No Breast Cancer Screening For Women Aged 40-49
Comments
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VR, I understand the complexities of selecting research end-points. I get it. But that's not the issue. The issue with these studies is inconsistency in the selection of end-points and a lack of apples to apples comparison.
The issue is that QOL end points have not been considered to be relevant on one side of the study (the implications of less frequent screening and starting screening later) but they have been considered relevant on the other side of the study (the implications of more frequent screening and starting screening earlier).
"Unnecessary biopsies" is nothing more than a quality of life issue. The studies all focus on the fact that there are too many unnecessary biopsies and that in fact forms the basis for the recommendations. "Avoidable treatments" is also a quality of life issue - and in fact is a considerably more severe QOL issue than unnecessary biopsies. The studies do not consider this at all. That's the problem.
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VR - ENOUGH ALREADY!!!!!
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I have a headache! Need some propofol.
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Beesie - thank you for explaining that QOL point which is very relevant and has broadened my view of the subject. Earlier detection means more people avoiding harsher treatments. I was focusing on the mortality issue.
To me this is more than a statistical matter, it is an ethical issue. Even the anti-screening proponents admit that early screening, BSE and CBE reduce mortality, just not enough to warrant the expenditure in their opinion. So, if we know for a fact that lives will be lost with the new guidelines, is it not then unethical to implement them? Goverments do other things based on ethics rather than cost. For example, Canadians do not have capital punishment, although it is cheaper to kill criminals than to house them for many years. But killing them is considered unethical - state sanctioned murder. Is this not analagous? We know these guidlines will result in deaths of individuals, although we can't see those individuals beforehand as we would with criminals to be executed. To the anti-screeners, they are numbers, not individuals.
bluedahlia - stay away from propofal lol. Isn't that what did in Michael Jackson?
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Exactly!!!!!!!!!!!!
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I like Propofal! LOL It's the one reason why I looked forward to my colonoscopy! LOL
For Ontarians, you might be interested in completing the following survey... huge study...
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I was just telling a friend the other day how "happy" I felt after my colonoscopy...and my lumpectomy, too. Was that propofal? lol
Will check out the study, NannaBaby.
There was a very good letter in the Toronto Star this morning about the breast screening issue (Not long). http://www.thestar.com/opinion/letters/article/1092933--confusing-message-on-breast-screening
The bottom line is: Mammograms + BSE+CBE = False Positives + Actual Positives
NO Mammograms + NO BSE + NO CBE = No false positives and NO actual positives = missed bc diagnoses = some deaths
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Is ignorance bliss?
I am dump founded y they don't encourage cbe and bse!?! How would u know if u had the classic breast cancer symptom? A lump? Should women ignore their breasts and wait until the lump changes the appearance of their breast? Or until it's bleeding?! -
I think the worst aspect of these recommendations is that doctors may use them as justification for refusing a woman a mammogram at age 40 for example, even if she wants one. I say this as someone who was first diagnosed at age 39, after having a gynecologist examine my breasts and even though there was a lump, she told me not to worry about it and "at your age it's just lumpy (dense) breasts". Fortunately I lived then in the United States and was able to schedule my own mammogram, with no referral and sure enough they found breast cancer that had already spread to one lymph node. I think many younger women face scepticism and unnecessary delays when they find a lump because statistically they are at much lower probability of developing breast cancer. I think these guidelines will just encourage doctors to be even more dismissive of breast cancer screening even when the woman herself requests it.
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I was refused a diagnostic mammo in Ontario even though I had a dr. order! I made a fuss but, they said I was too young for one. 5 months later I was diagnosed with a 8cm locally advanced tumour with lymph node and chest wall involvement.
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I read that NannaBaby and that is just so wrong. As long as the emotional and financial toll isn't too high for you, I would sue. Just to make a point and to humiliate the awful doctor you had to deal with. Although I saw that you are also taking your complaint to the doctor's board -- and you are commended for doing that---although I worry if that is like a fox watching the chickens situation -- self-policing.
