Do Mammograms Save Lives?

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For every life saved by mammography, as many as two to ten women are overdiagnosed and unnecessarily turned into breast cancer patients—and let’s not overlook all of the attendant harms of chemo, radiation, or surgery without the benefits.

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Below is an approximation of this video’s audio content. To see any graphs, charts, graphics, images, and quotes to which Dr. Greger may be referring, watch the above video.

What was the impact of the 2009 shift in recommendation to delay routine screening until age 50? Ironically, mammography rates of women in their 40s may have actually gone up. The thought is that all the media attention may have just reminded women about it, underscoring the need to better translate “evidence…into practice.”

The new recommendations bring the U.S. closer to European standards: mammograms every few years, starting at age 50. In 2015, the American Cancer Society split the difference, and recommended starting at 45 annually, and then switching to every other year at 55—suggesting this would decrease the lifetime risk of dying from breast cancer from 2.7% down to under 2%, based in part on a systematic review performed by the Cochrane collaboration, a highly-respected bastion of evidence-based medicine.

The authors of the Cochrane review, however, wrote in to say they used the wrong number, and that if you look at the studies they considered were “adequately randomized,” there did not appear to be any significant “mortality benefit” from mammograms at all, and that the “data certainly do not support the popular idea that [breast cancer] screening saves lives”—accusing the American Cancer Society of being more of “a political organization with financial ties to…the multi-billion dollar [mammogram] industry.”

Here’s the Cochrane review they’re talking about, which concluded that “[t]he studies which provided the most reliable information [evidently] showed that screening did not reduce breast cancer mortality.” If that’s true, then that changes everything. They conclude that “the time has [therefore] come to re-assess whether [routine mammograms] should be recommended for [women of] any age”—which is what the Swiss Medical Board did. They “were struck by how nonobvious it was that the benefits of mammography screening outweighed the harms.” It’s “easy to promote mammography screening [when] the majority of women believe that it prevents or reduces the risk of getting breast cancer and saves many lives through early detection of aggressive tumors.” I mean, if those beliefs were valid, they’d be all for it. “Unfortunately,” they concluded, “they are not, and [so] believe that women need to be told so. From an ethical perspective, a public health program that does not clearly produce more benefits than harms is hard to justify.” Their report, not surprisingly, “caused an uproar.” Critics argued that “the report unsettled women, but we wonder how to avoid unsettling women, given the available evidence.”

If you ask women what they perceive to be the benefits of regular mammogram screening, they think it cuts the risk of dying from breast cancer in half. That’s the orange box: saving the lives of about one in 12 women. But, in reality, the numbers appear to look like this. First of all, the risk of dying from breast cancer regardless is smaller than most women think, and the reduction in risk—the differences in size of the orange boxes—is much smaller, maybe only one in a thousand women benefits. But hey, doesn’t saving the life of even one in a thousand women make it all worth it? Imagine if you were in that one in a thousand family whose mom was saved. But, that may not be true.

One in a thousand women screened may not die from breast cancer, but there’s “no evidence to suggest that overall mortality was affected,” which would mean no lives are actually saved. There’s been 10 randomized trials of mammogram screening, and not one has ever showed “an overall mortality benefit.” Wait. How does that make sense? If mammograms prevent one in a thousand women from dying from breast cancer, then the only way no lives are saved is if mammograms ended up somehow leading to the deaths of one in a thousand healthy women, and that’s preposterous, right?

Let me introduce the concept of “overdiagnosis”—the fact that some of the tiny tumors picked up on mammograms may have never progressed, or even disappeared on their own. And so, had they not been picked up, the women would have been none the wiser: would have never been affected by it, or even known they had it. But once you pick up a cancer on a mammogram, you have to treat it, since you don’t know what it’s going to do. But, in some cases, the overdiagnosed cases where it would never hurt you, you’re treating the breast cancer unnecessarily.

