Saturday, July 30, 2011

Fewer breast cancer deaths not due to screening: study


Mammogram have played an insignificant role in falling breast cancer death rates in Europe, according to a study published on Friday. -- ST PHOTO: HOW HWEE YOUNG

PARIS - MAMMOGRAMS have played an insignificant role in falling breast cancer death rates in Europe, according to a study published on Friday.

Three pairs of countries with similar access to treatment but varying levels of breast screening showed scant difference in the degree of mortality attributed to the disease, researchers reported. The study, published online by the British Medical Journal, adds to a growing body of evidence suggesting that two decades of routine screening has yielded modest results at best.


A trio of scientists led by Philippe Autier of the International Prevention Research Institute in Lyon, France compared the mortality rates of otherwise similar health systems that began screening programs at least a decade apart.

In Northern Ireland, which began systematic mammograms in the early 1990s, the death rate among breast cancer patients dropped 29 per cent from 1989 to 2006. In Ireland, mortality went down nearly as much, 26 per cent, over the same period even though the country didn't set up regular screening until 10 years later. The Netherlands and Belgium also showed a parallel drop in breast cancer mortality rates - identical in the case of Dutch-speaking Belgium - despite a lag time of about a decade in the implementation of screening programmes. And in Sweden, which in 1986 pioneered systematic mammograms to detect the disease, the drop was only 16 per cent, compared to 24 per cent in Norway, which began to do so only in 2005.


The slim difference in mortality rates suggests that the decrease was caused by other factors, such as better treatment, the researchers said. 'Since we began studying the long-term effects on mortality, a lot of data has suggested that the impact is little to none,' Dr Autier told AFP.

'I am among those who pushed hard for systematic screening for breast cancer in the 1990s,' he added. 'But now there are question marks and we have to provide answers, because we cannot continue to promote something that may not be very effective but which can lead to a certain number of false positives,' where healthy women are diagnosed as having the disease, he said. -- AFP






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