As I've said elsewhere in this forum, I am horrified at the Canadian healthcare system. I know others have had good experiences, but after moving back to Canada from the U.S. my own experiences so far have not been good. Severe problems with accessing necessary services.
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I can't sue. the "delay" isn't considered long enough. The Canadian Physician's protetion laws are too strong and I won't win.
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McMartin: New breast cancer screening guidelines full of crap
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Great article
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Article says it all!
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So, her SCREENING mammogram was normal? And then several months later a DIAGNOSTIC mammogram confirmed an aggressive tumor. She was low risk? Hmmmm....Perhaps at the conference her doctor learned that after age 50 her patient's risk of breast cancer INCREASES....and that diagnostic mammograms are important for EVERY age group?
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The good news is, no one can keep us from doing BSE. The boards here are littered with women just like myself who found their lumps. Mine was showing up "probably benign" in an ultrasound, no one ever bothered to biopsy it. It was a grade 3 tumor. My doctor said there was no way the mammography would have found it for some time, due to my density. In my case, I got the runaround, but squeaky wheel gets the oil at every hospital I've ever worked with.
Ellemint, your story is mine almost exactly. I'm sorry yours was in a node, I was very fortunate to be node negative with a grade 3. Regarding suing, it has crossed my mind a million times that the "probably benign" diagnosis that went on for two years cost me a couple of percentage points in survival outcomes in all likelihood. I just can't go there right now, it's too hard for me.
I think what women are struggling with now is understanding that screening methods are in fact fairly primitive. What I hope with all the anguish and ridiculousness of pulling screening out of womens' hands is there will be a quick move to improve screening. I believe women should be allowed to make choices about their screening.
This is also where aggregates fail. Within the dump of "overall survival" or "mortality" lie women like myself. This board is representative of the women who fall in the statistical minority, clearly. And it's up to us to advocate for ourselves in an environment where the majority rules.
MRI, by the way, is also coming under fire. Check it out here in latest studies. One has to remember that in reading these reports, there are a ton of nuance about the studies--age, aggressiveness of cancer, etc.
Beesie and VoraciousReader are smarter than I am. I look to them to help me parse out the study findings.
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Thanks very much to voraciousreader and cp418 for posting the links to studies and articles that we would otherwise not be aware of.
There is an article today by a professor from UBC that says a lot of what I am trying to say, but in a much better way. http://www.theglobeandmail.com/news/opinions/opinion/the-breast-screening-debates-about-values-and-resources/article2252546/?utm_medium=Feeds%3A%20RSS%2FAtom&utm_source=Home&utm_content=2252546
A couple of brief excerpts: "Last week, The Globe and Mail's public health reporter and columnist, André Picard, presented the new breast-cancer screening guidelines - guidelines that would reduce the number of screening mammograms done - as the unalloyed product of science. Citing women's health pioneer Susan Love, he argued that those who support earlier guidelines are caught up in "wishful thinking." ....This opposition of science and wishful thinking misrepresents the debate: All health policy guidelines express values, and the new guidelines, while they take into account considerable scientific evidence, also represent a shift in social and economic values.....It must be hard to be a women who has been diagnosed with and treated for breast cancer after a screening mammogram, not only to read that you were among the deluded wishful thinkers, but also to realize that if the new guidelines had been in place at the time, you wouldn't now be engaged in wishful or illusory thinking, because you'd be dead."
My feeling is - we know that this screening has saved the lives of women in that age group, so how can we now take those life-saving measures away from them.
Andre Picard had another aticle in today's Globe as well.
He refers to the "angry doubters of the science" but never once indicates that it is just some of the science and that the science he is citing is in dispute in other studies. Interestingly, the header over his column is "Money" - an error in placement?
