Women need better information about routine mammography
Hazel Thornton, honorary visiting fellow1,
Adrian Edwards, reader2, Michael
Baum, emeritus professor of surgery3
1 Department of Epidemiology and Public Health,
University of Leicester, Leicester LE1 6TP, 2 Department of Primary
Care, University of Wales Swansea Clinical School, Swansea, SA2 8PP, 3
Academic Department of Surgery, University College, London W1P 7PL
Correspondence to: H Thornton, Saionara, Rowhedge, Colchester
CO5 7EA hazelcagct@aol.com
Scientists continue to argue about the benefits of breast
screening,but ultimately decisions about screening should be made bywomen themselves. To make this decision, however, women needto
fully understand both the benefits and the potential harms
Although mammographic screening is well established in the United
Kingdom and elsewhere, its value continues to be debated. Mostof the
data on mammographic screening come from a group ofclinical trials
completed over a decade ago. These are subjectto constant reworking,
reanalyses, and wrangling between thescreening zealots and the
screening sceptics. New data are unlikely to emerge, as it is improbable that
new screening trials,with a control group that is "left to nature"
will be conducted.
Decisions about mammographic screeningshould be based on all the facts
Credit: CHRIS PRIEST/SPL
Most of the controversy surrounding screening, however, seemsto
miss the point. The question of whether the benefits ofscreening
outweigh the harms is essentially a value judgment.The problem is
that, up to now, this judgment has been madeby paternalistic agents
of the state rather than by women, supported by their general practitioners or
others. In orderto make an informed choice on screening, women need
to be awareof the range of uncertainties for both the benefits (that
is,preventing death from breast cancer) and the harms.
Evidence of effectiveness
Public health programmes such as the UK NHS breast screening
programme aim to reduce mortality from breast cancer by offering
routine mammography to healthy individuals. This is a potential
public good. But the public receives highly conflicting messages
about the effect of screening. Every new published estimateis hotly
debated in the media, and the results are usually couchedin terms
that most people will misunderstand. The latest reportof a "44%
reduction in breast cancer mortality in women aged40-69 years"1 was headlined in the Independent, for example,as "Screening `halves breast cancer death rate.'" 2
But thetext did not mention that mortality from breast cancer alsofell in those who were not screened, which was attributed to
improvements in treatment. Nor did the article mention theimportant
caveat in the original report (also included in Ottoet al's report3) that until formal methods are developed for
"partitioning mortality changes by attribution to screening,
treatment or other factors" the percentage reduction in mortality
remains unknown and incalculable.1
The public needs to be told about all the outcomes of screeningin
terms it can understand. This was achieved, for examplein Raffle and
colleagues' report on cervical screening, whichfailed to hit the
headlines.4
Earlier claims for the reduction in relative risk of death from
breast cancer among women who are screened have ranged from63% to
6%.56 Findings of
meta-analyses of randomised trialshave also variedfrom 29%7 to the conclusion in a Cochranereview that
an effect has not been shown and that breast cancermortality is a
misleading outcome measure.8 Indeed, all causemortality and surgical and psychological morbidities are equally important
outcomes, especially to the affected individuals.Studies often refer
to unnecessary treatments arising fromoverdiagnosis as "biopsies,"
but in reality this may encompasssegmental excisions, mastectomies,
and even radiotherapy (PGøtzsche, personal communication9). Comprehensive outcomemeasures are needed,
together with tools that can assess thepotential harms and benefits
of breast screening. Until toolsare developed that are capable of
measuring a wide varietyof outcomes, we cannot weigh the evidence
satisfactorily.
Evaluating harm
Harms are often dismissed as a price worth paying for the perceivedgeneral good. Individual women may suffer physical, emotional,
social, financial, intergenerational,10 or
psychological harm.11 The harm may be temporary,
lasting around the timeof testing and while waiting for results, but
can be lifelong.It is important, therefore, that women are able to
understandthe potential harms and can make an informed choice for
which they are prepared to take responsibility. The UK NHS prostate
cancer risk management programme attempts this by offeringdifferent
levels of information and counselling about the prosand cons of the
test (www.cancerscreening.nhs.uk/prostate/index.html).
The way that information is presented is as important as the
information itself. Human rights and ethical imperatives demandthat
individuals should be treated with dignity and enabledto make
informed choices based on "substantial understanding."12
This objective is rarely met. Slaytor et al reviewed 58 pamphlets
used in breast screening programmes and found that they allused
relative risk information about the benefits in preferenceto
absolute risk reductions. Six pamphlets incorrectly "advised
unequivocally that women who have regular screening mammogramsevery
two years halve their chances of dying of breast cancer."13
Such framing manipulations are highly persuasive in gettingpeople to
take tests.14 Evidence shows that use of
explicitrather than ambiguous language results in lower consent
rates.15 There is also evidence (from all
screening programmes, but mainlyfrom mammography evaluations) that
when people are offeredmore detailed information about their
personal risks they areless likely to opt for tests.16 Thus, people are more likelyto conclude
that they were not fully informed when offeredrelative risk
information in isolation and that they were notput in a position to
exercise autonomous choices.
