Women in Their 40s Need Annual Mammogram
The American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists (ACOG) has released new guidelines for mammography that call for annual mammograms for all women, beginning at age 40.
The new guidelines differ from the group's previous recommendation of a mammogram once every two years.
The advice also conflicts with that of the U.S Preventive Services Task Force, which changed its recommendation in 2009 to once every two years, beginning at age 50.
"I am reassured to see these recommendations from the American College of Obstetrics and Gynecology,” says Dr. Nitin Tanna, Chief, Mammography Division and Breast Imaging of Lancaster General Health.
“The scientific studies that incorporate quality mammography examinations have repeatedly shown that mammography saves lives by detecting cancer at an earlier stage," Dr. Tanna says. "This is especially critical for younger women in whom these cancers grow more rapidly and spread much earlier.
He said the best way to detect these earlier cancers in a woman at average risk for breast cancer is through routine annual mammogram screenings starting at age 40.
"For those women at higher risk for breast cancer, mammography needs to be supplemented with additional tests," he says.
According to ACOG, more than 207,000 American women were diagnosed with invasive breast cancer in 2010, and nearly 40,000 died from it. Breast cancer is the second most common type of cancer among women in the U.S. after skin cancer. It may be detected by a mammogram before it grows big enough to cause symptoms - a period know as the "sojourn time."
A key factor in the ACOG recommendation is the shorter sojourn time among younger women. Women ages 40 to 49 have a sojourn time of 2 to 2.4 years, the guidelines said, while those ages 50 to 59 have a sojourn time of 2.5 to 3.7 years, and women 70 to 74 have a sojourn time of 4 to 4.1 years.
"In these younger patients, we have a smaller window because these cancers tend to grow faster, sooner," says Lauren Cassell, M.D., at Lenox Hill Hospital in New York City. "There are plenty of patients who develop breast cancer between 40 and 50. The fear was we would miss these younger patients and see them at later stages."
The American Cancer Society's and the National Comprehensive Cancer Network's screening recommendations are identical to ACOG's new guidelines. The National Cancer Institute (NCI) recommends mammograms every one to two years, beginning at age 40.
The American College of Radiology and the Society of Breast Imaging support the updated ACOG recommendations. These two groups based their decision on data from the NCI that show the U.S. breast cancer death rate - previously unchanged for 50 years - dropped 37 percent since mammograms became widespread in the 1990s.
"This is all based on our best judgment with the best available evidence," says Jennifer Griffin, M.D., at the University of Nebraska Medical Center and co-author of the ACOG guidelines. "Women in their 40s typically have children, some have elderly parents; many are active in the workforce. I don't think we can really underestimate the value of that one life saved."
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