How common is that, though? “For every life saved by mammography, [as many as] two to 10 women are overdiagnosed”—meaning turned into breast cancer patients unnecessarily, along with all the attendant harms of chemo, radiation, or surgery without the benefits. Harms can include death. Imagine being in the family whose mom was killed.

The concern is that unnecessary radiation treatments “may kill…as many as” are saved; hence, the no evidence of net mortality benefit. Radiation treatments to the chest increase the risk of dying from heart disease and lung cancer. Now, those may be acceptable risks, if you actually have breast cancer that would otherwise kill you. Treatments that are beneficial for real patients can be lethal for those who never should have been treated in the first place.

Even if mammograms don’t save your life, might they save your breast? I mean, if you catch a tumor early, maybe you can avoid a mastectomy? The opposite may actually be true. The Cochrane researchers explain that that’s why they published their report. They thought it was important for women to know that “screening [may increase] their risk of losing a breast.”

Basically, mammograms have “been promoted to the public with three simple promises that all appear to be wrong:…Screening does not seem to make the women live longer; it [instead may unnecessarily] increase…mastectomies; and cancers are not caught early…” It may take decades for a tumor to grow large enough to be picked up on a mammogram. And, even when they are, they may not grow any further; that’s the concern we’re catching too many. “There is so much overdiagnosis that” if a woman really doesn’t want to become “a breast cancer patient,” maybe they should “avoid [mammogram] screening” altogether. But, if you have breast cancer, don’t you want to know?

“The small probability that a woman may avoid a breast cancer death must be weighed against the more likely scenario that she may have a false-positive…[or] false-negative result…, or most critically, [a] diagnosis and treatment of cancer that would otherwise not have threatened her health or even come to her attention.”

Please consider volunteering to help out on the site.

Image credit: U.S. Department of Defense. Image has been modified.

Motion graphics by Avocado Video

Below is an approximation of this video’s audio content. To see any graphs, charts, graphics, images, and quotes to which Dr. Greger may be referring, watch the above video.

What was the impact of the 2009 shift in recommendation to delay routine screening until age 50? Ironically, mammography rates of women in their 40s may have actually gone up. The thought is that all the media attention may have just reminded women about it, underscoring the need to better translate “evidence…into practice.”

The new recommendations bring the U.S. closer to European standards: mammograms every few years, starting at age 50. In 2015, the American Cancer Society split the difference, and recommended starting at 45 annually, and then switching to every other year at 55—suggesting this would decrease the lifetime risk of dying from breast cancer from 2.7% down to under 2%, based in part on a systematic review performed by the Cochrane collaboration, a highly-respected bastion of evidence-based medicine.

The authors of the Cochrane review, however, wrote in to say they used the wrong number, and that if you look at the studies they considered were “adequately randomized,” there did not appear to be any significant “mortality benefit” from mammograms at all, and that the “data certainly do not support the popular idea that [breast cancer] screening saves lives”—accusing the American Cancer Society of being more of “a political organization with financial ties to…the multi-billion dollar [mammogram] industry.”

Here’s the Cochrane review they’re talking about, which concluded that “[t]he studies which provided the most reliable information [evidently] showed that screening did not reduce breast cancer mortality.” If that’s true, then that changes everything. They conclude that “the time has [therefore] come to re-assess whether [routine mammograms] should be recommended for [women of] any age”—which is what the Swiss Medical Board did. They “were struck by how nonobvious it was that the benefits of mammography screening outweighed the harms.” It’s “easy to promote mammography screening [when] the majority of women believe that it prevents or reduces the risk of getting breast cancer and saves many lives through early detection of aggressive tumors.” I mean, if those beliefs were valid, they’d be all for it. “Unfortunately,” they concluded, “they are not, and [so] believe that women need to be told so. From an ethical perspective, a public health program that does not clearly produce more benefits than harms is hard to justify.” Their report, not surprisingly, “caused an uproar.” Critics argued that “the report unsettled women, but we wonder how to avoid unsettling women, given the available evidence.”

