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The Danger and Unreliability of Mammography
By Samuel S. Epstein
, Rosalie Bertell, Ph.D., GNSH and Barbara Seaman
"Mammography screening is a profit-driven technology posing
risks compounded by unreliability. In striking contrast, annual
clinical breast examination (CBE) by a trained health
professional, together with monthly breast self-examination (BSE),
is safe, at least as effective, and low in cost. International
programs for training nurses how to perform CBE and teach BSE
are critical and overdue."
Contrary to popular belief
and assurances by the U.S. media and the cancer
establishment--the National Cancer Institute (NCI) and American
Cancer Society (ACS)--mammography is not a technique for early
diagnosis. In fact, a breast cancer has usually been present for
about eight years before it can finally be detected.
Furthermore, screening should be recognized as damage control,
rather than misleadingly as «secondary prevention.
DANGERS OF SCREENING MAMMOGRAPHY
Mammography poses a wide range of risks of which women worldwide
still remain uninformed.
Radiation Risks
Radiation from routine mammography poses significant cumulative
risks of initiating and promoting breast cancer (1-3). Contrary
to conventional assurances that radiation exposure from
mammography is trivial--and similar to that from a chest X-ray
or spending one week in Denver, about 1/1,000 of a rad
(radiation-absorbed dose)--the routine practice of taking four
films for each breast results in some 1,000-fold greater
exposure, 1 rad, focused on each breast rather than the entire
chest (2). Thus, premenopausal women undergoing annual screening
over a ten-year period are exposed to a total of about 10 rads
for each breast. As emphasized some three decades ago, the
premenopausal breast is highly sensitive to radiation, each rad
of exposure increasing breast cancer risk by 1 percent,
resulting in a cumulative 10 percent increased risk over ten
years of premenopausal screening, usually from ages 40 to 50
(4); risks are even greater for «baseline» screening at younger
ages, for which there is no evidence of any future relevance.
Furthermore, breast cancer risks from mammography are up to
fourfold higher for the 1 to 2 percent of women who are silent
carriers of the A-T (ataxia-telangiectasia) gene and thus highly
sensitive to the carcinogenic effects of radiation (5); by some
estimates this accounts for up to 20 percent of all breast
cancers annually in the United States (6).
Cancer Risks from Breast Compression
As early as 1928, physicians were warned to handle «cancerous
breasts with care--for fear of accidentally disseminating cells»
and spreading cancer (7). Nevertheless, mammography entails
tight and often painful compression of the breast, particularly
in premenopausal women. This may lead to distant and lethal
spread of malignant cells by rupturing small blood vessels in or
around small, as yet undetected breast cancers (8)
Delays in Diagnostic Mammography
As increasing numbers of premenopausal women are responding to
the ACS's aggressively promoted screening, imaging centers are
becoming flooded and overwhelmed. Resultingly, patients referred
for diagnostic mammography are now experiencing potentially
dangerous delays, up to several months, before they can be
examined (9).
UNRELIABILITY OF MAMMOGRAPHY
Falsely Negative Mammograms
Missed cancers are particularly common in premenopausal women
owing to the dense and highly glandular structure of their
breasts and increased proliferation late in their menstrual
cycle (10, 11). Missed cancers are also common in
post-menopausal women on estrogen replacement therapy, as about
20 percent develop breast densities that make their mammograms
as difficult to read as those of premenopausal women (12).
Interval Cancers
About one-third of all cancers--and more still of premenopausal
cancers, which are aggressive, even to the extent of doubling in
size in one month, and more likely to metastasize--are diagnosed
in the interval between successive annual mammograms (2, 13).
Premenopausal women, particularly, can thus be lulled into a
false sense of security by a supposedly negative result on an
annual mammogram and fail to seek medical advice.
Falsely Positive Mammogram
Mistakenly diagnosed cancers are particularly common in
premenopausal women, and also in postmenopausal women on
estrogen replacement therapy, resulting in needless anxiety,
more mammograms, and unnecessary biopsies (14, 15). For women
with multiple high-risk factors, including a strong family
history, prolonged use of the contraceptive pill, early
menarche, and nulliparity--just those groups that are most
strongly urged to have annual mammograms--the cumulative risk of
false positives increases to «as high as 100 percent» over a
decade's screening (16).