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I have another post going on the same topic, but wasn't sure of the best place to post it for exposure, so I put it in the "Not Diagnosed, But Worried" section:
http://community.breastcancer.org/forum/83/topic/778470?page=1#idx_30
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OUCH: also represent a shift in social and economic values
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Disturbing. I was diagnosed at 40. NO symptoms - no lumps, nothing - and NO family history. There was NO reason for me to even consider that I was at risk. I saw my GP for annual check up. She said let's get your mammo before the guidelines change just for a baseline reading. Lucky for me. The radiologist said it would have been 5 more years before I could have felt a lump. So, I would have had cancer at least 5 more years. That's plenty more time for IDC to spread. I hate to think there will be many women that aren't as fortunate as I was.
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Breast Cancer Screening: Not ‘If', but ‘Which?'By Todd Neff |November 29, 2011
CHICAGO - Carol Lee, MD, a Memorial Sloan-Kettering Cancer Center radiologist, presented a balanced menu of evidence on breast-cancer screening at RSNA 2011 on Monday. She offered up a slew of studies that, collectively, have found mammography to cut breast cancer mortality around 25 percent. She highlighted other studies, one dating back to 1976, that questioned whether mammography made any difference at all for women.
Lee mentioned the screening recommendations of the American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists, the National Comprehensive Cancer network, the American College of Radiology, and the American Cancer Society (all who suggest annual screening for women ages 40 and older) as well as those for the National Cancer Institute (biannually starting at age 40) and the U.S. Preventive Services Task Force, which recommends biannual screens starting at age 50.
Indeed, to capture her true thoughts on the issue, one had to wait for the Q&A.
"I wonder what the motivation of those who continually attack screening mammography is," she wondered aloud. "We have some pretty good science behind our position." She added that the Scandinavian studies (Kalager et all in the New England Journal of Medicine and Jorgensen et al in the British Medical Journal, both in 2010) that have questioned the value of screening mammography, are weaker than some of the studies supporting screening because they weren't randomized, prospective, controlled trials.
And so most the discussion during the panel "Screening for Breast Cancer: Where do we stand?" was not about whether to screen, but how to screen, with a focus on emerging alternatives to mainstay mammography. Lee briefly covered two of the latest options herself: positron emission mammography (PEM) and breast-specific gamma imaging (BSGI). Both, she said, have been shown to detect otherwise occult breast cancers - indeed, two studies presented Tuesday at RSNA 2011 found BGSI to have greater sensitivity and sensitivity - as well as effectiveness in diagnosis among women with dense-breasts -- than with mammography or ultrasound. But both BGSI and PEM expose patients to radiation doses far higher than the roughly 0.44 millisieverts of a digital mammogram - 6.2 mSv for BGSI and 9.3 mSv per PEM scan, she said.
Janice Sung, MD, also of Memorial Sloan-Kettering, picked up the thread for MRI screening. MRI shines with women with risk factors such as a personal history of cancer, a history of chest irradiation when young, and BRCA 1 or 2 mutations, Sung explained. Various studies have found MRI to help in detecting between 4 percent and 7 percent more cancers in high-risk women than would be the case with mammography, most of the tumors less than one centimeter in size.
Margarita Zuley, MD, the University of Pittsburgh's medical director for breast imaging, discussed research in tomosynthesis screening for breast cancer. The procedure, which creates a three-dimensional image of the breast using X-rays, won U.S. Food and Drug Administration approval in February. University of Pittsburgh researcher David Gur, ScD, and others have found it to be particularly good at highlighting small lesions and speculated masses. A current study by Gur and colleagues is yielding numbers similar to or better than a 2009 study showing a 30 percent reduction in recall rate with tomosynthesis-plus-mammography and a 10 percent reduction in recall rate with tomosynthesis alone, Zuley said.
Jean Weigert, MD, director of women's imaging at Mandell and Blau MDs, PC, and the Hospitals of Central Connecticut, picked up the thread with ultrasound. It's a good choice with dense breasts, where mammography is weak, she said. Data collected in the first year of a new study across six practices with 10 sites in Connecticut - covering 78,778 screening mammograms and 8,651 screening ultrasounds retrospectively - estimated that ultrasound screening caught an additional 3.2 cancers per 1,000 patients in the screening population, Weigert said.
