lunes, 16 de noviembre de 2015

Towards personalized screening: Cumulative risk of breast cancer screening outcomes in women with and without a first-degree relative with a histor... - PubMed - NCBI

Towards personalized screening: Cumulative risk of breast cancer screening outcomes in women with and without a first-degree relative with a histor... - PubMed - NCBI

 2015 Nov 4. doi: 10.1002/ijc.29912. [Epub ahead of print]

Towards personalized screening: Cumulative risk of breast cancer screening outcomes in women with and without a first-degree relative with a history of breast cancer.

Abstract

Several reviews have estimated the balance of benefits and harms of mammographic screening in the general population. The balance may, however, differ between individuals with and without family history. Therefore, our aim is to assess the cumulative risk of screening outcomes; screen-detected breast cancer, interval cancer, and false-positive results, in women screenees aged 50-75 and 40-75, with and without a first-degree relative with a history of breast cancer at the start of screening. Data on screening attendance, recall and breast cancer detection were collected for each woman living in Nijmegen (the Netherlands) since 1975. We used a discrete time survival model to calculate the cumulative probability of each major screening outcome over 19 screening rounds. Women with a family history of breast cancer had a higher risk of all screening outcomes. For women screened from age 50-75, the cumulative risk of screen-detected breast cancer, interval cancer and false-positive results were 9.0%, 4.4% and 11.1% for women with a family history and 6.3%, 2.7% and 7.3% for women without a family history, respectively. The results for women 40-75 followed the same pattern for women screened 50-75 for cancer outcomes, but were almost doubled for false-positive results. To conclude, women with a first-degree relative with a history of breast cancer are more likely to experience benefits and harms of screening than women without a family history. To complete the balance and provide risk-based screening recommendations, the breast cancer mortality reduction and overdiagnosis should be estimated for family history subgroups. This article is protected by copyright. All rights reserved.
© 2015 UICC.

KEYWORDS:

breast cancer; false positive; family history; interval cancer; mammography; screen-detected; screening

PMID:
 
26537645
 
[PubMed - as supplied by publisher]

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