Task Force Member Defends Mammography Guidelines

Meanwhile, three doctors weigh in on what women should do about the new recommendations

Posted: November 19, 2009

By Kathleen Doheny
HealthDay Reporter

THURSDAY, Nov. 19 (HealthDay News) -- Responding to the uproar over revised mammogram recommendations unveiled earlier this week, a member of the independent task force that crafted the recommendations defended them Thursday, saying they were based on the most current, accurate information available.

Dr. Timothy Wilt, a member of the U.S. Preventive Services Task Force, defended the recommendation that most women don't need to get mammograms in their 40s and should get one every two years starting at age 50. That recommendation runs counter to the American Cancer Society's long-held stance that women should get a yearly mammogram starting at age 40.

The task force's recommendations "were based on the most rigorous peer review of up-to-date, accurate information about the evidence about the harms and benefits of treatment," Wilt said on ABC's Good Morning America, the Associated Press reported.

On Wednesday, U.S. Health and Human Services Secretary Kathleen Sebelius responded to the controversy that followed the release of the task force recommendations on Monday. She said the USPSTF does "not set federal policy and they don't determine what services are covered by the federal government."

Sebelius added that American women should "keep doing what you've been doing for years -- talk to your doctor about your individual history, ask questions, and make the decision that is right for you."

She also said she'd be "very surprised if any private insurance company changed its mammography coverage decisions as a result of this action."

Wilt did not take issue with Sebelius' statement. "Our recommendations support an individualized decision-making process," he said, and each woman still needs to talk with her doctor to make the most informed decision, the AP reported.

In reaching its recommendations, the task force of doctors and scientists determined that early and frequent mammograms often lead to false-positive readings and unnecessary biopsies, without substantially improving the odds of survival for women under 50.

Reaction to the proposed guidelines has been swift.

Critics such as the American Cancer Society vowed to stand by its advice that annual screening begin at age 40 for women of average risk. The American College of Radiology agreed.

But what will doctors who see female patients day after day suggest they do?

The guidelines recommend that women aged 40 to 49 and at average risk for breast cancer talk to their doctor about when it would be best for them to begin mammography screening. Those aged 50 to 74 should have every-other-year screenings, rather than an annual mammogram, according to the new guidelines. As for women aged 75 and older, the task force concluded that there is not enough evidence to assess the benefits and harms of the test.

Whether they agree or disagree with the guidelines, experts seem to agree that women should talk to their health-care providers for guidance based on their individual medical history and other factors.

Three such providers -- an internist, a family physician and a gynecologist -- weigh in on what they will advise their patients to do.

An Internist's View

"The evidence supports the recommendation," said Dr. Karla Kerlikowske, director of the Women Veteran's Comprehensive Health Center at the San Francisco Veterans Affairs Medical Center, who wrote an editorial accompanying publication of the guidelines in the Annals of Internal Medicine.

"I think for women 40 to 49, we should target women who are at high risk," she said, such as those with a first-degree relative with breast cancer.

Changing the screening interval from annually to every two years for women 50 to 74, she said, "is one of the best things they did." At her clinic, Kerlikowske said, biennial screening has been a standard for years.

A Gynecologist's View

Gynecologist Judi Chervenak, an associate clinical professor of obstetrics-gynecology and women's health at Montefiore Medical Center and Albert Einstein College of Medicine in New York City, said she will tell her patients this: "From age 39 on, a woman should have a yearly visit to her health-care provider, during which she discusses which routine tests are appropriate for her, including mammography."

lives will be lost if we go this route!

I am a Mammographer and honestly believe if they go this way, there will be lives lost by cancers that will have been missed. I have seen breast cancer in women as young as 29 yrs of age and have seen a change in women's breast even after one year that came back positive by proven mammography imaging. I have seen it with my own eyes! Dont these women count? They are excluding all the women who have been tested positive even though the numbers are statistically low. THese are women that matter !

I think more people need to be educated in whats involved with mammography . Cancers are not always felt under examination. They are seen under xray and sometimes not seen under xray. Another form of pathology known as Calcifications can only be seen under xray. These are tricky and not palpable by anyone , not even your physician. They appear to look like little powdery specks so tiny, and if not caught early and treated, it can be too late. We still dont know all the answers on breast cancer and the thought of stopping it until age 50 would honestly be the wrong way to go. I think this is a way to lowering our population. Really scarey!

Technology is still moving strong, and now with digital mammography , we are able to see more pathology in womens breast but we still have a way to go.

People need to be more educated and not by just statistics, but by pathology and having their yearly mammograms. Please , I hope this doesnt happen. People get your mammogram dont be stupid!

beca of CA @ Jan 25, 2010 10:19:16 AM

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Aboutlcmsc of GA @ Dec 03, 2009 17:59:44 PM

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Abouthbjfk of IN @ Dec 03, 2009 17:59:32 PM

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