reviewJNCI Journal of the National Cancer InstituteApr 22, 2010Closed access

Overdiagnosis in Cancer

White River Junction VA Medical Center

PubMed
Indexed incrossrefpubmed

Abstract

This article summarizes the phenomenon of cancer overdiagnosis-the diagnosis of a "cancer" that would otherwise not go on to cause symptoms or death. We describe the two prerequisites for cancer overdiagnosis to occur: the existence of a silent disease reservoir and activities leading to its detection (particularly cancer screening). We estimated the magnitude of overdiagnosis from randomized trials: about 25% of mammographically detected breast cancers, 50% of chest x-ray and/or sputum-detected lung cancers, and 60% of prostate-specific antigen-detected prostate cancers. We also review data from observational studies and population-based cancer statistics suggesting overdiagnosis in computed…

Citation impact

1,580
total citations
FWCI
87.21
Percentile
100%
References
41
Citations per year

Authors

2

Topics & keywords

Keywords
  • Overdiagnosis
  • Medicine
  • Cancer
  • Lung cancer
  • Disease
  • Population
  • Observational study
  • Breast cancer
UN Sustainable Development Goals
  • Good health and well-being
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