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Beneficial Effect of Consecutive Screening Mammography Examinations on Mortality from Breast Cancer: A Prospective Study

Stephen W. Duffy, Làszló Tabár, Amy Ming‐Fang Yen, Peter B. Dean, Robert A. Smith, Håkan Jönsson, Sven Törnberg, Sherry Yueh‐Hsia Chiu, Sam Li‐Sheng Chen, Hsiao-Hsuan Jen, May Mei‐Sheng Ku, Chen-Yang Hsu, Johan Ahlgren, Roberta Maroni, Lars Holmberg, Chien‐Jen Chen

2021Radiology152 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Background Previously, the risk of death from breast cancer was analyzed for women participating versus those not participating in the last screening examination before breast cancer diagnosis. Consecutive attendance patterns may further refine estimates. Purpose To estimate the effect of participation in successive mammographic screening examinations on breast cancer mortality. Materials and Methods Participation data for Swedish women eligible for screening mammography in nine counties from 1992 to 2016 were linked with data from registries and regional cancer centers for breast cancer diagnosis, cause, and date of death (Uppsala University ethics committee registration number: 2017/147). Incidence-based breast cancer mortality was calculated by whether the women had participated in the most recent screening examination prior to diagnosis only (intermittent participants), the penultimate screening examination only (lapsed participants), both examinations (serial participants), or neither examination (serial nonparticipants). Rates were analyzed with Poisson regression. We also analyzed incidence of breast cancers proving fatal within 10 years. Results Data were available for a total average population of 549 091 women (average age, 58.9 years ± 6.7 [standard deviation]). The numbers of participants in the four groups were as follows: serial participants, 392 135; intermittent participants, 41 746; lapsed participants, 30 945; and serial nonparticipants, 84 265. Serial participants had a 49% lower risk of breast cancer mortality (relative risk [RR], 0.51; 95% CI: 0.48, 0.55; P < .001) and a 50% lower risk of death from breast cancer within 10 years of diagnosis (RR, 0.50; 95% CI: 0.46, 0.55; P < .001) than serial nonparticipants. Lapsed and intermittent participants had a smaller reduction. Serial participants had significantly lower risk of both outcomes than lapsed or intermittent participants. Analyses correcting for potential biases made little difference to the results. Conclusion Women participating in the last two breast cancer screening examinations prior to breast cancer diagnosis had the largest reduction in breast cancer death. Missing either one of the last two examinations conferred a significantly higher risk. Published under a CC BY 4.0 license. Online supplemental material is available for this article. See also the editorial by Stephen A. Feig in this issue.

Topics & Concepts

MedicineBreast cancerMammographyIncidence (geometry)Poisson regressionPopulationCancerRelative riskGynecologyBreast cancer screeningDemographyAttendanceCancer registryObstetricsConfidence intervalInternal medicineEnvironmental healthOpticsSociologyPhysicsEconomicsEconomic growthGlobal Cancer Incidence and ScreeningCancer Risks and FactorsColorectal Cancer Screening and Detection
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