Over the past 3 decades, screening mammography may have overdiagnosed more than a million clinically insignificant breast tumors, while having virtually no impact on the incidence of metastatic disease.
Compared with the premammography era, routine screening now picks up 122 additional cases of early cancer per 100,000 women – just eight of which would likely have progressed to distant disease, Dr. Archie Bleyer and Dr. Gilbert Welch wrote in the Nov. 22 issue of the New England Journal of Medicine.
Looking at the results in light of a corresponding 28% decrease in breast cancer mortality puts screening mammography in perspective, the authors said: "Our data show that the true contribution of mammography to decreasing mortality must be at the low end of this range. They suggest that mammography has largely not met the first prerequisite for screening to reduce cancer-specific mortality – a reduction in the number of women who present with late-stage cancer.
Population cancer screening is a doubled-edged sword, wrote Dr. Bleyer of Oregon Health and Science University in Portland, and Dr. Welch of Geisel School of Medicine at Dartmouth in Hanover, N.H. While it’s impossible to say which screen-detected cancers would have caused serious disease or death, "there is certainty about what happens to [these women]. They undergo surgery, radiation therapy, hormonal therapy for 5 years or more, chemotherapy, or (usually) a combination of these treatments for abnormalities that otherwise would not have caused illness."
The authors used the Surveillance , Epidemiology, and End Results (SEER) database to examine screening mammography and breast cancer incidence data from 1976-2008. They considered the incidence baseline to be the number of cancers reported from 1976-1978, and compared it with incidence in 2006-2008. All of the models in the study controlled for an upswing of breast cancer from 1990 to 2005, which was associated with hormone-replacement therapy.
Screening mammography increased from about 30% of women aged 40 or older in the mid-80s to almost 70% by 2008. This was mirrored by an increase in the diagnosis of early-stage breast cancers diagnosed, from 112/100,000 to 234/100,000 per year – representing an absolute increase of 122/100,000 (N. Engl. J. Med. 2012;367:1998-2005 [doi:10.1056/NEJMoa1206809]).
"[This] reflects both the detection of more cases of localized disease and the advent of the detection of [ductal carcinoma in situ] (which was virtually not detected before mammography was available)," the authors said.
There was a much smaller concomitant decrease in late-stage cancers, which fell from 102/100,000 to 94 /100,000 women. This was almost entirely driven by a drop in regional disease, from about 85/100,000 in 1976 to 78/100,000 in 2008. The incidence of distant disease was almost entirely unchanged, hovering around 17/100,000 for the entire study period.
"If a constant underlying disease burden is assumed, only 8 of the 122 additional early diagnoses were destined to progress to advanced disease, implying a detection of 114 excess cases per 100,000 women" – a total of more than 1.5 million over the study period.
The incidence of overdiagnosis held when the authors used other models designed to favor mammography’s impact.