Screening Mammograms: Questions and Answers
What is a screening mammogram?
A screening mammogram is an x-ray of the breast used to
detect breast changes in women who have no signs or symptoms of breast
cancer. It usually involves two x-rays of each breast. With a mammogram, it
is possible to detect microcalcifications (tiny deposits of calcium in the
breast, which sometimes are a clue to the presence of breast cancer) or a
tumor that cannot be felt.
What is a diagnostic mammogram?
A diagnostic mammogram is an x-ray of the breast that is
used to diagnose unusual breast changes, such as a lump, pain, thickening,
nipple discharge, or a change in breast size or shape. A diagnostic
mammogram is also used to evaluate changes detected on a screening
mammogram. This type of mammogram may be necessary if it is difficult to
obtain a clear x-ray with a screening mammogram because of special
circumstances, such as the presence of breast implants (see question 12). A
diagnostic mammogram takes longer than a screening mammogram because it
involves more x-rays to obtain views of the breast from several angles. The
technician may magnify a suspicious area to produce a detailed picture that
can help the doctor make an accurate diagnosis.
When does the National Cancer Institute (NCI) recommend that women have
screening mammograms?
- Women in their 40s and older should have mammograms every 1 to 2
years.
- Women who are at higher than average risk of breast cancer should talk
with their health care providers about whether to have mammograms before
age 40 and how often to have them.
What are the factors that place a woman at increased risk of breast
cancer?
The risk of breast cancer increases gradually as a woman gets older.
However, the risk of developing breast cancer is not the same for all women.
Research has shown that the following factors increase a woman’s chance of
developing this disease:
- Personal history of breast cancer—Women who have had breast cancer are
more likely to develop a second breast cancer.
- Family history—A woman’s chance of developing breast cancer increases
if her mother, sister, and/or daughter have a history of breast cancer
(especially if they were diagnosed before age 50).
- Certain breast changes on biopsy—Having a diagnosis of atypical
hyperplasia (a noncancerous condition in which cells have abnormal
features and are increased in number) or lobular carcinoma in situ (LCIS)
(abnormal cells found in the lobules of the breast) increases a woman’s
risk of breast cancer. Women who have had two or more breast biopsies for
other benign conditions also have an increased chance of developing breast
cancer. This increase is due to the condition that led to the biopsy, and
not to the biopsy itself.
- Genetic alterations—Specific alterations in certain genes (BRCA1,
BRCA2, and others) increase the risk of breast cancer. These alterations
are rare; they are estimated to account for no more than 10 percent of all
breast cancers.
- Reproductive and menstrual history—Evidence indicates that:
- The older a woman is when she has her first child, the greater her
chance of developing breast cancer.
- Women who started menstruating at an early age (age 11 or younger),
experienced menopause late (after age 55), or never had children are
also at an increased risk of developing breast cancer.
- Women who take hormone replacement therapy for a long time also
appear to have an increased chance of developing breast cancer.
- Breast density—Breasts appear dense on a mammogram if they contain
many glands and ligaments (called dense tissue), and do not have much
fatty tissue. Because breast cancers nearly always develop in the dense
tissue of the breast (not in the fatty tissue), older women who have
mostly dense tissue on a mammogram are at an increased risk of breast
cancer. Abnormalities in dense breasts can be more difficult to detect on
a mammogram.
- Radiation therapy (“x-ray therapy”)—Women who had radiation therapy to
the chest (including the breasts) before age 30 are at an increased risk
of developing breast cancer throughout their lives. This includes women
treated for Hodgkin’s disease. Studies show that the younger a woman was
when she received her treatment, the higher her risk of developing breast
cancer later in life.
- Diet and lifestyle factors—Diet is thought to play a role in breast
cancer risk, although researchers have not yet identified specific dietary
factors that affect risk. Differences in diet may explain the lower risk
of breast cancer among Asian women compared with American women. Studies
have found that obesity and weight gain in postmenopausal women increase
breast cancer risk. A number of studies suggest that moderate alcohol
consumption may also increase a woman’s chance of developing breast
cancer.
What are the chances that a woman in the United States might get
breast cancer?
Age is the most important risk factor for breast cancer. The older a
woman is, the greater her chance of developing breast cancer. A woman’s
chance of being diagnosed with breast cancer is:*
from age 20 to age 30. . . 1 out of 2,000
from age 30 to age 40. . . 1 out of 250
from age 40 to age 50. . . 1 out of 67
from age 50 to age 60. . . 1 out of 35
from age 60 to age 70. . . 1 out of 28
Ever . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1 out of 8
Most breast cancers occur in women over the age of 50; the number of cases
is especially high for women over age 60. Breast cancer is relatively
uncommon in women under age 40.