If you ask women what they perceive to be the benefits of regular mammogram screening, they think it cuts the risk of dying from breast cancer in half. That’s the orange box: saving the lives of about one in 12 women. But, in reality, the numbers appear to look like this. First of all, the risk of dying from breast cancer regardless is smaller than most women think, and the reduction in risk—the differences in size of the orange boxes—is much smaller, maybe only one in a thousand women benefits. But hey, doesn’t saving the life of even one in a thousand women make it all worth it? Imagine if you were in that one in a thousand family whose mom was saved. But, that may not be true.

One in a thousand women screened may not die from breast cancer, but there’s “no evidence to suggest that overall mortality was affected,” which would mean no lives are actually saved. There’s been 10 randomized trials of mammogram screening, and not one has ever showed “an overall mortality benefit.” Wait. How does that make sense? If mammograms prevent one in a thousand women from dying from breast cancer, then the only way no lives are saved is if mammograms ended up somehow leading to the deaths of one in a thousand healthy women, and that’s preposterous, right?

Let me introduce the concept of “overdiagnosis”—the fact that some of the tiny tumors picked up on mammograms may have never progressed, or even disappeared on their own. And so, had they not been picked up, the women would have been none the wiser: would have never been affected by it, or even known they had it. But once you pick up a cancer on a mammogram, you have to treat it, since you don’t know what it’s going to do. But, in some cases, the overdiagnosed cases where it would never hurt you, you’re treating the breast cancer unnecessarily.

How common is that, though? “For every life saved by mammography, [as many as] two to 10 women are overdiagnosed”—meaning turned into breast cancer patients unnecessarily, along with all the attendant harms of chemo, radiation, or surgery without the benefits. Harms can include death. Imagine being in the family whose mom was killed.

The concern is that unnecessary radiation treatments “may kill…as many as” are saved; hence, the no evidence of net mortality benefit. Radiation treatments to the chest increase the risk of dying from heart disease and lung cancer. Now, those may be acceptable risks, if you actually have breast cancer that would otherwise kill you. Treatments that are beneficial for real patients can be lethal for those who never should have been treated in the first place.

Even if mammograms don’t save your life, might they save your breast? I mean, if you catch a tumor early, maybe you can avoid a mastectomy? The opposite may actually be true. The Cochrane researchers explain that that’s why they published their report. They thought it was important for women to know that “screening [may increase] their risk of losing a breast.”

Basically, mammograms have “been promoted to the public with three simple promises that all appear to be wrong:…Screening does not seem to make the women live longer; it [instead may unnecessarily] increase…mastectomies; and cancers are not caught early…” It may take decades for a tumor to grow large enough to be picked up on a mammogram. And, even when they are, they may not grow any further; that’s the concern we’re catching too many. “There is so much overdiagnosis that” if a woman really doesn’t want to become “a breast cancer patient,” maybe they should “avoid [mammogram] screening” altogether. But, if you have breast cancer, don’t you want to know?

“The small probability that a woman may avoid a breast cancer death must be weighed against the more likely scenario that she may have a false-positive…[or] false-negative result…, or most critically, [a] diagnosis and treatment of cancer that would otherwise not have threatened her health or even come to her attention.”

Please consider volunteering to help out on the site.

Image credit: U.S. Department of Defense. Image has been modified.

Motion graphics by Avocado Video

Doctor's Note

You can check out my Doctor’s Note under the first video in this series to read why I chose to spend so much time on this topic. This is the fourth video in a 14-part series. If you missed the first three, see:

Stay tuned for:

Want to watch the entire series right now? Stream it for a donation to NutritionFacts.org by going here.

For more on breast cancer, see my videos Oxidized Cholesterol 27HC May Explain Three Breast Cancer Mysteriesand Eggs and Breast Cancer.

I was able to cover colon cancer screening in just one video. If you missed it, check out Should We All Get Colonoscopies Starting at Age 50?.

Also on the topic of medical screenings, see Is It Worth Getting Annual Health Check-Ups? and Is It Worth Getting an Annual Physical Exam?.

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