Two of the main challenges for ultrasound breast cancer screening are the spottiness of insurance coverage for patients and lower insurance reimbursement rates for the procedure, Weigert said. But she added that several states, including New York, Texas and California, are making headway in requiring ultrasound as secondary screening.
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Regarding cp418's post regarding Peter McMartin's wife:
Nov 29, 2011 08:56 amcp418 wrote:
McMartin: New breast cancer screening guidelines full of crap
Mr. McMartin has written once again on the topic:
Individual lives are more important than statisticsFacebookTwitterA+-By Pete McMartin, Vancouver Sun December 1, 2011
In Tuesday's column about the new guidelines for breast screening, I related how my wife discovered her own breast cancer using self-examination and mammograms: the very tools the federal review panel that formulated the new guidelines had dismissed as being ineffective.
My email inbox filled with testimonials from women who went through the same experience, and who expressed nothing but scorn for the new guidelines - guidelines, I believe, which will not be adopted in B.C.
The column attracted the notice of Dr. Marcello Tonelli, chairman of the Canadian Task Force on Preventive Health Care. Tonelli, with the University of Alberta, is not a clinician but a kidney specialist, and was chosen for the panel, he said, because he had no conflict of interest. We talked on the phone.
While he said it was difficult to refute personal experience - that is, my wife's - he also hoped the public would recognize that the new national guidelines were based on science and statistical evidence rather than "anecdote."
Later, in an email, he wrote that there were several misconceptions about the guidelines, including:
. "[We] know from studies of hundreds of thousands of women that teaching regular, structured breast self examination doesn't prevent deaths from breast cancer - but does lead to women being harmed by unnecessary biopsies and surgical procedures. Put differently, your wife's experience with self examination is very, very rare - she's a lucky woman. Current national guidelines recommending against regular breast examination are more than 10 years old - our guideline simply reaffirms this recommendation, and is consistent with national guidelines from the U.S., United Kingdom, Australia and other countries."
. "[There] has never been a guideline from an independent national Canadian organization that has recommended screening mammography for women aged 40-49 - and accordingly most Canadian provinces do not recruit women in this age group for screening. Our guidelines do not represent a change for this age group compared with current Canadian practice. ... Please note that since our recommendations are 'weak,' an individual woman aged 40-49 years may choose to be screened if she is more concerned about the potential benefits of screening than the harms.
. "And most important, the Task Force is not opposed to screening, or trying to save money for government. Rather, we are interested in optimal use of screening - and opening a dialogue between women and their doctors about the potential benefits of screening [which are frequently mentioned] but also the potential harms [which are generally minimized or not mentioned]. Instead of paternalistically telling women that they should be screened solely on the basis of their age, we think that all women should be properly informed so that they can make their own decision. We do not understand why this is controversial."
The doctor's points are all well taken. But perhaps it takes the spouse of a cancer survivor to explain why many might find the review panel's recommendations controversial.
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When emotion prevails over cold, hard science in
public policy
JOHN ALLEMANG
Last updated Friday, Dec. 02, 2011 10:43PM
EST
An X-ray photograph of a mammography
screening. Mammography uses X-rays to detect any tumor or cyst in a breast.
(Sari Gustafsson/Lehtikuva OY)
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Who is health care for?
The answer seems obvious: everyone. It's a certainty based on the powerful
utilitarian idea that public spending should provide the greatest good for the
greatest number of people.
So what's gone wrong with breast cancer treatment? According to the
guidelines issued last month by the Canadian Task Force on Preventive Health
Care, our extensive use of screening techniques provides only small benefits at
a great cost.
Demystifying breast
cancer screening
Is the decision to
recommend reduced breast screening ethical?
