Study
finds breast cancer survivors stop mammographies
ATLANTA
- More than a third of American breast cancer survivors
gradually stop getting annual mammographies, according to a
new study.
The
results may indicate women grow complacent about medical
screening once they get past the medical scare, said the
study’s lead author, Dr. Chyke Doubeni of the University
of Massachusetts.
“The
assumption has been that once women have had breast cancer,
they’re going to recognize the value of a mammography and
get it done,” Edmiston said.
In
this study, researchers reviewed medical records for 797
women who were diagnosed with breast cancer in 1996 or 1997.
All were 55 and older, though the average age was about 69
1/2. All received care from health systems in Detroit,
Minneapolis, Oakland, California, or Worcester,
Massachusetts. More than 80 percent were white.
About
40 percent had one breast removed, and 55 percent had a
lumpectomy or some other form of breast-conserving surgery.
Women who’d had double mastectomies were not included.
About
80 percent of the women had mammographies within the first
year after surgery, but the percentage dropped to 63 by the
fifth year, the study found.
Older
women, particularly those with other ailments, were less
likely to get the tests as the years went by. Women who saw
a doctor annually were more likely to get them.
Also,
women who underwent breast-conserving treatment were more
likely to get mammographies than women who’d had a
mastectomy.
It’s
possible that both complacency and fear may be keeping some
women from follow-up mammographies, said Robert Smith, the
American Cancer Society’s director of cancer screening.
Also,
doctors may be failing to remind women to get the exams.
“The recommendation and endorsement of physicians can
overcome those issues” - fear and complacency, Smith said.
AP
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