Title: Breast cancer Screening
1Breast cancerScreening
2NHS Breast Screening ProgrammeNHSBSP Publication
No. 61. Feb 2006www.cancerscreening.nhs.uk
- NHS Breast Screening Programme (NHSBSP) began in
1988 - Aims to invite all women aged 50-70 years once
every 3 years - Number of breast cancer registrations has
increased by almost 50 since NHSBSP began - Cancers detected by screening are smaller and
mastectomy is less likely - NHSBSP plus earlier symptomatic presentation and
greater use of adjuvant therapy has reduced
mortality from breast cancer - Mammography screening trials show a 25 relative
risk reduction in mortality (ITT), equates to 35
in women regularly screened - NHSBSP saves an estimated 1400 lives each year in
England.
3Benefits vs. harms of screeningNHSBSP
Publication No. 61. Feb 2006
- About 1 in 400 women regularly screened over a 10
year period will be prevented from dying from
breast cancer - About 1 in 8 women regularly screened will be
recalled for further tests over a 10-year period - Breast cancer will be diagnosed in only a few of
these - Delicate balance between reducing recall rates so
far that small cancers are missed and calling
back too many women causing anxiety and possibly
reducing re-attendance - Among women routinely screened and diagnosed with
breast cancer - 1 in 8 fewer women will die than would have done
if theyd not been screened - 1 in 8 spared mastectomy
- 1 in 8 women have a cancer detected (and treated)
which would not have affected her had she not
been screened.
4NHSBSP Publication No. 61. Feb 2006
Positive predictive value (PPV) of abnormal
mammogram 19 i.e. 19 of people with abnormal
mammogram have breast cancer
5Overdiagnosis in breast cancer screening
(1)Jorgensen KJ, Gøtzsche PC. BMJ
2009339b2587Welch HG. BMJ 2009339b1425
MeReC Rapid Review Blog No. 417
The absolute risks and benefits of breast cancer
screening, including the level of overdiagnosis,
should be communicated to women in a balanced way
so they can make an informed decision to have
screening or not.
- From meta-analysis, the total overdiagnosis of
breast cancer in publicly available mammography
screening programmes was estimated as 52 (95CI
46 to 58) - i.e. about one in three cancers is overdiagnosed
- For every 1000 women (gt50 years) who are screened
for breast cancer annually for 10 years - 1 woman will avoid dying from breast cancer
- 2 to 10 women will be overdiagnosed and treated
needlessly - 10 to 15 women will be told they have breast
cancer earlier than they would otherwise have
been told, but this will not affect their
prognosis - 100 to 500 women will have at least one false
alarm (approximately half these women will
undergo a biopsy).
6Overdiagnosis in breast cancer screening
(2)Welch HG. BMJ 2009339b1425
- Mammography is one of medicines close calls
a delicate balance between benefits and harms
where different people in the same situation
might reasonably make different choices. - Mammography undoubtedly helps some women but
hurts others. No right answer exists, instead it
is a personal choice.
7Summary
- Breast cancer screening contributes to the
falling mortality from the disease - About 1 in 400 women regularly screened over a
10-year period will be prevented from dying from
breast cancer - 1 in 8 women diagnosed with breast cancer avoids
a mastectomy she would have needed, had she not
had the cancer diagnosed by screening - The benefits must be weighed against the harms
- About 1 in 8 women regularly screened will be
recalled for further assessment over a 10-year
period, but very few of these have the disease - 1 in 8 women screened and diagnosed have a cancer
which would not have affected her had she not
been screened.