What is the best method of detecting breast cancer as early as possible?
A high-quality mammogram with a clinical breast exam (an exam done by a
health care provider) is the most effective way to detect breast cancer
early. Like any test, mammograms have both benefits and limitations. For
example, some cancers cannot be detected by mammogram, but may be detectable
by breast examination.
Checking one’s own breasts for lumps or other unusual changes is called
breast self-exam (BSE). Studies so far have not shown that BSE alone reduces
the numbers of deaths from breast cancer. BSE should not take the place of
clinical breast exam and mammography. Mammograms can detect breast cancer
that cannot be felt.
What are the benefits of screening mammograms?
Several large studies conducted around the world show that breast cancer
screening with mammograms reduces the number of deaths from breast cancer
for women ages 40 to 69, especially those over age 50. Studies conducted to
date have not shown a benefit for regular screening mammograms, or for a
baseline screening mammogram, in women under age 40.
What are some of the limitations of screening mammograms?
Finding cancer does not always mean saving lives—Even though mammography can
detect tumors that cannot be felt, finding a small tumor does not always
mean that a woman’s life will be saved. Mammography may not help a woman
with a fast-growing or aggressive cancer that has already spread to other
parts of her body before being detected.
False Negatives—False negatives occur when mammograms appear normal even
though breast cancer is present. Overall, mammograms miss up to 20 percent
of the breast cancers that are present at the time of screening. False
negatives occur more often in younger women than in older women because the
dense breasts of younger women make breast cancers more difficult to spot in
mammograms. As women age, their breasts usually become more fatty (and
therefore less dense), and breast cancers become easier to detect with
screening mammograms.
False Positives—False positives occur when mammograms are read by a
radiologist as abnormal, but no cancer is actually present. Although all
abnormal mammograms should be followed up with additional testing (a
diagnostic mammogram, ultrasound, and/or biopsy), most abnormalities turn
out not to be cancer. False positives are more common in younger women,
women who have had previous breast biopsies, women with a family history of
breast cancer, and women who are taking estrogen (for example, hormone
replacement therapy).
What happens if mammography leads to the detection of ductal carcinoma in
situ (DCIS)?
Over the past 30 years, improvements in mammography have resulted in an
ability to detect a higher number of tissue abnormalities called DCIS. DCIS
contains abnormal cells that are confined to the milk ducts of the breast.
The cells have not invaded the surrounding breast tissue. Eighty percent of
cases of DCIS are found by mammography because DCIS usually does not cause a
lump that can be felt. Some of these cases later become invasive cancers.
Today, it is not possible to predict which cases of DCIS will progress to
invasive cancer. Therefore, DCIS is usually removed surgically. Until
recently, DCIS was often treated with mastectomy, but breast-conserving
surgery is now an option for many women with DCIS. Radiation therapy, with
or without tamoxifen, also may be used. Women who have been diagnosed with
DCIS should talk with their doctor to make an informed decision about
treatment.
How much does a mammogram cost?
Screening mammograms generally cost between $100 and $150. Most states
now have laws requiring health insurance companies to reimburse all or part
of the cost of screening mammograms. Details can be provided by insurance
companies and health care providers.
Medicare pays 80 percent of the cost of a screening mammogram each year for
beneficiaries age 40 and older and one baseline mammogram for beneficiaries
age 35 to 39. There is no deductible requirement for this benefit, but
Medicare beneficiaries are responsible for a 20 percent copayment of the
Medicare-approved amount. Information about Medicare coverage is available
at http://www.medicare.gov on the Internet, or through the Medicare Hotline
at 1–800–633–4227 (1–800–MEDICARE). For deaf and hard of hearing callers,
the TTY/TDD number is 1–877–486–2048.
Some state and local health programs and employers provide mammograms free
or at low cost. For example, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention
(CDC) coordinates the National Breast and Cervical Cancer Early Detection
Program. This program provides screening services, including clinical breast
exams and mammograms, to low-income women throughout the United States and
in several U.S. territories. Contact information for local programs is
available on the CDC’s Web site at http://www.cdc.gov/cancer/nbccedp/contacts.htm
on the Internet, or by calling the CDC at 1–888–842–6355 (select option 7).
Information on low-cost or free mammography screening programs is also
available through the NCI’s Cancer Information Service (CIS) at
1–800–4–CANCER (1–800–422–6237).
Where can women get high-quality mammograms?
