Behind the Screens: Mammograms
By Janine O’Leary Cobb
For most of the 20th century, physicians thought that breast cancer was
a local disease that only spread to the rest of the body late in its course.
Early detection... meant that the cancer would be caught and treated before
it could kill....We know now that breast cancer is an extremely complex disease
that often spreads invisibly through the body when a breast lump is small.
Cancers detected while small may not, in fact, be early. The aggressiveness
of a cancer...helps determine a woman's fate.
--Barron Lerner, NY Times (12/14/2001).
There are three ways in which breast cancer is typically discovered – by
breast self-examination (BSE), by clinical breast examination (CBE) performed
by a doctor or nurse, and by mammography. All three methods have generated
controversy but perhaps the most controversial of all is mammography.
Types of mammography
Mammograms are of two types: screening and diagnostic mammography. The most
widely known is the screening mammogram endorsed by most cancer organizations,
and typically recommended to women at high risk for breast cancer aged 40-49
or for any woman aged 50-79. Women under 40 are not encouraged to have mammograms
unless they have inherited a breast cancer gene or are otherwise considered
to be at exceptionally high risk.
Diagnostic mammography is ordered when an anomaly (abnormality) is found either
on a screening mammogram or during CBE or BSE. Most of the information in this
article applies primarily to the screening mammogram.
What is involved?
Mammograms are conducted by a specially-trained technician (nearly always female)
who escorts the woman into a small room, positions her so that her breast
is squeezed between two plates – once horizontally and once vertically – and
then retreats behind a lead shield to take a picture. Women with very large
breasts may require more than two exposures per breast. The squeezing can
be very painful, particularly for women whose breasts tend to have a lot
of fibrous tissue (fibrocystic breasts) or women with fibromyalgia, but the
pain lasts only a few seconds. Once the plates are checked, the woman is
free to go. Later, a radiologist reviews the films.
Perils of mammography
Aside from the pain involved (and this seems highly variable), there is a degree
of danger to ionizing radiation itself. Although radiologists downplay the
hazards, the cumulative effect of radiation, year after year, may add to
one’s risk of cancer. It is estimated that four films of a regular
mammogram add up to one rad of exposure and that each rad increases the risk
of breast cancer by 1%. Over ten years of annual screening this means a cumulative
increased risk of 10%. This is partly why younger women are discouraged from
regular mammograms. (Women carrying an inherited gene for ataxia-telangiectasia – a
rare degenerative condition -- are highly susceptible to ionizing radiation
damage).
There is also some concern about breast compression potentially causing a
rupture of blood vessels in or around small undetected cancers. This is a theoretical
peril since it is difficult to establish for certain if it warrants concern.
How effective is mammography?
According to the US National Cancer Institute (NCI), mammography misses approximately
one breast cancer in five. Either the breasts are so dense that the tumor
is obscured, or the tumor is “out of the picture”-- deep in the
armpit or higher up near the collar bone. Moreover, even when satisfactory
plates are available, the most experienced radiologist will accurately read
no more than seven out of ten sets of film. Less experienced doctors will
not do as well. These missed diagnoses, or “false negatives,” are
more common for premenopausal women with dense breasts or postmenopausal
women on estrogen therapy.
There are also “false positives.” In about four to five percent
of cases (with some new studies indicating 5-15%) a woman will be told that
she has an abnormality -- a potential cancer that warrants further investigation.
If she is having annual mammograms, her likelihood of receiving a false positive
after a number of years increases. Unfortunately, the resulting investigation
often involves surgical biopsy (and a resulting scar) before she is given the “all-clear.”
Many false positives are based on a diagnosis of ductal carcinoma in situ
(DCIS), a pre-invasive cancer often described as “microcalcifications.” In
about 80% of cases, DCIS never becomes invasive. Furthermore, mortality from
DCIS (~1%) is about the same for women whether treated or untreated.
These are not encouraging statistics and belie the enormous publicity given
to mammographic screening as a way of “saving women’s lives.” In
fact, as the NCI acknowledges, mammography extends perhaps one life for every
1,700 to 5,000 women screened and followed for 15 years. For women between
50 and 69, four out of a 100 will develop the disease, and one in four of
these women will die of breast cancer. In other words over 99% of the women
in this age group receiving mammograms will not materially benefit from the
procedure, aside from peace of mind, and will be exposed to unwanted radiation.
