Title: Breast Screening Remarks about mammography screening trials
1Breast Screening Remarks about mammography
screening trials
- Anthony B. Miller
- Professor Emeritus, Department of Public Health
Sciences, University of Toronto, - Head, Division of Clinical Epidemiology
- Deutsches Krebsforschungszentrum,
- Heidelberg, Germany
2Cluster randomization in the Swedish Two-County
trial
- Number of Units Women ASP PSP
ASP PSP - Kopparberg 14 7 39051 18846
- Ostergotlund 12 12 39034 37036
3Cluster randomization in the Swedish Two-County
trial
- Nixon et al, 2000
- Fixed effects and a variety of random effect
models show a strong degree of agreement and
yield a significant 29 or 30 reduction in
breast cancer mortality - The heterogeneity among clusters and strata was
relatively small.
4Updated Swedish overview analysis (Nystrom et al,
2002)
- Kopparberg not included
- Ostergotlund - data cited to show that the
screened and control areas had similar breast
cancer incidence and mortality prior to
randomisation
5Ostergotlund breast cancer data (Nystrom et al,
2002)
- Pre-trial period (1968-77) Intervention period
(1978-82) - Incidence
- Invited clusters 162.4 257.9
- Control clusters 162.0 185.8
- Mortality
- Invited clusters 60.6 62.7
- Control clusters 63.4 57.7
6Treatment in the Two-county trial
- Holmberg et al, 1986
- Standard treatment according to stage of disease
was applied to study and control groups - Tabar et al, 1999
- Hardly any prophylactic chemotherapy or hormone
therapy given to women with node positive disease
7Women with breast cancer age 50-59 Survival
during 13 years follow-up
- Trial and group N Alive ()
- Swedish Two county (Late 1970s)
- ASP 349 290 (83)
- PSP 290 221 (75)
- CNBSS-2 (1980s)
- MP 622 515 (83)
- PO 610 505 (83)
8Conclusion on the Two-county trial
- The survival experienced by the women with breast
cancer in the controls, is not the current
expectation. - This must have some impact, perhaps a major
impact, on the estimated benefits that are likely
to be derived from breast screening.
9Cancers found by physical examination alone, when
mammography also used, according to age
- Trial 40-49 50-59
- HIP (1960s) 58 40
- BCDDP (1970s) 8 7
10Cancers found by mammography alone, when physical
examination also used, according to age
- Trial 40-49 50-59
- HIP (1960s) 25 39
- BCDDP (1970s) 45 47
11Recommendation of the Working Group that reviewed
the US BCDDP (1979)
- A trial to evaluate the magnitude of benefit and
net benefit-risk in the use of mammography
screening should be conducted. - CNBSS-2 is the only trial designed to meet this
need.
12Canadian National Breast Screening Study (CNBSS)-2
- 39,405 volunteers age 50-59 randomized with
informed consent to - Annual two-view mammography physical
examination BSE (MP) - Annual physical examination BSE only (PO)
- 5 or 4 screens and 11-16 years follow-up
13Occurrence of Invasive Breast Cancers in CNBSS-2
- MP PO
- Screen detected 267 148
- Interval cancers 50 88
- Incident cancers 305 374
- Total 622 610
- Total in situ 71 16
14Characteristics of screen-detected invasive
breast cancers in CNBSS-2
- MP PO
- Detected by Ma alone PE PE
- Number 126 141 148
- Node positive 20 33 36
- 15mm or more 38 67 72
- with or without mammography
15CNBSS-2 Deaths from breast cancer, 11-16 years
follow-up
- MP PO
- Women years (103) 216 216
- Breast cancer deaths 107 105
- Rate/10,000 4.95 4.86
- Rate ratio (95 CI) 1.02 (0.78, 1.33)
16Performance indicators for women age 50-69, first
screen
- Programme Detection lt15mm
- (/1000) (/1000)
- CNBSS-2 (50-59) 7.2 1.8
- Canada (50-69) 6.9 1.5
- UK NHS (50-64) 6.0 1.3
- Netherlands (50-64) 6.5 1.5
17Performance indicators for women age 50-69,
rescreens
- Programme Detection lt15mm
- (/1000) (/1000)
- CNBSS-2 (annual) 3.0 1.1
- Canada (2-yrly) 3.8 1.1
- UK NHS (3-yrly) 3.8 0.8
- Netherlands (2-yrly) 4.3 1.0
18Conclusion on CNBSS-2
- The benefit from screening derives from the
earlier detection of advanced breast cancers,
coupled with good therapy, not from the early
detection of impalpable cancers. - This is accomplished both by good BPE and by
mammography
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20Updated Swedish overview analysis Follow-up
model, (Nystrom et al, 2002)
- Age RR (95 CI)
- 40-49 0.91 (0.76-1.09)
- 50-59 0.93 (0.78-1.11)
- 60-69 0.73 (0.61-0.87)
- 70-74 1.12 (0.73-1.72)
21IARC Working Group, 2002 (press release, 20
Mar., 2002)
- The group.concluded that the trials have
provided sufficient evidence for the efficacy of
mammography screening of women between 50 and 69
years. - The reduction in mortality from breast cancer
among women who chose to participate in screening
programmes was estimated to be about 35.
22IARC Working Group, 2002 (press release, 20
Mar., 2002)
- For women aged 40-49 years, there is only limited
evidence for a reduction.
23IARC Working Group, 2002 (press release, 20
Mar, 2002)
- The working group also concluded that there is
insufficient evidence that clinical breast
examination or self-examination reduce mortality
from breast cancer.
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26Effect of NHS programme on reduction in breast
cancer mortality, England Wales (Blanks et
al, 2000)
- Effect of Estimate 1990-98
- Screening 6.4 (range 5.4-11.8)
- Treatment 14.9 (range 12.2-14.9)
27Conclusions
- The benefit from breast cancer screening derives
from the earlier detection of more advanced
disease, not the early detection of impalpable
cancers, i.e. from a reduction in average tumor
size from gt 20 mm to lt 20mm, providing modern
therapy is used.
28Conclusions
- The meta-analyses to date have over-estimated the
benefit likely to be achieved by mammography
screening in the era of adjuvant chemotherapy and
hormone therapy - In many countries, mortality from breast cancer
is falling, but the contribution of screening is
small
29Conclusions
- Screening is an expensive use of health care
resources - Screening can not abolish mortality from cancer,
and people who accept screening should not be
deceived that it will - As treatment improves, the benefit from screening
will fall - As prevention improves, the value of screening
will diminish