Benefits and Harms of Breast Cancer Screening
abstract
This abstract is available on the publisher's site.
Access this abstract nowImportance
Patients need to consider both benefits and harms of breast cancer screening.
Objective
To systematically synthesize available evidence on the association of mammographic screening and clinical breast examination (CBE) at different ages and intervals with breast cancer mortality, overdiagnosis, false-positive biopsy findings, life expectancy, and quality-adjusted life expectancy.
Evidence Review
We searched PubMed (to March 6, 2014), CINAHL (to September 10, 2013), and PsycINFO (to September 10, 2013) for systematic reviews, randomized clinical trials (RCTs) (with no limit to publication date), and observational and modeling studies published after January 1, 2000, as well as systematic reviews of all study designs. Included studies (7 reviews, 10 RCTs, 72 observational, 1 modeling) provided evidence on the association between screening with mammography, CBE, or both and prespecified critical outcomes among women at average risk of breast cancer (no known genetic susceptibility, family history, previous breast neoplasia, or chest irradiation). We used summary estimates from existing reviews, supplemented by qualitative synthesis of studies not included in those reviews.
Findings
Across all ages of women at average risk, pooled estimates of association between mammography screening and mortality reduction after 13 years of follow-up were similar for 3 meta-analyses of clinical trials (UK Independent Panel: relative risk [RR], 0.80 [95% CI, 0.73-0.89]; Canadian Task Force: RR, 0.82 [95% CI, 0.74-0.94]; Cochrane: RR, 0.81 [95% CI, 0.74-0.87]); were greater in a meta-analysis of cohort studies (RR, 0.75 [95% CI, 0.69 to 0.81]); and were comparable in a modeling study (CISNET; median RR equivalent among 7 models, 0.85 [range, 0.77-0.93]). Uncertainty remains about the magnitude of associated mortality reduction in the entire US population, among women 40 to 49 years, and with annual screening compared with biennial screening. There is uncertainty about the magnitude of overdiagnosis associated with different screening strategies, attributable in part to lack of consensus on methods of estimation and the importance of ductal carcinoma in situ in overdiagnosis. For women with a first mammography screening at age 40 years, estimated 10-year cumulative risk of a false-positive biopsy result was higher (7.0% [95% CI, 6.1%-7.8%]) for annual compared with biennial (4.8% [95% CI, 4.4%-5.2%]) screening. Although 10-year probabilities of false-positive biopsy results were similar for women beginning screening at age 50 years, indirect estimates of lifetime probability of false-positive results were lower. Evidence for the relationship between screening and life expectancy and quality-adjusted life expectancy was low in quality. There was no direct evidence for any additional mortality benefit associated with the addition of CBE to mammography, but observational evidence from the United States and Canada suggested an increase in false-positive findings compared with mammography alone, with both studies finding an estimated 55 additional false-positive findings per extra breast cancer detected with the addition of CBE.
Conclusions and Relevance
For women of all ages at average risk, screening was associated with a reduction in breast cancer mortality of approximately 20%, although there was uncertainty about quantitative estimates of outcomes for different breast cancer screening strategies in the United States. These findings and the related uncertainty should be considered when making recommendations based on judgments about the balance of benefits and harms of breast cancer screening.
Click on any of these tags to subscribe to Topic Alerts. Once subscribed, you can get a single, daily email any time PracticeUpdate publishes content on the topics that interest you.
Visit your Preferences and Settings section to Manage All Topic Alerts
Additional Info
Disclosure statements are available on the authors' profiles:
Benefits and Harms of Breast Cancer Screening: A Systematic Review
JAMA 2015 Oct 20;314(15)1615-1634, ER Myers, P Moorman, JM Gierisch, LJ Havrilesky, LJ Grimm, S Ghate, B Davidson, RC Mongtomery, MJ Crowley, DC McCrory, A Kendrick, GD SandersFrom MEDLINE®/PubMed®, a database of the U.S. National Library of Medicine.
Myers and colleagues evaluated 7 reviews, 10 randomized control trials, and 72 observational studies and concluded that there is a mortality benefit associated with breast cancer screening. Meta-analyses of three clinical trials from the UK Independent Panel, the Canadian Task Force, and Cochrane all showed a 20% reduction in mortality with mammography screening. For younger women who were screened at age 40 years, the false-positive biopsy results were higher for annual screening (7%) vs biennial screening (4.8%). No added benefit was found with doing the clinical breast examination in the mammography groups.
So, this ultimately supports the new American Cancer Society guidelines1 by showing that screening is associated with a mortality benefit, but there may be some false-positive results that we will have to deal with. In the end, the few false positives are still worth it considering the 20% reduction in mortality.
Reference