Women can get high-quality mammograms in breast clinics, radiology
departments of hospitals, mobile vans, private radiology offices, and
doctors’ offices.
The Mammography Quality Standards Act (MQSA) is a Federal law designed to
ensure that mammograms are safe and reliable. Through the MQSA, all
mammography facilities in the United States must meet stringent quality
standards, be accredited by the Food and Drug Administration (FDA), and be
inspected annually. The FDA ensures that facilities across the country meet
MQSA standards. These standards apply to the following people at the
facility:
the technologist who takes the mammogram,
the radiologist who interprets the mammogram, and
the medical physicist who tests the mammography equipment.
All mammography facilities are required to display their FDA certificate.
Women should look for the MQSA certificate at the mammography facility and
check its expiration date. Women can ask their doctors or staff at the
mammography facility about FDA certification before making an appointment.
MQSA regulations also require mammography facilities to give patients an
easy-to-read report on the results of their mammogram.
Information about local FDA-certified mammography facilities is available
through the CIS at 1–800–4–CANCER (1–800–422–6237). Also, a list of these
facilities is on the FDA’s Web site at http://www.fda.gov/cdrh/mammography/certified.html
on the Internet.
What should women with breast implants do about screening mammograms?
Women with breast implants should continue to have mammograms. (A woman
who had an implant following breast cancer surgery should ask her doctor
whether a mammogram of the reconstructed breast is necessary.) It is
important to inform the facility about breast implants when scheduling a
mammogram. The technician and radiologist must be experienced in x-raying
patients with breast implants. Implants can hide some breast tissue, making
it more difficult for the radiologist to detect an abnormality on the
mammogram. If the technologist performing the procedure is aware a woman has
breast implants, steps can be taken to make sure that as much breast tissue
as possible can be seen on the mammogram.
What is digital mammography? How is it different from conventional
mammography?
Digital mammography records x-ray images in computer code instead of on
x-ray film, as with conventional mammography. In January 2000, the FDA
approved a digital mammography system that may offer potential advantages
over the use of standard x-ray film. Research studies so far have not shown
that digital images are more effective in finding cancer than x-ray film
images. However, NCI is directing additional studies to learn whether
digital mammography is as good as or better than conventional mammography.
Digital mammography may offer the following advantages over conventional
mammography:
The images can be stored and retrieved electronically, which makes
long-distance consultations with other mammography specialists easier;
Because the images can be adjusted by the radiologist, subtle differences
between tissues may be noted;
Digital mammography may reduce the number of follow up procedures that are
necessary; and
The need for fewer exposures with digital mammography can reduce the already
low levels of radiation.
Currently, digital mammography can be done only in facilities that are
certified to practice conventional mammography and have received FDA
approval to offer digital mammography. The procedure for having a mammogram
with a digital system is the same as with conventional mammography.
What other technologies are under development for breast cancer
screening?
The NCI is supporting the development of several new technologies to
detect breast tumors. This research ranges from methods under development in
research labs to those that have reached the stage of testing in humans (in
studies known as clinical trials). Efforts to improve conventional
mammography include digital mammography (see question 13), magnetic
resonance imaging (MRI), and positron emission tomography (PET scanning).
In addition to imaging technologies, NCI-supported scientists are exploring
methods to detect markers of breast cancer in blood, urine, or nipple
aspirates (fluid from the breast) that may serve as early warning signals
for breast cancer. The NCI fact sheet Improving Methods for Breast Cancer
Detection and Diagnosis provides more information about technologies that
are under development for breast cancer screening and diagnosis. This fact
sheet is available at http://cis.nci.nih.gov/fact/5_14.htm on the Internet,
or can be ordered from the CIS at 1–800–4–CANCER (1–800–422–6237).
What studies is NCI supporting to find better ways to prevent and treat
breast cancer?
NCI is supporting many studies that are looking for improved prevention
and treatment of breast cancer.
Basic research: Many studies are taking place to identify the causes of
breast cancer, including an analysis of the role that alterations in the
BRCA1 and BRCA2 genes play in the development of cancer. Scientists also are
looking at how these genes interact with other genes and with hormonal,
dietary, and environmental factors.
Prevention: Researchers are looking for ways to prevent breast cancer in
women who are at increased risk. For these women, a medication called
tamoxifen has been shown to decrease the risk of developing breast cancer.
Other medications, including a drug called raloxifene, are currently under
study. Also, studies are evaluating how modification in diet, physical
activity, nutrition, and environmental factors could lead to new prevention
strategies.
Treatment: Several studies are aimed at finding treatments for breast cancer
that are more effective and less toxic than current methods.
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