Breast Cancer Screening Outcomes in Women Ages 40-49: Clinical Experience With Service Screening Using Modern Mammography
Open Access
- 1 January 1997
- journal article
- review article
- Published by Oxford University Press (OUP) in JNCI Monographs
- Vol. 1997 (22) , 99-104
- https://doi.org/10.1093/jncimono/1997.22.99
Abstract
The several randomized controlled trials (RCTs) of breast cancer screening among women of ages 40 to 49 now collectively show a statistically significant reduction in breast cancer mortality. However, there have been numerous recent advances in mammography, such that it now is demonstrably better than when the RCTs were conducted. The use of surrogate measures of screening efficacy (tumor size, lymph node status, cancer stage), readily derived from modern service screening programs, demonstrates how the improved mammography of the 1990s should produce a greater degree of mortality reduction among women ages 40-49 than that already demonstrated in the RCTs. Indeed, these surrogate measures of mortality reduction are as favorable for women of ages 40-49 and 65+ as they are for women of ages 50-64, strongly suggesting that, since modern service screening is accepted as effectively reducing mortality among women of ages 50-64, it should also effectively reduce mortality among women in the 40-49 and 65+ age groups.Keywords
This publication has 41 references indexed in Scilit:
- Interval breast cancers in the Screening Mammography Program of British Columbia: analysis and classification.American Journal of Roentgenology, 1994
- Age-Specific Effectiveness of the Nijmegen Population-Based Breast Cancer-Screening Program: Assessment of Early Indicators of Screening EffectivenessJNCI Journal of the National Cancer Institute, 1994
- Deficiencies in the Analysis of Breast Cancer Screening DataJNCI Journal of the National Cancer Institute, 1993
- The British Columbia Mammography Screening Program: evaluation of the first 15 months.American Journal of Roentgenology, 1992
- STEREOTACTIC FINE-NEEDLE BIOPSY IN 2594 MAMMOGRAPHICALLY DETECTED NON-PALPABLE LESIONSThe Lancet, 1989
- Quantitative approaches to the evaluation of screening programsWorld Journal of Surgery, 1989
- Analysis of interval breast carcinomas in a randomized screening trial in StockholmBreast Cancer Research and Treatment, 1987
- What Can We Learn from Interval Carcinomas?Published by Springer Nature ,1984