The latest controversy
Most of the claims for the benefits of mammography are based on eight international
controlled trials involving approximately 500,000 women. A few years ago,
two officers of the Nordic Cochrane Center in Copenhagen were asked to investigate
the mortality data from Sweden, which showed no drop in breast cancer death
rates even though women there have been encouraged to have regular mammograms
since 1985. (Cochrane Centers are part of an international organization that
helps people make well-informed decisions about health care by ensuring the
accessibility of systematic reviews of the effects of health care interventions.)
The researchers subsequently published a study that dismissed five of these
eight studies as deeply flawed and, using data from the acceptable studies,
argued that mammography did not affect the mortality rate for women with
breast cancer.
On the basis of this analysis, an independent panel of experts in the US announced
that there was insufficient evidence to show that mammograms prevented breast
cancer deaths. The NCI rejected this opinion and continued to press for screening
mammograms. A year later, the Danish researchers produced a second analysis
suggesting that levels of false positives during screening mammography in the
US lead to unwarranted aggressive treatment and ultimately to a higher than
normal number of mastectomies.
This set the cat among the pigeons and the resulting furor has not really
died down. Swedish investigators, stung by the Cochrane Center analyses, published
a couple of detailed reports contending that breast cancer screening has in
fact led to a reduction in death rates of approximately 20% for women aged
40 to 49, and approximately 30% for women aged 50 to 69. While reassuring,
one must bear in mind that 85% of Swedish women have regular mammograms, with
consistent intervals between screenings. The benefits cited for Sweden would
be attenuated in other countries.
Why is mammography so popular?
One answer is that breast cancer is big business. The mammography machines
and film produced by General Electric, DuPont, Eastman Kodak, Piker and Siemens
are worth millions of dollars and are being constantly updated to produce
sharper, clearer pictures. Personnel from these firms also conduct research
evaluating their products (research used by the cancer societies), sponsor
cancer awareness programs, produce advertising and promotional literature
for clinics, hospitals, medical organizations and physicians, and lobby the
US Congress to promote the availability and benefits of mammography. Mammography
clinics employ thousands of radiologists (five of whom have served as presidents
of the American Cancer Society), as well as technicians, repairmen and a
host of other employees. Breast cancer is an industry and a robust part of
our capitalist economy. Within this environment, women worry about breast
cancer and seek reassurance from technology.
Are there alternatives?
Another reason why mammography is so popular is because there is no viable
technological procedure to take its place. We hear about ultrasound, thermography,
magnetic resonance imaging (MRI), digital mammography and ductal lavage.
Of these, only MRI is mentioned as a possibility on the website of the NCI.
And none has been demonstrated to lower mortality from breast cancer.
Ultrasound imaging of the breast is used to distinguish between solid tumors
and fluid-filled cysts, and can also be used to evaluate lumps that are hard
to see on a mammogram. It is rarely used for routine breast cancer screening
because it cannot consistently detect early signs of cancer such as microcalcifications,
even though microcalcifications may not indicate any real threat.
Thermography uses ultra-sensitive infrared cameras and sophisticated computers
to detect, analyze and produce high-resolution diagnostic images of temperature
variations, which may be among the earliest signs of breast cancer. However,
there is still a need for more research to compare outcomes with other methods.
MRIs are used to evaluate palpable breast masses and to discriminate between
cancers and scars, but false positive results are common. MRIs are therefore
used primarily to assess the integrity of silicone breast implants, of palpable
masses following surgery or radiation therapy, and to detect breast cancer
recurrence where mammography and ultrasound prove inadequate.
Digital mammography – once heralded as a break-through – has been
shown to better facilitate storage, retrieval, transmission and adjustment
of images, but so far has not shown any greater accuracy than standard mammograms.
Ductal lavage – developed by Dr. Susan Love – is very new. It
is a procedure that samples cells from the milk ducts of the breast through
nipple fluid to identify women at high risk of breast cancer. It has been approved
in the US only for high risk women, in conjunction with mammography, and the
first clinical practice guidelines were issued as recently as January of last
year.
What about BSE and CBE?
Breast self-examinations have been promoted for years on the basis that the
earlier a cancer is discovered, the better the prospects of a total remission
(doctors rarely say “cure”). In fact, roughly one-third of breast
cancers are diagnosed in the interval between annual mammograms and over
90% of all breast cancers are detected by the woman doing BSE, in the shower
or, with her partner, during intimate moments. Even so, a recent report published
in Canada has recommended that routine teaching of BSE be excluded from regular
medical check-ups for women of all ages (See A Friend Indeed, Vol. XVIII,
No. 5, Nov.-Dec. 2001).
