«While we endorse annual mammography for all women age 40 and over, and the addition of annual MRI for women at high risk, MBI fills an important gap for supplemental screening in
women with dense breasts who are not otherwise at high risk.»
«We are very excited about what MBI can
offer women with dense breasts,» says Amy Conners, M.D., chair of Mayo Clinic's Breast Imaging Division and a co-author of this study.
Why are women forced to get a dangerous annual mammogram BEFORE they are permitted to get a safe breast ultrasound, which is far more effective at detecting breast cancer anyway particularly for the 50 %
of women with dense breasts?
Dr. Kelly is one of the country's leading authorities on ultrasound to detect cancers
on women with dense breast tissue and / or implants.
This can be especially useful for
young women with dense breasts, says Janet Wolter, MD, a medical oncologist and the Brian Piccolo chair of Breast Cancer Research at Rush University Medical Center in Chicago, because their home breast self - exams (BSEs) are trickier to interpret.
The SonoCiné Automated Whole Breast Ultrasound (AWBUS) was specifically designed
for women with dense breast tissue and women with breast implants.
Scientists from The University of Manchester working with IBM Research have identified a key biological mechanism that for the first time explains
why women with dense breast tissue are at greater risk of developing breast cancer.
Used in conjunction with mammography, imaging based on nuclear medicine is currently being used as a successful secondary screening alongside mammography to reduce the number of false positive results
in women with dense breasts and at higher risk for developing breast cancer.
Tumors and dense breast tissue can both appear white on a mammogram, making tumors indistinguishable from background tissue in
women with dense breasts.
A new breast imaging technique pioneered at Mayo Clinic nearly quadruples detection rates of invasive breast cancers in
women with dense breast tissue, according to the results of a major study published this week in the American Journal of Roentgenology.
said Judith K. Wolf, MD, Chief Medical Officer of Provista Diagnostics, Inc. «This study shows that, with an over 99 percent negative predictive value (NPV), clinicians can confidently use Videssa Breast to detect cancer in
women with dense breasts and better determine when biopsy is truly warranted to assess suspicious findings.»
«This study also validates the scientific promise and the growing role biomarkers have in addressing diagnostic challenges for
women with dense breasts, and the merits of further research to help expand how we put that science to work to benefit women.»
It has long been known that
women with denser breasts are at higher risk for breast cancer.
As a result,
some women with dense breasts are advised to get supplementary screening with ultrasound or MRI.
«Early evidence suggests that tomosynthesis may be a promising tool for
women with dense breasts that may reduce false positives,» said Christoph Lee, associate professor of radiology at the University of Washington School of Medicine, who contributed to the study.
Examples of higher risk would include women who carry a strong genetic predisposition to breast cancer, such as carriers of a BRCA1 or BRCA2 mutation, or
woman with dense breasts (making mammography difficult) who have a first degree relative with breast cancer.
But a study published in February estimated that performing supplemental screening ultrasound on 10,000
women with dense breasts and negative mammos would prevent only about four deaths and would require about 3,500 unneeded biopsies.
Young
women with dense breasts - as measured by the percentage of water in their breast tissue - may be at greater risk of developing breast cancer later in life than women with less - dense breasts.
Having Dense Breasts (
women with dense breasts have more dense [supportive] tissue than fatty tissue)
In
the women with dense breasts, it may make more sense to do something different like whole breast ultrasounds for example, which would be better able to pick something up until you go through menopause and your breasts get less dense and, then, maybe mammography will be more useful.
Dr Oz Dense Breasts Hidden Breast Cancer Risk For Women Over 40 —
A woman with dense breasts has 5 times the risk of breast cancer compared to women you have mostly fatty breasts.
Studies show that an ultrasound examination, in conjunction with a mammogram, can find more cancers in
women with dense breasts than by mammography alone.
Women with dense breast tissue (DBT) or implants benefit most from SonoCiné because it is difficult to produce clear images using standard mammography and immaging techniques.
Dr. Kelly is one of this country's leading authorities on using ultrasound to detect breast cancer in
women with dense breast tissue and / or implants.
So, mammograms can be less accurate in
women with dense breasts.
At this time, experts do not agree what other tests, if any,
women with dense breasts should get in addition to mammograms.
Dr. Kevin Kelly: Because that's when all of the dense breasts, it's the young
women with dense breasts.
Cancers may be harder to find on mammograms in
women with dense breasts.
Because fibroglandular tissue and tumors have similar density, tumors can be harder to detect in
women with denser breasts.