The breast screening
debate's about values and resources
The guidelines' authors argue that more women have been harmed than helped by
a public-health policy that has encouraged all women to see themselves as
potential victims, even though the high-risk group is substantially smaller in
number.
Critics dismiss the guidelines by pointing to the examples of women whose
lives have been saved by mass screening campaigns.
The heated debate around cancer treatment has provoked a larger question:
Should we be crafting policy and spending money on the basis of exceptionalism?
But how do we begin to answer that question when there's no public consensus on
the exact point where the general good is no longer served by the benefits to a
few?
"There's a perverse lack of calibration between science and policy," says
Ross Upshur, Canada Research Chair in Primary Care Research at the University of
Toronto. "And this rapidly turns into a classic conflict between the universal
and the particular, because there's always an exception to the rule, the patient
whose tumor was found through screening."
Exceptionalism is at the root of many public-policy issues where emotion,
self-interest and personal experience conflict with the more dispassionate,
evidence-based approach of science.
And with good reason: The individual story changes everything in how we
relate to a prickly policy issue, whether it's hunger in Africa made human
through a famine-ravaged baby on a TV fundraiser, or the survivors' testimony
that has been marshalled to criticize the task-force report.
"If you put a face on a death, the argument for the other side is lost," says
McGill epidemiologist Abby Lippman.
Compelling exceptions are hard to counteract, especially for political
leaders who can only look cruel by preferring abstract policy about death rates
over individuals who share stories of pain and survival.
Those warring values were put to the test last year with the widely
publicized campaign for funding of the controversial liberation therapy for
multiple sclerosis. "The scientific evidence has been very weak to date," says
Timothy Caulfield, Canada Research Chair in Health Law and Policy at the
University of Alberta. "If we made the science resource allocation the way we
usually do, we'd have basic research first, try to figure out a mode of action
and slowly move it into the clinical stage. But it's the people with the disease
who are driving the issue. And when the demand is so huge, there's an impetus to
take action."
Last week, federal Health Minister Leona Aglukkaq announced plans for
clinical trials of the treatment, reversing the government's previous policy.
"The science is very thin," says University of Manitoba bioethicist Arthur
Schafer, looking for a way to explain this change of heart. "But the drug
therapies we have are very oppressive, and you're dealing with people who are
desperate. So in the end, why not try it?"
When used as a policy tool, exceptionalism is understandable and even
defensible. Israel trades 1,027 Palestinian prisoners for a single soldier held
hostage by Hamas. The critics of that asymmetric deal take a position that is
proudly detached: It's wrong because it rewards hostage-takers, at the likely
cost of future retaliations toward Israel.Continue Reading
But the payoff from the return of that single Israeli soldier goes well
beyond the individual - other Israelis see themselves reflected in him and his
suffering, and take collective pride in the protective patriotism that sees his
life as so valuable. That compassionate sense of unity can be leveraged by
politicians who recognize the overriding power of emotion, even when it seems
irrational and potentially dangerous.
Likewise in Canada, a government that talks tough on criminals when crime
rates are falling prefers the anecdotal concerns of its supporters to the
collective power of statistics. Decision-makers who won't let gay men make blood
donations know the risk of spreading HIV is infinitesimal, but balance their bad
science against the possibility of undermining public faith in the blood supply.
Researchers tell governments that in-car headsets can be just as dangerously
distracting as cellphones. Yet only the phones are banned, because the argument
against a hand-held device is easier for the public to accept - public policy,
much more than science, has to pass the popularity test.
The tensions in the breast cancer issue are even more divisive, for the
paradoxical reason that the advocates for intensive mass monitoring of the
population don't accept that they represent an exceptional position. The
treatment of breast cancer, like prostate cancer, like colorectal cancer, has
been framed in general and universal human terms: If everyone should be tested
at some point, even the non-symptomatic, isn't that what preventive public
health is all about?
