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Journal ArticleDOI

Sensitivity and specificity of first screen mammography in the Canadian National Breast Screening Study: a preliminary report from five centers.

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TLDR
Sensitivity and specificity of first screen mammography in a randomized screening trial at five centers are reported and all 206 cancer cases were histologically confirmed, and 174 were defined as being detectable at first screening.
Abstract
Sensitivity and specificity of first screen mammography in a randomized screening trial at five centers are reported. A total of 23,101 women underwent mammography; in 139, breast cancer was detected at first screening; in 20, less than 12 months after first screening; and in 47, at second screening. All 206 cancer cases were histologically confirmed, and 174 were defined as being detectable at first screening. Average length of follow-up for all women was 3.2 years. Interpretations of first screen mammograms by the center radiologists were matched to known outcomes. Simultaneous blind review was performed by a single reference radiologist with mammograms from all 206 cancer cases and those of a random sample of 739 women not known to have breast cancer at 15 months or more after initial screening. Overall, the five screening centers achieved a sensitivity of 69% (range, 60%-78%), a specificity of 94% (range, 93%-96%), a positive predictive value of 8.6% (range, 3%-16%), and a negative predictive value of 99.7% (range, 99.6%-99.9%).

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Citations
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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.
Journal Article

Canadian National Breast Screening Study: 1. Breast cancer detection and death rates among women aged 40 to 49 years

TL;DR: Screening with yearly mammography and physical examination of the breasts detected considerably more node-negative, small tumours than usual care, but it had no impact on the rate of death from breast cancer up to 7 years' follow-up from entry.
Journal ArticleDOI

Microwave Imaging for Breast Cancer

TL;DR: An overview on medical imaging using microwave imaging for breast cancer and its challenges, hopes, and outlook is presented.
Journal ArticleDOI

Wavelet transforms for detecting microcalcifications in mammograms

TL;DR: A 2-stage method based on wavelet transforms for detecting and segmenting calcifications designed to overcome the limitations of the simplistic Gaussian assumption and provides an accurate segmentation of calcification boundaries is developed.
Journal ArticleDOI

Radiology's Achilles' heel: error and variation in the interpretation of the Röntgen image.

TL;DR: Current developments show that where image features can be comprehensively described, computer analysis can replace the perception function of the observer, whilst the function of interpretation can in some cases be performed better by artificial neural networks.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Primer on Certain Elements of Medical Decision Making

TL;DR: Principals of statistical decision theory and information theory suggest technics for objectively determining these cutoff points, depending upon whether the physician is concerned with health costs, with financial costs, or with the information content of the test.
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Evidence on screening for breast cancer from a randomized trial.

TL;DR: Based on current findings in the HIP study, there appears to be strong support for periodic screening at ages 50 years and over with clinical examination and mammography; to justify screening under 50, new information from other studies is required.
Journal ArticleDOI

Breast cancer missed by mammography.

TL;DR: Because a "negative" mammogram that is followed by a biopsy diagnostic of cancer is a matter of deep concern, a retrospective review was conducted of 48 such missed diagnoses at four Breast Cancer Detection Centers.
Journal ArticleDOI

The estimation of false negatives in medical screening.

Judith D. Goldberg, +1 more
- 01 Mar 1978 - 
TL;DR: The results of four screening examinations at approximately one-year intervals and the long-term follow-up of all screened individuals support the usefulness of capture-recapture methods in the evaluation of a screening program.
Journal ArticleDOI

Screening for breast cancer: How effective are our tests? a critical review

TL;DR: It is found that mammography can advance the stage at detection and have a reasonably high predictive value compared with the isoprobability baseline, and clinical examination can lower threshold over current threshold levels, but only at the expense of a very high biopsy rate.
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