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Study Finds Breast Cancer Survivors Are Not Getting Recommended Number of Mammograms Postsurgery

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Key Points

  • 1 year out from surgery, researchers found 13% of the survivors had not undergone any breast imaging.
  • The number without a mammogram within the past year rose to 19% by 5 years after surgery.
  • Only 50% of the patients who were followed for at least 5 years had at least one mammogram each of those 5 years.

Breast cancer survivors are not getting the recommended level of screening postsurgery, according to a study by Ruddy et al in JNCCN–Journal of the National Comprehensive Cancer Network.

The study was led by Kathryn Ruddy, MD, MPH, Director of Cancer Survivorship for the Department of Oncology at Mayo Clinic Cancer Center. Dr. Ruddy—who is also a member of the NCCN Clinical Practice Guidelines in Oncology (NCCN Guidelines®) Panel for Survivorship—looked at the postsurgery mammography rates for women with health insurance. While NCCN Guidelines recommend annual mammograms for early detection of disease recurrence; this study found that even women who remained insured were less likely to meet that standard, as they became long-term survivors.

“The use of regular mammograms to detect a return of breast cancer before any symptoms appear is associated with better overall survival,” said Dr. Ruddy. “Therefore, clinicians need to make sure that their patients are fully aware of the role these annual mammograms play in screening for new breast cancers as well as for local recurrences. Creating and implementing survivorship care plans with clear follow-up instructions may help ensure that more survivors adhere to recommended screening schedules.”

Study Methods and Findings

The researchers followed 27,212 patients for a median of 2.9 years after breast cancer surgery (excluding those who had bilateral mastectomy, for whom mammograms are not needed), with 4,790 patients remaining in the study cohort for at least 65 months. The retrospective analysis used the OptumLabs Data Warehouse, containing claims from privately insured patients and Medicare Advantage enrollees from across the United States.

One year out from surgery, researchers found 13% of the survivors had not undergone any breast imaging. The number without a mammogram within the past year rose to 19% by 5 years after surgery. Only 50% of the patients who were followed for at least 5 years had at least one mammogram each of those 5 years.

“This lack of imaging follow-up represents a missed opportunity for identifying recurrent or new breast cancers among a high-risk patient subgroup,” said Benjamin O. Anderson, MD, FACS, Professor of Surgery and Global Health Medicine at the University of Washington and Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center, and Vice-Chair for the NCCN Guidelines Panel for Breast Cancer. “Of equal importance, this finding illustrates that our health-care system can fail to track sizable groups of cancer patients after completion of treatment. The NCCN Guidelines for Survivorship delineate quality-of-life issues that patients must address, which together with tests like follow-up mammograms should be part of a coherent and integrated survivorship plan.” 

The study also found that black breast cancer survivors were less likely than their white counterparts to receive mammograms according to the recommended schedule. This may contribute to higher mortality rates for that population, given that recurrence of cancer in the breast is considered to be a major driver for poor prognosis in black women. While the reasons for this disparity aren’t clear, limited access to genetic testing could be a factor.

There are new tools currently in development to help support and encourage adherence to posttreatment screening guidelines, including mobile apps and Web-based programs. Further research is needed to explore how variability in reimbursements for imaging tests may impact surveillance testing.

The content in this post has not been reviewed by the American Society of Clinical Oncology, Inc. (ASCO®) and does not necessarily reflect the ideas and opinions of ASCO®.


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