Anonymous wrote:I was not high risk, athletic, fit, moderate alcohol use, breastfeed years….I had my first mammogram at 41, “dense breasts” ignored the recommendation that comes with it for extra screening as overkill, second mammo a year later, boom. Stage 2 breast cancer. Currently in chemo, after a double mastectomy. I’m so grateful I didn’t delay screening till 50! I might have died first. I want to live a long long life with my family.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Some medical groups recommend waiting til 45 or 50 if you don’t have risk factors. Most of the physicians I know say we are massively over screening and it isn’t resulting in better outcomes but most women I know who are not physicians are going every year.
How would it not result in better outcomes to find the cancer early on mammogram?
The over simplified answer is that slow growing cancers grow so slowly you don’t need to catch them all that early, and the fast growing aggressive cancers tend to kill you regardless of when you catch them.
Anonymous wrote:When I was in my 40s, there were conflicting recommendations. ACS said yearly at 40, ACOG said yearly at 45, USPSTF said yearly at 50.
I am low-risk and waited to 48 to start. During that time, I was being periodically reminded by FB friends who had caught DCIS or even higher-stage breast cancers via mammograms done early how important it was to do this.
Usually these folks did not share information about their own risk factors, which can be quantified using this tool: https://magview.com/ibis-risk-calculator/ (warning: it's a long intake--quite thorough).
To date, I have not gotten breast cancer, and earlier mammograms would not have impacted any breast cancer I might eventually get. It was a good choice for me.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Some medical groups recommend waiting til 45 or 50 if you don’t have risk factors. Most of the physicians I know say we are massively over screening and it isn’t resulting in better outcomes but most women I know who are not physicians are going every year.
How would it not result in better outcomes to find the cancer early on mammogram?
Anonymous wrote:I am being monitored every six months with mammograms and ultrasounds after an anomaly on a mammo. I can completely see how if I did end up having cancer I would feel grateful for the very close monitoring and early detection. However, in the event that it’s nothing I would be grateful it’s nothing, but meanwhile have been through years of monitoring, with the associated costs (each one is about $1000 out of pocket since they are no longer “screening mammograms”), time, and worry. It’s not clear to me that it’s been a net benefit in my case.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Some medical groups recommend waiting til 45 or 50 if you don’t have risk factors. Most of the physicians I know say we are massively over screening and it isn’t resulting in better outcomes but most women I know who are not physicians are going every year.
How would it not result in better outcomes to find the cancer early on mammogram?
Anonymous wrote:I am being monitored every six months with mammograms and ultrasounds after an anomaly on a mammo. I can completely see how if I did end up having cancer I would feel grateful for the very close monitoring and early detection. However, in the event that it’s nothing I would be grateful it’s nothing, but meanwhile have been through years of monitoring, with the associated costs (each one is about $1000 out of pocket since they are no longer “screening mammograms”), time, and worry. It’s not clear to me that it’s been a net benefit in my case.
Anonymous wrote:Some medical groups recommend waiting til 45 or 50 if you don’t have risk factors. Most of the physicians I know say we are massively over screening and it isn’t resulting in better outcomes but most women I know who are not physicians are going every year.
Anonymous wrote:I do one every year, when apparently I should be doing a mammo and an ultrasound or MRI, rotated every 6 months, because of my family history.
It's not painful if you schedule your mammo during the first half of your cycle, and you take a Tylenol 30 min before the exam.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Breast cancer in younger women is on the rise, insurance will cover it yearly so that’s what I would recommend, as someone whose breast cancer was detected at an early stage on a mammogram.
Same. A mammogram caught my breast cancer at 43. Surgery, radiation, and tamoxifen. No chemo because it was caught early. Get your mammograms!
Also, I was not high risk prior to getting diagnosed. I am BRCA and other gene mutation negative. No real family history. My biggest risk factor was dense breasts, which is extremely common. And being a woman.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Breast cancer in younger women is on the rise, insurance will cover it yearly so that’s what I would recommend, as someone whose breast cancer was detected at an early stage on a mammogram.
Same. A mammogram caught my breast cancer at 43. Surgery, radiation, and tamoxifen. No chemo because it was caught early. Get your mammograms!