Further evidence of benefits of a (non-randomised) breast cancer screening programme: the DOM project.
Open Access
- 1 August 1992
- journal article
- research article
- Published by BMJ in Journal of Epidemiology and Community Health
- Vol. 46 (4) , 382-386
- https://doi.org/10.1136/jech.46.4.382
Abstract
STUDY OBJECTIVE--The aim was to demonstrate the benefits of breast cancer screening on mortality. DESIGN--The study was an evaluation of a breast cancer screening programme by means of different approaches: (1) a case-control study, breast cancer deaths being the cases; (2) comparing the numbers of breast cancer deaths in screened and unscreened women; (3) comparing breast cancer mortality before and after start of the programme; (4) comparing breast cancer mortality in different large cities; (5) comparing screening activity with mortality reduction. SETTING--The setting was a breast cancer screening programme in the city of Utrecht, the DOM project, for women aged 50-64 years old at intake, birth cohort 1911-1925. The programme started in 1974, and there were five screening rounds up to 1984. Participation rate in the first round was 72% (14,697 women). MAIN RESULTS--(1) Screening was protective against dying from breast cancer, odds ratio 0.52, with a stronger effect in older women and no evidence of confounding; (2) risk ratio of dying from breast cancer for women in the response group was the same as the odds ratio, 0.52; (3) breast cancer death rate after the start of the project was nearly 20% lower than before the project started; after correcting for women who could not have benefited from screening the reduction was 33%; (4) a rise in breast cancer mortality in birth cohort 1911-1925 seen in other large cities without a screening programme due to aging of the cohort was not seen in the city of Utrecht; (5) mortality reduction followed the screening activity with a time lag of approximately 5 years. CONCLUSIONS--Early diagnosis of breast cancer by mammography reduces breast cancer mortality in women 50-64 years old at intake; different approaches to the evaluation of the project give different estimates of the screening effect, making clear that the effect depends on the intensity of the programme.Keywords
This publication has 13 references indexed in Scilit:
- Screening mammographyThe Lancet, 1991
- Mammographic screening and mortality from breast cancer: the Malmo mammographic screening trial.BMJ, 1988
- A case‐control study of the efficacy of a non‐randomized breast cancer screening program in florence (Italy)International Journal of Cancer, 1986
- [Influence of relative body weight on the prognosis of breast cancer in women].1985
- The dom project for the early detection of breast cancer, Utrecht, The NetherlandsJournal of Chronic Diseases, 1984
- EVALUATION OF SCREENING FOR BREAST CANCER IN A NON-RANDOMISED STUDY (THE DOM PROJECT) BY MEANS OF A CASE-CONTROL STUDYThe Lancet, 1984
- REDUCTION OF BREAST CANCER MORTALITY THROUGH MASS SCREENING WITH MODERN MAMMOGRAPHYThe Lancet, 1984
- Body Weight and Prognosis in Breast Cancer234JNCI Journal of the National Cancer Institute, 1981
- DOES SCREENING BY "PAP" SMEARS HELP PREVENT CERVICAL CANCER?The Lancet, 1979
- Periodic Breast Cancer Screening in Reducing Mortality From Breast CancerJAMA, 1971