Benefits and Harms of Breast Cancer Screening
Duke University · Clinical Research Institute
Abstract
Patients need to consider both benefits and harms of breast cancer screening.
To systematically synthesize available evidence on the association of mammographic screening and clinical breast examination (CBE) at different ages and intervals with breast cancer mortality, overdiagnosis, false-positive biopsy findings, life expectancy, and quality-adjusted life expectancy. EVIDENCE REVIEW: We searched PubMed (to March 6, 2014), CINAHL (to September 10, 2013), and PsycINFO (to September 10, 2013) for systematic reviews, randomized clinical trials (RCTs) (with no limit to publication date), and observational and modeling studies published after January 1, 2000, as well as systematic reviews of all study designs. Included studies (7 reviews, 10 RCTs, 72 observational, 1 modeling) provided evidence on the association between screening with mammography, CBE, or both and prespecified critical outcomes among women at average risk of breast cancer (no known genetic susceptibility, family history, previous breast neoplasia, or chest irradiation). We used summary estimates from existing reviews, supplemented by qualitative synthesis of studies not included in those reviews.
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 23.67
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 130
Authors
12Topics & keywords
- Medicine
- Overdiagnosis
- Breast cancer
- Relative risk
- Observational study
- Systematic review
- Mammography
- Randomized controlled trial
- Good health and well-being