The rationales for this recommendation were to spare physicians from having
to cope with a roster of breast complaints, and to spare women from the unnecessary
biopsy procedures that often follow. This recommendation did not deal with
the possibility of having nurses teach BSE and the more important aspect of
the sense of control felt by many women who routinely use BSE.
Many women prefer not to do BSE. For those that do, the Canadian Breast Cancer
Network and other breast cancer organizations recommend the use of all screening
tools -- BSE, CBE and mammograms.
A recent and very credible study of clinical breast examination demonstrates
that, when done properly, CBE is as effective, perhaps more effective, than
mammography. The only hitch is that the CBE in this study was performed by
trained nurses who spent eight to ten minutes on the procedure. If our health
care providers were similarly thorough, CBE would be a welcome alternative
to mammography.
A personal note
To date, the evidence that routine mammography screening allows early detection
and treatment of breast cancer remains questionable. The central issue for
women worldwide is the lack of a proven alternative -- which makes the endorsement
of mammography by the NCI, the cancer societies, and organizations that represent
breast cancer survivors, more than understandable.
“
The emphasis on mammograms has put the burden of fighting the disease squarely
on the women themselves,” say Barbara Ehrenreich and Barbara Brenner
(two breast cancer survivors), and what we must do is to “band together
to demand better treatments, more research into the causes of the disease and
more reliable methods of detection.” Amen, say I.
My own experience with breast cancer resulted from a spot discernible on a
mammogram but impossible to feel (even when I knew where it was). After tracking
it for a number of months, I agreed to surgery and radiation. That was five
years ago. Today, I veer between being grateful that the lump was discovered
during a routine mammogram and wondering whether, had it been left alone, would
it ever have amounted to anything more than a small lump? I will never know.
Janine O’Leary Cobb is the founder of A Friend Indeed, and the author
of Understanding Menopause (Key Porter).This article first appeared in A
Friend Indeed,
the newsletter for women in menopause and midlife.
Selected References:
Baxter, Nancy, Can Med Assoc Jrnl 2001;164(13):1837-1846.
Ehrenreich, B. and B. Brenner, www.newsday.com/news/opinion/ny-vpehr282526210dec28.story
Elmore, Joann G. et al, J Natl Cancer Inst 2003;95:1384.
Epstein, S.S. et al, Intnl Jrnl Hlth Serv 2001;31(3):605-615.
Fletcher, S.W. and J. G. Elmore, NEJM 2003;348:1672-1680.
Götzsche P.C. and O. Olsen, Lancet 2000;355:129-134.
Lerner, Barron, The Breast Cancer Wars (Oxford U. Press, 2001).
Miller A.B., et al., Ann Intrn Med 2002;137(5):305-312.
Miller A.B. et al., Jrnl Nat Cncr Inst 2000; 92(18):1490-1499.
Nystrom L., et al., Lancet 2002;359:909-919.
Olsen O., P. E. Gostzsche, Lancet 2001:358:1340-1342.
Tabar L., et al. Lancet 2003; 361:1411-1417.
Mammography: What Organizations
are Saying….
by the editors of A Friend Indeed
As the debate continues
on the pros and cons of mammography, here’s
what a variety of leading organizations, societies and advocacy groups are
recommending for those not at a high risk of developing breast cancer. These
organizations regularly review their recommendations and we’ll keep you
up to date with any major changes in their policies.
Recommends annual screening for those 40 years and older:
- Canadian Breast Cancer Network
- National Alliance of Breast Cancer Organizations, US
- Susan B. Komen Foundation, US
- US Preventive Services Task Force
- American Cancer Society
- National Cancer Institute, US
- American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists
Recommends screening for those 50-69 years every 1 or 2 years:
- Canadian Task Force on Preventive Health Care
- Canadian Cancer Society
- Health Canada
- American College of Preventive Medicine
- American Academy of Family Physicians
- National Women’s Health Network, US
Recommends women be counseled about the benefits and risks of mammography:
- National Breast Cancer Coalition, US
- National Institutes of Health Consensus Conference, US
Adapted from the US Preventive Services Task Force and the N Engl J Med 348;17.