Overdiagnosis
Overdiagnosis and subsequent overtreatment are among the major
risks of mammography. The widespread and virtually unchallenged
acceptance of screening has resulted in a dramatic increase in
the diagnosis of ductal carcinoma-in-situ (DCIS), a pre-invasive
cancer, with a current estimated incidence of about 40,000
annually. DCIS is usually recognized as micro-calcifications and
generally treated by lumpectomy plus radiation or even
mastectomy and chemotherapy (17). However, some 80 percent of
all DCIS never become invasive even if left untreated (18).
Furthermore, the breast cancer mortality from DCIS is the same--
about 1 percent--both for women diagnosed and treated early and
for those diagnosed later following the development of invasive
cancer (17). That early detection of DCIS does not reduce
mortality is further confirmed by the 13-year follow-up results
of the Canadian National Breast Cancer Screening Study (19).
Nevertheless, as recently stressed, «the public is much less
informed about overdiagnosis than false positive results. In a
recent nationwide survey of women, 99 percent of respondents
were aware of the possibility of false positive results from
mammography, but only 6 percent were aware of either DCIS by
name or the fact that mammography could detect a form of
`cancer' that often doesn't progress» (20).
Quality Control
In 1992 Congress passed the National Mammography Standards
Quality Assurance Act requiring the Food and Drug Administration
(FDA) to ensure that screening centers review their results and
performance: collect data on biopsy outcomes and match them with
the original radiologist's interpretation of the films (21).
However, the centers do not release these data because the Act
does not require them to do so. It is essential that this
information now be made fully public so that concerns about the
reliability of mammography can be further evaluated. Activist
breast cancer groups would most likely strongly support, if not
help to initiate, such overdue action by the FDA.
FAILURE TO REDUCE BREAST CANCER MORTALITY
Despite the long-standing claims, the evidence that routine
mammography screening allows early detection and treatment of
breast cancer, thereby reducing mortality, is at best highly
questionable. In fact, «the overwhelming majority of breast
cancers are unaffected by early detection, either because they
are aggressive or slow growing» (21). There is supportive
evidence that the major variable predicting survival is
«biological determinism--a combination of the virulence of the
individual tumor plus the host's immune response,» rather than
just early detection (22).
Claims for the benefit of screening mammography in reducing
breast cancer mortality are based on eight international
controlled trials involving about 500,000 women (23). However,
recent meta-analysis of these trials revealed that only two,
based on 66,000 postmenopausal women, were adequately randomized
to allow statistically valid conclusions (23). Based on these
two trials, the authors concluded that «there is no reliable
evidence that screening decreases breast cancer mortality--not
even a tendency towards an effect.» Accordingly, the authors
concluded that there is no longer any justification for
screening mammography; further evidence for this conclusion will
be detailed at the May 6, 2001, annual meeting of the National
Breast Cancer Coalition in Washington, D.C., and published in
the July report of the Nordic Cochrane Centre.
Even assuming that high quality screening of a population of
women between the ages of 50 and 69 would reduce breast cancer
mortality by up to 25 percent, yielding a reduced relative risk
of 0.75, the chances of any individual woman benefiting are
remote (18). For women in this age group, about 4 percent are
likely to develop breast cancer annually, about one in four of
whom, or 1 percent overall, will die from this disease. Thus,
the 0.75 relative risk applies to this 1 percent, so 99.75
percent of the women screened are unlikely to benefit.
THE UNITED STATES VERSUS OTHER NATIONS
No nation other than the United States routinely screens
premenopausal women by mammography. In this context, it may be
noted that the January 1997 National Institutes of Health
Consensus Conference recommended against premenopausal screening
(24), a decision that the NCI, but not the ACS, accepted (4).
However, under pressure from Congress and the ACS, the NCI
reversed its decision some three months later in favor of
premenopausal screening. The U.S. overkill extends to the
standard practice of taking two or more mammograms per breast
annually in postmenopausal women. This contrasts with the more
restrained European practice of a single view every two to three
years (4).
BREAST EXAMINATION IS A SAFE AND EFFECTIVE ALTERNATIVE TO
MAMMOGRAPHY
That most breast cancers are first recognized by women
themselves was admitted in 1985 by the ACS, an aggressive
advocate of routine mammography for all women over the age of
40: «We must keep in mind the fact that at least 90 percent of
the women who develop breast carcinoma discover the tumors
themselves» (25). Furthermore, as previously shown, «training
increases reported breast self-examination frequency,
confidence, and the number of small tumors found» (26).
