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NOVEMBER / DECEMBER
2005
AROUND HARVARD
This article originally appeared in
the November 2005 Harvard Women’s Health Watch and is provided courtesy
of Harvard Health
Publications.
Digital mammography better for some women
New technology helps see through breast tissue that
can hide cancers.
In recent years, advanced imaging technologies, such as magnetic resonance
imaging (MRI), ultrasound, and digital imaging have been used in breast cancer
screening. But it hasn’t been clear whether any of these techniques offered
a better way of spotting breast cancer than standard mammography. While new
technologies can help improve image quality or make diagnosis more precise,
they haven’t replaced traditional mammography.
However, that could change, in light of results from the Digital Mammographic
Imaging Screening Trial (DMIST), a large clinical study of digital versus traditional
mammography. The DMIST trial was funded by the National Cancer Institute and
led by investigators at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. Researchers
in the United States and Canada used both technologies to examine the breasts
of nearly 50,000 women, ages 47–62. For the group as a whole, digital
was neither better nor worse than standard mammography. But in women most likely
to have dense breasts, digital did a better job of locating breast cancers.
The findings were published in the New England Journal of Medicine (October
27, 2005) and online at www.nejm.org.
Results and implications
The authors reported that digital imaging improved cancer detection by 15%
in women under age 50 and in those nearing menopause — as well as by
11% in women of any age with dense breasts. Dense breast tissue has less fat
and more glandular and connective tissue. High breast density increases the
risk of breast cancer, although the reasons aren’t entirely clear. On
a mammogram, cancer may be obscured by dense breast tissue. Such tissue may
also be more vulnerable to malignancy — a possibility researchers are
exploring. Although dense breast tissue is more common in younger women, 30%–40%
of women over age 50 also have dense breasts.
One of the chief advantages of digital over standard mammography is that radiologists
can fine-tune images so that tiny abnormalities stand out better when breast
density is an issue (see “Why digital mammograms help”). Older
breasts, which tend to have less glandular tissue, don’t pose the same
challenge. Indeed, the DMIST study found that digital imaging was no more accurate,
overall, than standard mammography in detecting breast cancer in women over
age 50 and in those who don’t have dense breasts or who are no longer
menstruating.
Why digital
mammograms help
On
mammograms, fat looks dark gray, and breast tissue, which is denser,
is white. Abnormalities, such as microcalcifications and lumps,
also appear white, making it difficult to distinguish them from
the surrounding tissue. In the digital image (left), a cancerous
mass can be seen as solid white (boxed in red), just behind the
nipple. The tumor is harder to spot on a standard mammogram (right)
of the same breast. |
What now?
These results don’t mean that every woman should rush out to get a digital
mammogram. For one thing, digital mammography is not yet widely available.
Digital systems are far more expensive than standard mammography equipment;
they also require special training on the part of radiologists and technologists.
Ultrasound, widely available, can be added to standard mammography to help
answer questions raised by a suspicious mammogram.
But many institutions are moving toward digital systems, in part because of
the technical advantages. Digital images are easier to store, and they can
be transmitted quickly — for example, to get second opinions or to transfer
records. They may also reduce callbacks for further imaging. And to the extent
that digital mammography better reveals abnormalities in dense breast tissue,
it will make for another strong incentive to go digital.
More studies of digital imaging in large populations should help clarify the
benefits of this technology. For now, there are two important messages: First,
regular mammograms for women age 40 and over matter. Whether digital or on
film, when read by a well-trained eye, standard mammograms help find breast
cancers early. Second, for any woman with dense breast tissue, digital mammography
is an option worth investigating.
Copyright 2006 Harvard Medical International
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