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Welcome to irishhealth.com (19 Jun, 2013) Quickfind
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Breast cancer screening under fire

[Posted: Fri 03/08/2012 by Gillian Tsoi www.irishhealth.com]

The world's largest breast cancer charity has come under fire for using misleading statistics to persuade women to undergo mammography.

Professors Lisa Schwartz and Steven Woloshin - from the Center for Medicine and the Media at the Dartmouth Institute for Health Policy and Clinical Practice - have challenged the "pink ribbon" creator for misusing statistics to generate false hope.

They argue that last year's breast cancer awareness month campaign by the charity ‘Susan G Komen for the Cure' "overstates the benefit of mammography and ignores harms altogether".

A growing body of evidence shows that although screening may reduce a woman's chance of dying from breast cancer by a small amount, it also causes major harms,. Yet the controversial public advertising campaign ignores this fact.

Instead it states that the key to surviving breast cancer is for women to get screened because "early detection saves lives. The five-year survival rate for breast cancer when caught early is 98%. When it's not? 23%."

This benefit of mammography looks so big that it is hard to imagine why any woman would forgo screening. But the authors explain that comparing survival between screened and unscreened women is "hopelessly biased".

For example, imagine a group of 100 women diagnosed with breast cancer because they felt a breast lump at age 67, all of whom die at age 70. Five year survival for this group is 0%. Now imagine the women were screened, given their diagnosis three years earlier, at age 64, but still die at age 70. Five year survival is now 100%, even though no one lived a second longer.

Over-diagnosis (the detection of cancers that will not kill or even cause symptoms during a patient's lifetime) also distorts survival statistics because the numbers now include people who have a diagnosis of cancer but who, by definition, survive the cancer, the authors add.

"If there were an Oscar for misleading statistics, using survival statistics to judge the benefit of screening would win a lifetime achievement award hands down," they said.

The professors argued that in terms of its actual benefit, mammography can reduce the chance that a woman in her 50s will die from breast cancer over the next 10 years from 0.53% to 0.46%, a difference of 0.07 percentage points.

The Komen advertisement also ignores the harms of screening, they add. For every life saved by mammography, around two to 10 women are over-diagnosed. These women cannot benefit from unnecessary chemotherapy, radiation, or surgery. All they do experience is harm.

"Women need much more than marketing slogans about screening: they need - and deserve - the facts," conclude the authors. "The Komen advertisement campaign failed to provide the facts. Worse, it undermined decision making by misusing statistics to generate false hope about the benefit of mammography screening. That kind of behaviour is not very charitable."

Their views are published online in the British Medical Journal as part of an occasional series highlighting the exaggerations, distortions, and selective reporting that make some news stories, advertising, and medical journal articles "not so."

 

 
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