Anonymous wrote: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.
Exact same situation for me. I am headed to surgery and likely some radiation. No family history and I'm glad for my annual mammograms. I don't think mammograms or even follow up u/s for women with dense breast tissue (that's many of us) is overkill or over prescribing. Obviously, the vast majority of those will show no issue. That's not the right question. It's how many early breast cancers do they catch? Stage 1 breast cancer is 99% survivable, and some types of breast tumors grow very fast, where treatment gets more and more expensive and prognosis goes down.
Anonymous wrote:Screenings are there for a reason, even if you don't have a family history (most people do not have family history)
Anonymous wrote:I’ve been getting them annually, starting at 40 (I’m now 48). It’s worth it to me even though there’s no family history. I guess I’m fortunate that I don’t find them even a little painful, it’s seriously NBD from the pain perspective, and insurance fully covers it, so why wouldn’t I spend half an hour once a year?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote: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.
This is very simplified. Catching breast cancer early often means no chemotherapy. That is a huge benefit.
It's complicated because getting treated for breast cancer that could have stayed early stage for a long time can also cause issues. And not just in terms of anxiety and cost, but cancer treatments are bad for you if you don't need them (some of them cause heart problems, for instance). Of course, on the individual level, you don't know what would have happened had you taken a different decisions, but starting annual mammograms at age 40 for women without additional risk factors or symptoms is actually a hotly debated topic among scientists in the field. It is not a settled issue in any way.
But there are data, which should inform population level recommendations.
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: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.
This is very simplified. Catching breast cancer early often means no chemotherapy. That is a huge benefit.
It's complicated because getting treated for breast cancer that could have stayed early stage for a long time can also cause issues. And not just in terms of anxiety and cost, but cancer treatments are bad for you if you don't need them (some of them cause heart problems, for instance). Of course, on the individual level, you don't know what would have happened had you taken a different decisions, but starting annual mammograms at age 40 for women without additional risk factors or symptoms is actually a hotly debated topic among scientists in the field. It is not a settled issue in any way.
Anonymous wrote: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.
This is very simplified. Catching breast cancer early often means no chemotherapy. That is a huge benefit.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote: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.
The risk calculator is based on family history. That's it.
The calculator gives me very high risk - 60% - because I have a sister and a cousin with breast cancer. But they were both low risk, because there was no family history before them (both diagnosed the same year, one with stage 3 at her first mammogram). We have all done the genetic testing now and have no genetic markers, which is common.
I think there are discussions to be had about false positives and additional screening/biopsy because of frequent screening. But the idea you are "low risk" does not mean what people think it does. It just means you don't (yet) know if your relatives have or will have cancer.
You might click through and see. The statement that this risk screen covers only family history is not accurate. It also covers age of first menstruation and pregnancy, hormone exposure, height, weight and breast density, among others. They’re are all known risk factors.
It’s true that the family history questions are lengthy—because of all of the other cancers genetically related to breast cancer.
FWIW, this is also the screen that is used to determine whether to recommend regular MRI to women with dense breasts.
PP you're responding to - I did click through and take it, that's how I got the 60%. I've also taken a similar test through my doc (gave me 56%). The family history is the most relevant factor because the majority of women have dense breasts, the majority of adult women have been pregnant, etc.
You can't get insurance to cover a breast MRI just because you have dense breasts + you're overweight or take HRT or got your period at age 9. Those won't move the risk needle enough. It really just turns on family history. Or genetic tests, but a minority of breast cancer patients have genetic markers that we know how to test for.
My point is, the absence of "high risk" factors does not make you low risk. It just means your risk is not known to be high.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote: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.
The risk calculator is based on family history. That's it.
The calculator gives me very high risk - 60% - because I have a sister and a cousin with breast cancer. But they were both low risk, because there was no family history before them (both diagnosed the same year, one with stage 3 at her first mammogram). We have all done the genetic testing now and have no genetic markers, which is common.
I think there are discussions to be had about false positives and additional screening/biopsy because of frequent screening. But the idea you are "low risk" does not mean what people think it does. It just means you don't (yet) know if your relatives have or will have cancer.
You might click through and see. The statement that this risk screen covers only family history is not accurate. It also covers age of first menstruation and pregnancy, hormone exposure, height, weight and breast density, among others. They’re are all known risk factors.
It’s true that the family history questions are lengthy—because of all of the other cancers genetically related to breast cancer.
FWIW, this is also the screen that is used to determine whether to recommend regular MRI to women with dense breasts.
Anonymous wrote: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.
What is the extea screening? I just had my first one at 40 last month. My results had some verbiage about dense breasts, but I didn't see anything about extra screening and nobody has called me otherwise.
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: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.
The risk calculator is based on family history. That's it.
The calculator gives me very high risk - 60% - because I have a sister and a cousin with breast cancer. But they were both low risk, because there was no family history before them (both diagnosed the same year, one with stage 3 at her first mammogram). We have all done the genetic testing now and have no genetic markers, which is common.
I think there are discussions to be had about false positives and additional screening/biopsy because of frequent screening. But the idea you are "low risk" does not mean what people think it does. It just means you don't (yet) know if your relatives have or will have cancer.