Mammogram recommendations 'alarming,' could lead to more deaths: expert
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VANCOUVER — A leading B.C. breast-cancer expert predicts an increase in cases and deaths if women and doctors pay too much heed to “alarming” recommendations from a Canadian task force.
Radiologist Dr. Paula Gordon doesn’t deny that screening can occasionally lead to false positives, overdiagnosis and overtreatment. But she said certain studies were ignored — including a B.C. one — that show a 25-per-cent reduction in mortality among women screened by mammograms.
The task force also put too much stock on research that was poorly designed or was done decades ago, she contends.
“False positives can indeed cause harm because they can be traumatizing, and I agree that women should consider the potential harm of screening. But it is absurd that the task force is recommending no self-examination by women [without risk or symptoms] and no clinical examination by family doctors,” said Gordon, who was reacting to the task force report as chairwoman of an early detection working group of the Canadian Breast Cancer Foundation (BC/Yukon). She is also medical director of the breast health program at B.C. Women’s Hospital.
“This puts us back to the 1960s because the task force relied on old trials using equipment that is now obsolete. So it’s advising women in their 40s to make decisions based on scientific evidence that is older than they are,” said Gordon, referring to the advice against regular screening for low-risk women aged 40 to 49.
Gordon said mammograms do turn up abnormalities that are not cancerous, but false positives are inevitable and occur in all screening tests, including pap smears for cervical cancer. However, she cited surveys that show even with the risks of false positives, women would still rather have tests or even biopsies done, rather than delay diagnosis and treatment.
As to the task force’s recommendation that women at average risk of breast cancer have no need to routinely examine themselves or seek the same from doctors, “women are effectively being told to wait till they see a lump in their breast in the mirror before they seek treatment.
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