A pooled analysis of several 1993 studies showed that women who
regularly performed BSE detected their cancers much earlier and
with fewer positives nodes and smaller tumors than women failing
to examine themselves (27); BSE would also enhance earlier
detection of missed or interval cancers, especially in
pre-menopausal women (28). There is a strong consensus that the
effectiveness of BSE critically depends on careful training by
skilled professionals, and that confidence in BSE is enhanced
with annual CBEs by an experienced professional using structured
individual training (29). The tactile sensitivity of BSE can be
increased by the use of Mammacare techniques to enhance lump
detection skills (30, 31), and by the use of FDA-approved and
nonprescription thin and pliable lubricant-filled sensor pads
(32, 33).
In a joint U.S. and Chinese large-scale trial based on 520
Chinese factories, women in half the factories were trained in
and practiced BSE, while the other group of women served as
controls (34). The five-year follow up results reported no
reduction in breast cancer mortality in women in the BSE group.
However, these findings are of little, if any, significance in
view of the minimum of a 10- to 13-year period required before
the efficacy of mammography is claimed to occur in premenopausal
women (24), especially as some of the trial's participants were
in their thirties (28).
The critical importance and reliability of CBE has been
strikingly confirmed by the recent Canadian National Breast
Cancer Screening Study (19). This reported the results of a
unique individually randomized controlled trial on some 40,000
women, aged 50 to 59 on entry, followed by record linkage for
nine to 13 years, with active follow-up of cancer patients for
an additional three years. Half the women performed monthly BSE,
following instruction by trained nurses, had annual CBEs (taking
approximately ten minutes) by trained nurses, and had annual
mammograms, while the other half practiced BSE and had annual
CBEs but no mammograms.
It should be noted that the
CBE performance by trained nurses had been shown to be as good as, if
not better than, that of the study surgeons (35), a finding of
particular interest in view of the growing perception among women that
professional women are more sensitive than men to women's health issues
(36). The results of this study provide clear evidence on the
reliability of CBE, in association with BSE (19): «In women age 50-59
years, the addition of annual mammography screening to physical
examination has no impact on breast cancer mortality.» In other words,
the mammographic detection of nonpalpable cancers failed to improve
survival rates, as «the majority of the small cancers detected by
mammography represent pseudo-disease or overdiagnosis» (37);
confirmation of this explanation awaits a trial, a protocol of which is
available, comparing mammography alone with physical examination alone.
It should further be noted that the mammogram group had a three-fold
increase in the number of false positives compared with the CBE and BSE
group, resulting in unnecessary biopsies.
The effectiveness of CBE is further supported by the results of a new
Japanese mass screening study (38). Breast cancer mortality was compared
in municipalities with or without «high coverage» by CBE. The
age-adjusted breast cancer mortality between 1986-1990 and 1991-1995 was
reduced by over 40 percent in «high coverage» municipalities, in
contrast to only 3 percent in controls.
In spite of such evidence, the ACS and radiologists persist in their
dismissiveness of CBE and BSE, particularly as «a substitute for
screening practices that have a `proven' benefit such as mammograms»
(33). The NCI no longer prints a BSE guide in its breast cancer booklet,
claiming that «no studies have clearly shown a benefit of using BSE»;
similarly, the ACS no longer distributes information on BSE, such as
shower-hanger cards.
There are immediate needs for a large-scale crash program for training
nurses in how to perform annual CBE and how to teach BSE. This need is
critical for underinsured and uninsured low-socioeconomic and ethnic
women in the United States, and even more so for developing countries.
Once well trained, women of all social and cultural classes could
perform monthly BSE, at no cost or risk apart from false positives,
which decrease with increasing practice, along with annual CBE
screening.
Clinics offering CBE and
training in BSE could be established nationwide, and eventually
worldwide, in a network of clinics, community hospitals, churches,
synagogues, and mosques. These clinics could also act as a comprehensive
source of reliable information on how to reduce the risks of breast
cancer, about which women still remain largely uninformed by the cancer
establishment (2). Besides lifestyle and reproductive risk factors,
emphasis should be directed to the massive overprescription of
carcinogenic hormonal drugs and the avoidable and involuntary exposures
to petrochemical and radionuclear carcinogens in the totality of the
environment (39-41).
COSTS OF SCREENING
The dangers and unreliability of mammography screening are compounded by
its growing and inflationary costs; Medicare and insurance average costs
are $70 and $125, respectively. Inadequate Medicare reimbursement rates
are now prompting fewer hospitals and clinics to offer mammograms, and
deterring young doctors from becoming radiologists. Accordingly,
Senators Charles Schumer (D-NY) and Tom Harkin (D-IA) are introducing
legislation to raise Medicare reimbursement to $100 (42).
