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Efficacy of breast cancer screening by age. New results swedish two-county trial

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TLDR
A small effect of breast cancer screening on breast cancer mortality in women aged younger than 50 years compared with older women and various possible reasons have been suggested are suggested.
Abstract
Background. Several studies have found a smaller effect of breast cancer screening on breast cancer mortality in women aged younger than 50 years compared with older women. Various possible reasons have been suggested for this, but none firmly is established. Methods. The Swedish Two-County Study is a randomized trial of breast cancer screening of women aged 40-74 years, comprising with 133,065 women with a 13-year follow-up of 2467 cancers. The Breast Cancer Detection Demonstration Project (BCDDP) is a nonrandomized screening program in the United States, with a 14-year follow-up of 3778 cancers in women aged 40-74 years. The Swedish results by age were updated. The lesser effect of screening at ages 40-49 years was investigated in terms of sojourn time (the duration of the preclinical but detectable phase) size, lymph node status, and histologic type of the tumors diagnosed in the Swedish Study and their subsequent effect on survival using survival data from both studies. Results. In the Swedish Trial, a 30% reduction in mortality associated with the invitation to screening of women aged 40-74 years was maintained after 13-years of follow-up. The reduction was 34% for women aged 50-74 years and 13% for women aged 40-49 years. Results indicated that the reduced effect on mortality for women aged 40-49 years was due to a differential effect of screening on the prognostic factors of tumor size, lymph node status, and histologic type. The mean sojourn times in the age groups 40-49 years, 50-59 years, 60-69 years, and 70-74 years were 1.7, 3.3, 3.8, and 2.6 years, respectively. Conclusions. These results suggest that much, although not all, of the smaller effect of screening on mortality in women aged 40-49 years is due to faster progression of a substantial proportion of tumors in this age group and the rapid increase in incidence during this decade of life. It is concluded that the interval between screenings should be shortened to achieve a greater benefit in this age group. It is estimated that a 19% reduction in mortality would result from an annual screening regime. Cancer 1995 ;75 :2507-17.

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

American Cancer Society guidelines for the early detection of cancer.

TL;DR: Recommendations for the “cancer‐related check‐up,” in which clinical encounters provide case‐finding and health counseling opportunities, and an update of the most recent data pertaining to participation rates in cancer screening by age, gender, and ethnicity from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention's Behavioral Risk Factor Surveillance System and National Health Interview Survey.
Journal ArticleDOI

Screening for breast cancer with mammography.

TL;DR: It is found that breast cancer mortality was an unreliable outcome that was biased in favour of screening, mainly because of differential misclassification of cause of death.
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Comparison of the Performance of Screening Mammography, Physical Examination, and Breast US and Evaluation of Factors that Influence Them: An Analysis of 27,825 Patient Evaluations

TL;DR: Mammographic sensitivity for breast cancer declines significantly with increasing breast density and is independently higher in older women with dense breasts, which significantly increases detection of small cancers and depicts significantly more cancers and at smaller size and lower stage than does PE, which detects independently extremely few cancers.
Journal ArticleDOI

Screening for breast cancer: an update for the U.S. Preventive Services Task Force.

TL;DR: New studies and evidence gaps that were unresolved at the time of the 2002 USPSTF recommendation are focused on, including the effectiveness of mammography screening in decreasing breast cancer mortality among average-risk women aged 40 to 49 years and 70 years or older.
Journal ArticleDOI

Breast Cancer Screening: A Summary of the Evidence for the U.S. Preventive Services Task Force

TL;DR: The goal was to critically appraise and synthesize evidence about the overall effectiveness of breast cancer screening, as well as its effectiveness among women younger than 50 years of age, and to evaluate previous meta-analyses of these trials and of screening test characteristics and studies evaluating the harms associated with false-positive test results.
References
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Book

Cancer Incidence in Five Continents

TL;DR: The aim of this study was to establish a database of histological groups and to provide a level of consistency and quality of data that could be applied in the design of future registries.
Book

Statistical Methods in Cancer Research

N. E. Breslow
TL;DR: Statistical methods in cancer research as mentioned in this paper, Statistical Methods in Cancer Research, Statistical methods in Cancer research, Statistical methods for cancer research, کتابخانه مرکزی دانشگاه علوم پزش
Journal Article

Statistical methods in cancer research. Volume II--The design and analysis of cohort studies.

TL;DR: What do you do to start reading statistical methods in cancer research vol ii the design and analysis of cohort studies?
Book

The design and analysis of cohort studies

N. E. Breslow, +1 more
TL;DR: The scope ranges from an account of the elementary and descriptive approaches to cohort analysis to the fitting of regression models for incidence rates with general risk functions, and particular attention is given to the use of a case-control approach embedded in a cohort study.
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