Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Something like 50% of women under 50 or mid 50s get called back. It's really horrible. In fact, some reputable experts advise less frequent screening mammograms in healthy women with no family history or other risk factors because of that.
This. We moved to Europe and my new doctor was shocked to hear I was having annual mammograms starting at 40 with no family history. Definitely not the standard here.
The thing is, most women diagnosed with breast cancer have no family history. I am one of them. So I now advocate for regular mammograms starting at 40. If caught early, you might not need extensive surgery, or chemo.
That being said, callbacks are almost always nothing so OP is probably just fine.
Yes but unnecessary biopsies lead to both stress and can also lead to scar tissue that can make it harder to read future mammograms so it is totally reasonable to wait. Also it is not really clear that catching breast cancer early makes it less likely to kill you. And you can also end up treating cancer that definitely won't kill you. I say all of this as someone who had a lumpectomy for DCIS. But I don't really think of it as a "thank god they caught that early" situation, I think of it as more of a "I'll never know if that was a totally waste or live saving".
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'm 42 and just had my third annual screening mammogram. Always do 3D. No family history. I just received a call they want me to come back in for additional images next week.
How panicked should I be?
3.
I had a callback AND a biopsy and it was still nothing.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Something like 50% of women under 50 or mid 50s get called back. It's really horrible. In fact, some reputable experts advise less frequent screening mammograms in healthy women with no family history or other risk factors because of that.
This. We moved to Europe and my new doctor was shocked to hear I was having annual mammograms starting at 40 with no family history. Definitely not the standard here.
The thing is, most women diagnosed with breast cancer have no family history. I am one of them. So I now advocate for regular mammograms starting at 40. If caught early, you might not need extensive surgery, or chemo.
That being said, callbacks are almost always nothing so OP is probably just fine.
Yes but unnecessary biopsies lead to both stress and can also lead to scar tissue that can make it harder to read future mammograms so it is totally reasonable to wait. Also it is not really clear that catching breast cancer early makes it less likely to kill you. And you can also end up treating cancer that definitely won't kill you. I say all of this as someone who had a lumpectomy for DCIS. But I don't really think of it as a "thank god they caught that early" situation, I think of it as more of a "I'll never know if that was a totally waste or live saving".
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Something like 50% of women under 50 or mid 50s get called back. It's really horrible. In fact, some reputable experts advise less frequent screening mammograms in healthy women with no family history or other risk factors because of that.
This. We moved to Europe and my new doctor was shocked to hear I was having annual mammograms starting at 40 with no family history. Definitely not the standard here.
The thing is, most women diagnosed with breast cancer have no family history. I am one of them. So I now advocate for regular mammograms starting at 40. If caught early, you might not need extensive surgery, or chemo.
That being said, callbacks are almost always nothing so OP is probably just fine.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'm 42 and just had my third annual screening mammogram. Always do 3D. No family history. I just received a call they want me to come back in for additional images next week.
How panicked should I be?
3.
I had a callback AND a biopsy and it was still nothing.
Same here - only none of the staff told me I shouldn't worry too much and it seemed like they were really rushing to squeeze me in quickly, so I was SUPER freaked out. So mad afterward.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Something like 50% of women under 50 or mid 50s get called back. It's really horrible. In fact, some reputable experts advise less frequent screening mammograms in healthy women with no family history or other risk factors because of that.
But the majority of women diagnosed with breast cancer have no family history.
Yup. They only find genetic links in about 10%.
Speaking here as a 34yo, zero family history, yet diagnosed with triple positive invasive ductal carcinoma a year ago. Fortunately it was in a spot where I could feel the lump, and my doctors took it seriously. If it was found at age 40 I'd probably be dead or stage 4. If it had grown just another 4mm or gone to my lymph nodes I would have gone through much harsher chemo than I ended up needing. he whining from some persistent posters on here about "unnecessary scares" on mammogram callbacks has gotten really grating. What a privileged position. You got to go back to your life after a few days of worry. You're LUCKY. May you never know the other side, because it looks very different from here.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'm 42 and just had my third annual screening mammogram. Always do 3D. No family history. I just received a call they want me to come back in for additional images next week.
How panicked should I be?
3.
I had a callback AND a biopsy and it was still nothing.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'm 42 and just had my third annual screening mammogram. Always do 3D. No family history. I just received a call they want me to come back in for additional images next week.
How panicked should I be?
3.
I had a callback AND a biopsy and it was still nothing.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Something like 50% of women under 50 or mid 50s get called back. It's really horrible. In fact, some reputable experts advise less frequent screening mammograms in healthy women with no family history or other risk factors because of that.
This. We moved to Europe and my new doctor was shocked to hear I was having annual mammograms starting at 40 with no family history. Definitely not the standard here.