If all U.S. premenopausal women, about 20 million according to the
Census Bureau, submitted to annual mammograms, minimal annual costs
would be $2.5 billion (4). These costs would be increased to $10
billion, about 5 percent of the $200 billion 2001 Medicare budget, if
all postmenopausal women were also screened annually, or about 14
percent of the estimated Medicare spending on prescription drugs.
Such costs will further
increase some fourfold if the industry, enthusiastically supported by
radiologists, succeeds in its efforts to replace film machines, costing
about $100,000, with the latest high-tech digital machines, approved by
the FDA in November 2000, costing about $400,000. Screening mammography
thus poses major threats to the financially strained Medicare system.
Inflationary costs apart, there is no evidence of the greater
effectiveness of digital than film mammography (43), as confirmed by a
study reported at the November 2000 annual meeting of the Radiological
Society of North America (44). In fact, digital mammography is likely to
result in the increased diagnosis of DCIS.
The comparative cost of CBE and mammography in the 1992 Canadian Breast
Cancer Screening Study was reported to be 1 to 3 (45). However, this
ratio ignores the high costs of capital items including buildings,
equipment, and mobile vans, let alone the much greater hidden costs of
unnecessary biopsies, specialized staff training, and programs for
quality control and professional accreditation (46). This ratio could be
even more favorable for CBE and BSE instruction if both were conducted
by trained nurses. The excessive costs of mammography screening should
be diverted away from industry to breast cancer prevention and other
women's health programs.
CONFLICTS OF INTEREST
The ACS has close connections to the mammography industry (39). Five
radiologists have served as ACS presidents, and in its every move, the
ACS promotes the interests of the major manufacturers of mammogram
machines and films, including Siemens, DuPont, General Electric, Eastman
Kodak, and Piker. The mammography industry also conducts research for
the ACS and its grantees, serves on advisory boards, and donates
considerable funds. DuPont also: is a substantial backer of the ACS
Breast Health Awareness Program; sponsors television shows and other
media productions touting mammography; produces advertising,
promotional, and information literature for hospitals, clinics, medical
organizations, and doctors; produces educational films; and, of course,
lobbies Congress for legislation promoting availability of mammography
services. In virtually all its important actions, the ACS has been and
remains strongly linked with the mammography industry, while ignoring or
attacking the development of viable alternatives (39).
ACS promotion continues to lure women of all ages into mammography
centers, leading them to believe that mammography is their best hope
against breast cancer. A leading Massachusetts newspaper featured a
photograph of two women in their twenties in an ACS advertisement that
promised early detection results in a cure «nearly 100 percent of the
time.» An ACS communications director, questioned by journalist Kate
Dempsey, admitted in an article published by the Massachusetts Women's
Community's journal Cancer, «The ad isn't based on a study. When you
make an advertisement, you just say what you can to get women in the
door. You exaggerate a point. . . . Mammography today is a lucrative
[and] highly competitive business» (39).
NEEDED REFORMS
Mammography is a striking paradigm of the capture of unsuspecting women
by runaway powerful technological and pharmaceutical global industries,
with the complicity of the cancer establishment, particularly the ACS,
and the rollover mainstream media. Promotion of the multibillion dollar
mammography screening industry has also become a diversionary flag
around which legislators and women's product corporations can rally,
protesting how much they care about women, while studiously avoiding any
reference to avoidable risk factors of breast cancer, let alone other
cancers.
Screening mammography should be phased out in favor of annual CBE and
monthly BSE, as an effective, safe, and low-cost alternative, with
diagnostic mammography available when so indicated. Such action is all
the more critical and overdue in view of the still poorly recognized
evidence that screening mammography does not lead to decreased breast
cancer mortality (18, 21, 23).
Networks of CBE and BSE clinics, staffed by trained nurses, should be
established internationally, including in developing nations. These
low-cost clinics would further empower women by providing them with
scientific evidence on breast cancer risk factors and prevention,
information of particular importance in view of the continued high
incidence of breast cancers, with an estimated 192,200 new U.S. cases
predicted for 2001 (47), exceeding the number for any previous years.
The multibillion dollar U.S. insurance and Medicare costs of
mammography, besides those in other nations, should be diverted to
outreach and research on prevention of breast and other cancers and on
other women's health programs.
Acknowledgments -- The comments and advice of Dr. Cornelia Baines and
Maryann Napoli are gratefully acknowledged.
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