The scientists on the task force challenge this belief simply by pointing to
their seemingly overwhelming statistics: Screening 2,100 women aged 40 to 49
every two or three years for 11 years saves only one life. On balance, says the
task force, that's too much exceptionalism.
Of course in the real world, we don't know whose life that is - it might be
yours. And while science fixates on the mythical average woman, doctors see much
more room for variation from the mean - especially in breast cancer, where
family histories and genetic mutations can indicate a strong susceptibility to
the disease.
"The tension in medical practice comes from figuring out how to translate
guidelines," says Neel Shah, who runs an NGO called Costs of Care. "The very
best doctors look at patients and try to figure out how they could be different
from the average. Guidelines aren't gospel, they're just a starting
point."
Published on Friday, Dec. 02, 2011 10:40PM
EST -
Is the decision to recommend reduced breast
screening ethical?
Margaret Somerville
Last updated Monday, Nov. 28, 2011 5:14PM
EST
Margaret Somerville, founding director of the
Centre for Medicine, Ethics and Law at McGill University (Christinne Muschi)
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Good facts are essential to good ethics. Taking the most up-to-date
scientific evidence into account, the Canadian Task Force on Preventive Health
Care has recommended abandoning or reducing the frequency of routine screenings
for breast cancer on certain groups of women. Some people have strongly objected
to these changes. Is this decision ethical?
Demystifying breast
cancer screening
Why I reject most of the
new breast cancer screening recommendations
Cures for cancer at any
cost
Photo Gallery Editorial cartoons, November
2011
First, the decision is made in conditions of some uncertainty. That's an
ethically relevant fact. But, as André Picard, The Globe and Mail's public
health reporter and columnist, points
out: The scientific evidence that "early detection saves lives" is
"equivocal," and the scientific evidence that the proposed changes are
reasonably safe is "a lot more convincing than the dire warnings ‘that thousands
will die' " if screening is reduced. A common mistake is to reduce unavoidable
uncertainty to false certainty and, as a result, make ethically wrong decisions.
The task force seems to have tried to avoid this error. Those opposing their
conclusions may not have.
Ethics requires non-malfeasance (first, do no harm) and beneficence (where
possible, do good). Where harm is unavoidable, it must be clearly justified. As
the debate over the changes in screening shows, we won't all agree on what
constitutes good or harm, or justification for inflicting harms or risks, in any
given circumstances.
The task force's goal is clearly to do more good than harm. But the benefits
and harms of the changes in screening will not accrue to the same persons, which
makes the situation more complex ethically. Those who would have benefited from
finding their cancer earlier will be harmed; those who avoid false positives and
unnecessary interventions, unfounded worry, and the costs screening involves,
will be benefited.
Ethically, what should be the basic presumption on which decisions about
routine screening are based? That choice can affect the decision outcome,
because when we are in equal doubt as to the correct decision the basic
presumption governs.
Under a "yes, but ..." presumption, screening would be made available, but not
if, for example, the woman had been screened within the past year. Under a "no,
unless ..." presumption, screening would not be available, unless, for example,
the woman was in a high-risk group.
The person relying on the exception - the "unless" or the "but" - has the
burden of proof of the exception. So in cases of equal doubt as to whether an
exception applies, the woman will get screening under a "yes, but" presumption,
but will be refused it, in exactly the same circumstances, under a "no, unless"
presumption.
The task force has largely adopted a "no, unless" presumption. I note that
this makes the frugal choice the default position.
The ethics that apply can differ at different levels of doing ethics:
individual (micro); institutional (meso); societal (macro); and global (mega).
And what is ethically required at institutional and societal levels can be in
conflict with the individual level. For instance, efficiency and effectiveness
in the use of health-care resources, such as screening, and justice in access to
them, are ethical requirements for hospitals and governments, but physicians
cannot put such considerations above the interests of their individual patients.
They have a "primary obligation of personal care" to each patient and must put
the patient's "best interests" first.
