a more sensitive
test, in addition to mammograms starting by age 30.
Women who have a greater
than 20 percent lifetime risk of breast cancer based on family history should
also have annual MRI scans starting at 30.
For high-risk women who
cannot get an MRI, often because of claustrophobia, a breast ultrasound should
be used instead, Evans said.
The two groups did not
consider the harms associated with routine screening at an earlier age, such as
false positive results, which the task force was trying to balance.
"The reason for
that is there have been studies that have shown women would rather have their
cancer found, even if it means having to have a biopsy. The harms, from most
studies we've seen, did not seem to be all that real," Evans said. (Editing
by Philip Barbara)