Women with Breast
Cancer Detected by Mammography Screening Have Better Outcomes
Behind the Cancer Headlines®
Women who have breast cancer detected by mammography screening
have a reduced risk of distant tumor recurrence than women with breast cancer
detected outside of screening, according to a study published in the
Journal of the American Medical Association.
The incidence of cancerous tumors detected by mammography screening is increasing due to its expanding use, according to background information in the article. Selection of therapies for women diagnosed as having breast cancer is based on risk estimations for cancer recurrence.
Heikki
Joensuu, M.D., of
The researchers found that women with cancerous tumors detected by mammography screening had better estimated 10-year distant (other location in the body) disease-free survival than women with tumors found outside of screening. In analysis that included factors related to the biological aspects of the cancers, women with tumors detected outside of screening had a 90 percent increased risk for distant recurrence than women with tumors detected by mammography screening.
"Cancerous tumor detection in mammography screening was a favorable prognostic variable independent of the number of axillary lymph nodes, the primary tumor size, age at cancer detection, and the histological grade," the authors write. "Further research on factors related to cancer invasiveness and metastasis formation needs to be performed. For women with cancerous tumors detected by mammography screening, the risk of distant metastases may be overestimated unless the method of detection is taken into account in risk estimations."
SOURCE:
Journal of the American
Medical Association,