Assessment of benefit
Few people appreciate that screening contributes to the risein
incidence of breast cancer. Yet invitations to NHS breastscreening
use the rise in incidence to justify screening.17In addition, the invitations do not mention that ductal carcinomain situ accounts for 20% of cancers detected by screening.
Ductal carcinoma in situ has an uncertain natural course andthose
women who have heard of it find it hard to understand,as do many
doctors11; it is an early stage of disease thatresults in a 40% mastectomy rate. The consequences of diagnosis
of this enigmatic, little understood disease are serious for women and the
health service. Women and their doctors have tomake difficult
decisions and evaluations of risk, which occupiesmuch time in the
clinics, and expensive research is requiredon management of the
disease.
Women invited for NHS screening are not told the numbers neededto
screen to prevent one death or absolute risks of dying ofbreast
cancer. Research by the US Preventive Task Force foundthat it is
necessary to screen 1224 women aged 40-74 years(or 1792 women
younger than 50) for 14 years to prevent one death from breast cancer.18 These are pertinent facts fora woman to
know when attempting to decide how to manage herrisk. The
researchers concluded that the age at which the trade-off between benefit and
harm becomes acceptable "is a subjectivejudgment that cannot be
answered on scientific grounds."
Improving understanding
We live in an increasingly risk conscious society where screening
has been described as "the institutionalisation of risk." Somemay
view this as acceptable if there are public health benefits.Others
may focus more on the individual's experience of thatrisk. To meet
the needs that go with the experience of risk,we need to demystify
the statistics about relative and absoluterisk, risks of mortality
and morbidity, lifetime risk, 10 yearrisks, age related risks, etc.
Great strides have been madein exploring how risk information can be
conveyed simply, ina balanced way, so that it is useful to people's
decision making.15 This approach might begin to
change the public'sperceptions about the risk of dying of breast
cancer and thebenefits of mammographic screening.11 Gigerenzer mentionsfive common
misunderstandings that could usefully be clarifiedin leaflets (box).19
Screening testsare meant for
patients with known symptoms
Screening reducesthe incidence of
breast cancer
Early detection implies reduced
mortality
All breast cancers progress
Early detection isalways a benefit
Tensions exist between the demands of the screening industry's "pursuit of
good uptake" 20 and properly promoting informedchoice of patients as required by the GMC guidelines. Although
much research has been done, so far there has been negligible improvement in NHS
screening leaflets and public misconceptions.Most women who are
screened have neither suffered nor beeneducated about the reality of
the uncertainties, harms, andlimitations of screening or the
consequences of finding pathologyof borderline importance.
Of course, most screening episodes end with the woman feeling
reassured. But how many women realise that their risk of developing
breast cancer in any one year remains at 2/1000 and that eventhis
degree of reassurance has to be tempered by an intervalcancer rate
of about half the incidence?
The focus of research into screening programmes should not beto
improve uptake but to develop flexible decision aids tomeet women's
desires for balanced information. Although somedoctors may be
concerned about admitting scientific uncertainty,honesty can enhance
patients' respect for the profession. Acultural change is necessary
to improve the experience of citizensand enable them to take
responsibility for their decisions.Some women may say they don't
want this responsibility, butit is part of grown up decision making.21
Summary points
Estimates of the effect of mammographic screeningon mortality from breast cancer vary widely
All cause mortalityand morbidity are also
important considerations
Women offeredscreening are given limited
information on the potential harms
Dataare presented in terms that are hard
to understand
Women mustbe enabled to make true
informed choices about screening
Conclusions
The information inviting women to screening must be improved.It
is unacceptable that women taking tests continue to suffermorbidity
and regret because they found out the harms of screeningfrom
experience. Research into screening needs to encompassthe range of
outcomes that are important to people being invitedfor screening.
Unless women are able to make true informedchoices, funding for the
service will continue to be questioned.
We thank the BMJ editorial team, the reviewers, Peter
Gøtzsche,and Ole Hartling for their comments.
