Dense breasts??

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rn4babies
rn4babies Member Posts: 409

It's been a while since I've been on here but I have a question. I've been getting mammograms yearly since the age of 40. I'm now 51. I was diagnosed with BC twice, once in each breast the most recent in 2012. I've been having a lot of pain in my left breast which was the breast that my BC occurred in the first time, in 2011. I've had radiation on both sides. Anyway, I just had a mammogram last week and was told it was normal but got a letter stating that my breasts are dense which may make diagnosed of BC more difficult. All the mammograms that I've ever had, this is the first time I've been told this. I thought density DECREASED with age. Has anyone else had this happen

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  • Vanden
    Vanden Member Posts: 4
    edited January 2016

    Hi PA,

    I too have dense breasts ..that is until my forthcoming mastectomy to remove. 4+cm tumor not found on mammogram five months earlier. I'm not sure when or if density subsides but I am a proponent of US and MRI for detection over mammograms . Too many follow-ups in my life due to large painful and benign cysts lulled me into trusting the mammo result with no further follow up. The letter you describe is a fairly new regulation to inform and encourage women into having additional testing done regardless of negative mammo results. That is a good thing. My primary care received every test result through the years and never once said - get an mri due to density. I just lived by the "see you next year" philosophy; joyous and relieved. It was a change in the breast shape that I noticed that sent me to a gyno specialist who sent me for additional testing.

    I've heard density lessons over time but I don't know if the higher risk that rides it's coat tails goes along with it. Either way i believe women and Drs need to advocate much more definitive and aggressive screening methods.

    My silver lining at this point is that I will not miss this heavy painful lumpy and apparently volitile breast tissue. What I will miss is the opportunity to turn back the clock and find this cancer sooner.

  • doxie
    doxie Member Posts: 1,455
    edited January 2016

    rn4babies,

    This new article from BC.org explains that there isn't a reliable standard for reporting beast density from one mammogram to another, one radiologist to another. So someone with breasts not at the highest density may see flip flops in classification.

    Just search for breast density and right now it pops up as the second item on the list. Or find it in the Clinical Trials, Research Studies...., Breaking News from Breastcancer.org. It's on page 20, the last entry.

  • labelle
    labelle Member Posts: 721
    edited January 2016

    It is possible you had dense breasts all along and were not told until now. When I viewed my mammograms and notes from the local women's center, there were notations about "dense" breast tissue in each of the last several years, but I was never notified of this. A note came back with my mammogram done this past Dec. at the breast center notifying me of the dense breast tissue. First notification ever, although I know from looking at my old mammo results that it had been an issue for years. And I think some states have just recently required patients with dense breast tissue to be notified and some places that did not notify women with dense breast tissue in the past are now doing so.

  • Anonymous
    Anonymous Member Posts: 1,376
    edited January 2016

    I also have dense breasts (well, just one dense breast now). I was recommended to have imaging every 6 months after my diagnosis, alternating with mammo+ultrasound and a breast MRI (which I hate). I was also told that density decreases with age but I'm sure that is different for everyone. Ask your oncologist about having a breast MRI if you are worried. It has the highest sensitivity compared to other imaging.

  • Janett2014
    Janett2014 Member Posts: 3,833
    edited January 2016

    I started having mammograms at age 39 or so. At every one I was told I have dense breasts. After BC diagnosis at age 60, I mentioned to my breast surgeon that I know my breasts are dense. The reply: "Not especially."

    I figure a breast surgeon would know. Were the earlier mammographers and doctors wrong, or did my breasts become less dense with age?

    It seems that most of the women I know (with whom I've discussed breast issues) have been told that they have dense breasts. Do doctor just routinely tell most of us that? Sometimes I wonder...

  • Anonymous
    Anonymous Member Posts: 1,376
    edited January 2016

    SueSurvivor thanks for the information. I also live in San Diego and Pasadena is not that far for something like this. I hate breast MRI, the whole experience scares me. I'm going to look into whether my insurance covers it and if my doctors recommend it. Thanks again.

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