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Adverse effects

Authoring team

Adverse effects of mammographic breast screening include:

  • radiation risk - estimated that one extra breast cancer develops each year in women over 50 years, after a latent period of up to 10 years, for each million women screened

  • psychological and physical morbidity - mainly associated with false-positive screens - about two thirds of screen detected abnormalities are found to be unimportant on further mammography or ultrasound scanning

  • diagnosis of cancer that would not have become symptomatic during the woman's lifetime - in breast cancer, the natural history is not fully understood nor is there a clearly recognisable early stage of the disease. This carries the risk that some women will be subjected to further investigation and treatment which is unnecessary

  • resource costs - both real and opportunity costs of the screening programme

  • false-negatives - approximately 5% of cancers in women over the age of 50 years are mammographically invisible

Reference

  1. Marmot MG, Altman DG, Cameron DA, et al. The benefits and harms of breast cancer screening: an independent review. Br J Cancer 2013; 108:2205–40.

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