Do I Need a Mammogram Before I Turn 45? YES.
Recently unveiled guidelines from the American Cancer Society have increased confusion about screening mammography protocol. DenseBreast-info.org’s Chief Scientific Advisor and breast imaging expert, Dr. Wendie Berg, weighs in. The organization has developed a simple one page fact sheet that addresses:
Do I Need a Mammogram Before I Turn 45? YES.
- The entire reason we screen for breast cancer is to find it EARLY, when most treatable and survivable.
- Breast cancer is the number one cause of death in women aged 35 to 54 years.
- Mammography has been proven to reduce deaths due to breast cancer in women screened beginning at age 40.
- 25% of all years of life lost to breast cancer occur in women diagnosed before the age of 45.
- Women at “high risk” for breast cancer due to known or suspected disease-causing mutation (such as BRCA1 or BRCA2) should begin screening at least by age 30, to include MRI.
What About False Alarms (known as “False Positives”)?
- About 10% of women having a screening mammogram will be called back (recalled) for extra testing or views. THIS IS NORMAL. Among women called back, 95% do not have cancer. If a needle biopsy is necessary, even that is a simple test not much different from a dental filling.
- Newer techniques such as 3D-mammograms are more able to see cancer and there is less need for recall for extra testing.
What About Screening in Dense Breasts?
- Younger women are more likely to have dense breast tissue, which can hide cancer on mammography.
- In women who have breasts categorized as “dense” (heterogeneously dense or extremely dense), adding screening ultrasound after a mammogram can help find more breast cancers. Because ultrasound detects more, there is more to check and ultrasound does also increase the chance of needing a needle biopsy to determine if something detected is cancerous. For more information on breast cancer screening, dense breasts and risk factors, please visit www.DenseBreast-info.org.
Is it Covered?
- Insurance is required in nearly all states to cover the full cost of screening mammography. If requested by a health care provider, additional screening with ultrasound, or MRI is generally covered by insurance after a deductible/co-pay, though pre-authorization may be needed for MRI.
- Diagnostic mammography is performed to evaluate abnormalities on screening or when a woman has signs or symptoms of breast cancer. A deductible/co-pay will typically apply for diagnostic mammography.
FOR MORE INFORMATION ABOUT THE NEW AMERICAN CANCER SOCIETY GUIDELINES AND DENSE BREASTS: AN INTERVIEW WITH RADIOLOGICAL EXPERT, DR. WENDIE BERG
(c) 2015, DenseBreast-info, Inc.
Categories:
Breast Cancer, Health
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