Decisions not to provide certain health-care resources to individuals that
seem ethically acceptable at the individual level can also be very contentious
ethically when blown up on the societal big screen, because they are seen as
setting a precedent justifying "refusals of health care."
Cost-effectiveness assessments are necessary, but not solely determinative of
ethical acceptability. Putting a price on life affects important shared values,
in particular, the value that human life and money are not commensurable and we
will pay whatever it costs to save or protect life. Consequently, as we see with
the mammography recommendations, cost-saving is usually a secondary
consideration. But increasingly, we will be faced with the question: Can we put
a maximum price on health-care resources, without putting a price on life?
Features of the decision-making can also affect whether we see it as ethical.
Hidden decision-making, hidden decision-makers, unidentified victims at the time
of the decision, indirect impact of the decision on important values and so on,
make us more likely to view it as acceptable. The opposite features make us more
likely to view it as unacceptable.
Judging whether health-care decisions are ethical can be complex. Both the
principles on which they're based and the reasons for them matter ethically, as
do the processes used to make them.
In deciding on the rules that should govern access to interventions such as
breast cancer screening, we also have responsibilities as individuals to use
health-care resources ethically. We should take into account the "do something
syndrome" - believing that doing something is better than doing nothing, which
is not necessarily the case. We should recognize mistakes as to the causation of
both beneficial and harmful outcomes, and in assuming that people in white coats
always benefit us health-wise. And we should ask ourselves whether we are using
health-care resources to seek control in order to reduce our anxiety, and are,
in fact, just the "worried well."
Margaret Somerville is the founding director of the Centre for Medicine,
Ethics and Law at McGill University.
Published on Tuesday, Nov. 29, 2011 2:00AM
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Thanks voracious, what a tempest in a teapot over these new guidelines.
Quote from the Margaret Summerville article above: "The very best doctors look at patients and try to figure out how they could be different from the average. Guidelines aren't gospel, they're just a starting point."
Quote from the Canadian Task Force on Preventive Health Care FAQ for patients:
The chance of getting breast cancer is lower and the chance of having a false positive mammogram s higher in the 40-49 age group, which can lead to further investigation, including other unnecessary procedures such as breast removal. We recommend not screening in women aged 40-49, however women in this age group who are interested in screening and less concerned about its undesirable consequences should discuss their options with a physician.
http://www.canadiantaskforce.ca/docs/FAQ_Patients_ENG.pdf
Kathy -
Seems to me the "tempest" is in VR's teapot!
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Thanks voraciousreader. I think this is a worthwhile debate. The article by Dr. Yaffe (link in Margaret somerville's article) is an interesting counterpoint to the Task Force. http://m.theglobeandmail.com/life/health/new-health/conditions/cancer/breast-cancer/why-i-reject-most-of-the-new-breast-cancer-screening-recommendations/article2252072/?service=mobile
Quote: "One sixth of breast cancer deaths and 40 per cent of years of life lost come from cancer that arises from women in their 40s. All the fuss that's been in the news is not because earlier detection of breast cancer with screening doesn't save lives. It does. Even the Task Force, despite not recommending screening for women in their 40s, agrees it reduces deaths by 15 per cent. And that's with antiquated 1980s mammography; with modern technology it's more like 24 per cent."
I am in the over 50 age group. Waiting 3 years for a mammogram (also suggested) would have been a problem for me. My tumour found in the mammogram after 2 years was .3 mm from my chest wall. I'm sure it would have been in my chest wall by 3 years.
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Indeed, super-interesting. The thing I'm responding so strongly to is it appears the decision is being made in part on old research before digital mammography and new equipment.
And what I also find interesting is none of these discussions talk about the rise of MRI as a more precise screening tool.
I can say this: diagnosed at 39 with IDC grade 3, had I waited until 50 for screening, in all likelihood, I'd be dead.
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Annual Mammography is Essential for Women in their 40's --- an article posted on Medscape.com in Ob/Gyn & Women's Health section. I'm posting the article in its entirety because the link was hard to post.
