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Breast cancer risk characteristics of women undergoing whole-breast ultrasound screening versus mammography alone.

Authors :
Sprague BL
Ichikawa L
Eavey J
Lowry KP
Rauscher G
O'Meara ES
Miglioretti DL
Chen S
Lee JM
Stout NK
Mandelblatt JS
Alsheik N
Herschorn SD
Perry H
Weaver DL
Kerlikowske K
Source :
Cancer [Cancer] 2023 Aug 15; Vol. 129 (16), pp. 2456-2468. Date of Electronic Publication: 2023 Jun 12.
Publication Year :
2023

Abstract

Background: There are no consensus guidelines for supplemental breast cancer screening with whole-breast ultrasound. However, criteria for women at high risk of mammography screening failures (interval invasive cancer or advanced cancer) have been identified. Mammography screening failure risk was evaluated among women undergoing supplemental ultrasound screening in clinical practice compared with women undergoing mammography alone.<br />Methods: A total of 38,166 screening ultrasounds and 825,360 screening mammograms without supplemental screening were identified during 2014-2020 within three Breast Cancer Surveillance Consortium (BCSC) registries. Risk of interval invasive cancer and advanced cancer were determined using BCSC prediction models. High interval invasive breast cancer risk was defined as heterogeneously dense breasts and BCSC 5-year breast cancer risk ≥2.5% or extremely dense breasts and BCSC 5-year breast cancer risk ≥1.67%. Intermediate/high advanced cancer risk was defined as BCSC 6-year advanced breast cancer risk ≥0.38%.<br />Results: A total of 95.3% of 38,166 ultrasounds were among women with heterogeneously or extremely dense breasts, compared with 41.8% of 825,360 screening mammograms without supplemental screening (p < .0001). Among women with dense breasts, high interval invasive breast cancer risk was prevalent in 23.7% of screening ultrasounds compared with 18.5% of screening mammograms without supplemental imaging (adjusted odds ratio, 1.35; 95% CI, 1.30-1.39); intermediate/high advanced cancer risk was prevalent in 32.0% of screening ultrasounds versus 30.5% of screening mammograms without supplemental screening (adjusted odds ratio, 0.91; 95% CI, 0.89-0.94).<br />Conclusions: Ultrasound screening was highly targeted to women with dense breasts, but only a modest proportion were at high mammography screening failure risk. A clinically significant proportion of women undergoing mammography screening alone were at high mammography screening failure risk.<br /> (© 2023 The Authors. Cancer published by Wiley Periodicals LLC on behalf of American Cancer Society.)

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
1097-0142
Volume :
129
Issue :
16
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
Cancer
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
37303202
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1002/cncr.34768