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Final Results of the Prospective FH02 Mammographic Surveillance Study of Women Aged 35–39 at Increased Familial Risk of Breast Cancer()

BACKGROUND: Many women who are at increased risk of breast cancer due to a mother or sister diagnosed with breast cancer aged under 40 do not currently qualify for surveillance before 40 years of age. There are almost no available data to assess whether mammography screening aged 35–39 years would b...

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Autores principales: Evans, D.G., Thomas, S., Caunt, J., Burch, A., Brentnall, A.R., Roberts, L., Howell, A., Wilson, M., Fox, R., Hillier, S., Sibbering, D.M., Moss, S., Wallis, M.G., Eccles, D.M., Duffy, S.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Elsevier 2019
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6472550/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/31008449
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.eclinm.2019.01.005
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author Evans, D.G.
Thomas, S.
Caunt, J.
Burch, A.
Brentnall, A.R.
Roberts, L.
Howell, A.
Wilson, M.
Fox, R.
Hillier, S.
Sibbering, D.M.
Moss, S.
Wallis, M.G.
Eccles, D.M.
Duffy, S.
author_facet Evans, D.G.
Thomas, S.
Caunt, J.
Burch, A.
Brentnall, A.R.
Roberts, L.
Howell, A.
Wilson, M.
Fox, R.
Hillier, S.
Sibbering, D.M.
Moss, S.
Wallis, M.G.
Eccles, D.M.
Duffy, S.
author_sort Evans, D.G.
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: Many women who are at increased risk of breast cancer due to a mother or sister diagnosed with breast cancer aged under 40 do not currently qualify for surveillance before 40 years of age. There are almost no available data to assess whether mammography screening aged 35–39 years would be effective in this group, in terms of detection of breast cancer at an early stage or cost effective. METHODS: A cohort screening study (FH02) with annual mammography was devised for women aged 35–39 to assess the sensitivity and screening performance and potential survival of women with identified tumours. FINDINGS: 2899 women were recruited from 12/2006–12/2015. These women underwent 12,086 annual screening mammograms and were followed for 13,365.8 years. A total of 55 breast cancers in 54 women occurred during the study period (one bilateral) with 50 cancers (49 women) (15 CIS) adherent to the screening. Eighty percent (28/35) of invasive cancers were ≤ 2 cm and 80% also lymph node negative. Invasive cancers diagnosed in FH02 were significantly smaller than the comparable (POSH-unscreened prospective) study group (45% (131/293) ≤ 2 cm in POSH vs 80% (28/35) in FH02 p < 0.0001), and were less likely to be lymph-node positive (54% (158/290, 3 unknown) in POSH vs 20% (7/35) in FH02: p = 0.0002. Projected and actual survival were also better than POSH. Overall radiation dose was not higher than in an older screened population at mean dose on study per standard sized breast of 1.5 mGy. INTERPRETATION: Mammography screening aged 35–39 years detects breast cancer at an early stage and is likely to be as effective in reducing mortality as in women at increased breast cancer risk aged 40–49 years.
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spelling pubmed-64725502019-04-19 Final Results of the Prospective FH02 Mammographic Surveillance Study of Women Aged 35–39 at Increased Familial Risk of Breast Cancer() Evans, D.G. Thomas, S. Caunt, J. Burch, A. Brentnall, A.R. Roberts, L. Howell, A. Wilson, M. Fox, R. Hillier, S. Sibbering, D.M. Moss, S. Wallis, M.G. Eccles, D.M. Duffy, S. EClinicalMedicine Research Paper BACKGROUND: Many women who are at increased risk of breast cancer due to a mother or sister diagnosed with breast cancer aged under 40 do not currently qualify for surveillance before 40 years of age. There are almost no available data to assess whether mammography screening aged 35–39 years would be effective in this group, in terms of detection of breast cancer at an early stage or cost effective. METHODS: A cohort screening study (FH02) with annual mammography was devised for women aged 35–39 to assess the sensitivity and screening performance and potential survival of women with identified tumours. FINDINGS: 2899 women were recruited from 12/2006–12/2015. These women underwent 12,086 annual screening mammograms and were followed for 13,365.8 years. A total of 55 breast cancers in 54 women occurred during the study period (one bilateral) with 50 cancers (49 women) (15 CIS) adherent to the screening. Eighty percent (28/35) of invasive cancers were ≤ 2 cm and 80% also lymph node negative. Invasive cancers diagnosed in FH02 were significantly smaller than the comparable (POSH-unscreened prospective) study group (45% (131/293) ≤ 2 cm in POSH vs 80% (28/35) in FH02 p < 0.0001), and were less likely to be lymph-node positive (54% (158/290, 3 unknown) in POSH vs 20% (7/35) in FH02: p = 0.0002. Projected and actual survival were also better than POSH. Overall radiation dose was not higher than in an older screened population at mean dose on study per standard sized breast of 1.5 mGy. INTERPRETATION: Mammography screening aged 35–39 years detects breast cancer at an early stage and is likely to be as effective in reducing mortality as in women at increased breast cancer risk aged 40–49 years. Elsevier 2019-02-10 /pmc/articles/PMC6472550/ /pubmed/31008449 http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.eclinm.2019.01.005 Text en © 2019 Published by Elsevier Ltd. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/ This is an open access article under the CC BY-NC-ND license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/).
spellingShingle Research Paper
Evans, D.G.
Thomas, S.
Caunt, J.
Burch, A.
Brentnall, A.R.
Roberts, L.
Howell, A.
Wilson, M.
Fox, R.
Hillier, S.
Sibbering, D.M.
Moss, S.
Wallis, M.G.
Eccles, D.M.
Duffy, S.
Final Results of the Prospective FH02 Mammographic Surveillance Study of Women Aged 35–39 at Increased Familial Risk of Breast Cancer()
title Final Results of the Prospective FH02 Mammographic Surveillance Study of Women Aged 35–39 at Increased Familial Risk of Breast Cancer()
title_full Final Results of the Prospective FH02 Mammographic Surveillance Study of Women Aged 35–39 at Increased Familial Risk of Breast Cancer()
title_fullStr Final Results of the Prospective FH02 Mammographic Surveillance Study of Women Aged 35–39 at Increased Familial Risk of Breast Cancer()
title_full_unstemmed Final Results of the Prospective FH02 Mammographic Surveillance Study of Women Aged 35–39 at Increased Familial Risk of Breast Cancer()
title_short Final Results of the Prospective FH02 Mammographic Surveillance Study of Women Aged 35–39 at Increased Familial Risk of Breast Cancer()
title_sort final results of the prospective fh02 mammographic surveillance study of women aged 35–39 at increased familial risk of breast cancer()
topic Research Paper
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6472550/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/31008449
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.eclinm.2019.01.005
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