November 30, 2011 (Chicago, Illinois) - Women in their 40s with no family history of breast cancer are just as likely to develop invasive breast cancer as women with a family history, according to research presented here at the Radiological Society of North America 97th Scientific Assembly and Annual Meeting.The finding offers conclusive evidence that women 40 to 49 years of age should be screened yearly with mammography, Stamatia V. Destounis, MD, from Elizabeth Wende Breast Care, Rochester, New York, told reporters at a press briefing.
This flies in the face of the 2009 recommendation by the US Preventive Services Task Force that came out against screening for women in their 40s.
In fact, just last week, a Canadian task force issued new guidelines recommending against screening women in this age group, and extending the interval between mammography screening in women 50 to 74 years to as much as 3 years.
"All these task forces are coming out saying don't screen, don't do breast self-exam, don't do clinical breast exam. It's just ridiculous," Dr. Destounis told Medscape Medical News.
She and her team performed a retrospective review of all patients who underwent screening mammography at their center from 2000 to 2010. During that period, 6154 cancers were found in 5813 women.
Of these cancers, 1116 (18.1%) were found in women 40 to 49 years of age, and 373 were diagnosed as a result of mammography screening. The remainder were diagnosed because the women presented with symptoms such as pain, a lump, nipple discharge, and skin changes.
When the researchers focused on the women who had their cancers detected on screening mammography, they found that 144 (39%) had a family history of breast cancer and 228 (61%) did not; in the case of 1 woman, family history was unknown.
All but 1 of the patients went on to have surgery. In the women with no family history, the percentage of invasive breast cancer was 64%; in the women with a family history, the percentage was 63.2%.
The researchers also found that 31% of the women with a family history and 29% without a family history had positive lymph nodes.
"Our conclusion is that family history really doesn't seem to impact the rate of invasive disease or metastatic rate in this patient cohort," Dr. Destounis noted.
"Obviously, we know that the risk of getting breast cancer increases per decade. We get that. But 40- to 49-year-old women get breast cancer, too. They get diagnosed with screening mammography, and a considerable number of these are invasive cancers. The groups against screening say we do not have to screen them, but we do have to screen them. These women have a considerable percentage of cancers that are invasive and a considerable number of lymph nodes that are positive," she said.
Breast Cancer Risk in Younger Women Higher Than Previously Thought
Nina A. Mayr, MD, a radiation oncologist from Ohio State University, Columbus, told Medscape Medical News that the study confirms what many people have suspected.
"Many of us believe that the breast cancer risk of younger women in their 40s is much higher than we probably thought, and the recurrence rate is also higher," she said.
"I see these young women. They didn't have a mammogram and then they come in with a cancer that is very large. Many of these women still have children at home, so the socioeconomic cost of breast cancer is very high,...much higher than for in a woman in her 70s. I think these aspects are very important and they tend to be overlooked," Dr. Mayr said.
Critics who oppose screening mammography say that those who are in favor of it have a vested interest in doing mammograms, but Dr. Mayr denied that this is the case.
"If we were talking about a very expensive nuclear medicine test or an expensive surgical procedure that makes a lot of money, they might have a point. But mammograms do not make much money," she said.
In fact, academic centers and private practices find it extremely difficult to find people who want to do mammography, she noted.
"The cost of a mammogram is about $75. It is a procedure that incurs a lot of liability, so the financial yield is low and the liability is high.... If you want to derive a lot of financial benefit, you do not want to do mammography."
Dr. Destounis reports financial relationships with Siemens, Fujifilm Holdings Corporation, Hologic, Koning Corporation, Koninklijke Philips Electronics NV, and Matakina International Limited. Dr. Mayr has disclosed no relevant financial relationships.
Radiological Society of North America (RSNA) 97th Scientific Assembly and Annual Meeting: Abstract SST01-01. Presented November 29, 2011.
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