Contributors and sources: HT had ductal carcinoma in situ
diagnosedby screening in 1991. She was invited to join the UK DCIS
trialbut felt unable to give informed consent. She has subsequentlycampaigned for consumer involvement in the whole research processand researched the ethical and practical aspects of such involvement.AE has undertaken research on risk communication, shared decisionmaking and informed consent, particularly focusing on screening
programmes. His work includes several published systematicreviews
and the development of decision aids to assist informed decision making by
consumers. MB helped establish the screeningprogramme in 1987-8 in
south east England by setting up thescreening and assessment unit in
Camberwell and King's CollegeHospital, London. He also directed the
Cancer Research CampaignBreast Cancer Trials Group between 1980 and
2002.
Competing interests: AE and HT: None declared.
References
Tabar L, Yen M-F, Vital B, Chen H-H T, Smith R, Duffy SW.
Mammography service screening and mortality in breast cancer patients:
20-year follow-up before and after introduction of screening. Lancet
2003;361: 1405-10.[CrossRef][ISI][Medline]
Screening "halves breast cancer death rate." Independent
25 April 2003: 10.
Otto SJ, Fracheboud J, Looman CWN, Broeders MJM, Boer R, et
al. Initiation of population-based mammography screening in Dutch
municipalities and effect on breast-cancer mortality: a systematic review.
Lancet 2003;361: 1411-7.[CrossRef][ISI][Medline]
Raffle AE, Alden B, Quinn M, Babb PJ, Brett MT. Outcomes of
screening to prevent cancer: analysis of cumulative incidence of cervical
abnormality and modelling of cases and deaths prevented. BMJ
2003;326: 901-4.[Abstract/Free Full Text]
Tabar L, Vitak B, Chen HH, Yen MF, Duffy SW, Smith RA.
Beyond randomised controlled trials: organized mammographic screening
substantially reduces breast carcinoma mortality. Cancer 2001;91:
1824-31.
Blanks RG, Moss SM, McGahan CE, Quinn MJ, Babb PJ. Effect of
NHS breast screening programme on mortality from breast cancer in England
and Wales, 1996-8:comparison of observed with predicted mortality. BMJ
2000;321: 665-9.[Abstract/Free Full Text]
Nyström L, Rutqvist LE, Wall S, Lindgren A, Lindqvist M,
Ryden S, et al. Breast cancer screening with mammography: overview of
Swedish randomised trials. Lancet 1993;341: 973-8.[ISI][Medline]
Olsen O, Gøtzsche PC. Screening for breast cancer with
mammography. Cochrane Database Syst Rev 2001;(4): CD001877
[GenBank]
.
Goetzsche P. Screening for breast cancer [letter]. Ann
Intern Med 2003;138: 769.[Free Full Text]
Davey C, White V, Ward JE. Insurance repercussions of
mammographic screening: what do women think? Med Sci Monitor
2003;8: LE54-5.
Rakovitch E, Franssen E, Kims J, Ackerman I, Pignol J-P, et
al. A comparison of risk perception and psychological morbidity in women
with ductal carcinoma in situ and early breast cancer. Breast Cancer
Res Treatment 2003;77: 285-93.[CrossRef][ISI][Medline]
Mazur DJ. Information disclosure and beyond? How do
patients understand and use the information they report they want? Med
Decis Making 2000;20: 132-3.[ISI][Medline]
Slaytor E. Ward JE. How risks of breast cancer and benefits
of screening are communicated to women: analysis of 58 pamphlets. BMJ
1998;317: 263-4.[Free Full Text]
Edwards A, Elwyn G, Covey J, Mathews E, Pill R. Presenting
risk informationa review of the effects of "framing" and other
manipulations on patient outcomes. J Health Communication 2001;6:
61-82.[CrossRef][ISI]
Wragg E, Robinson EJ, Lilford RJ. Information presentation
and decision to enter a clinical trial: a hypothetical trial of hormone
replacement therapy. Soc Sci Med 2000;51: 453-62.[CrossRef][ISI][Medline]
Edwards A, Unigwe S, Elwyn G, Hood K. Personalised risk
communication in health screening programs. Cochrane Database Syst Rev
2003;(1): CD001865
[GenBank]
.
NHS Breast Screening. The facts. London: Department
of Health, 2001.
Humphrey LL, Helfand M, Benjamin KS, Chan MS, Woolf SH.
Breast cancer screening: a summary of evidence for the US Preventive
Services Task Force. Ann Intern Med 2002;137: 347-60.
Gigerenzer G. Reckoning with risk. London: Penguin,
2002.
Austoker J. Gaining informed consent for screening. BMJ
1999;319: 722-3.[Free Full Text]
Coulter A. The autonomous patient. Ending paternalism in
medical care. London: Stationery Office, 2002.
DISCLAIMER:
All information, data, and material contained, presented, or provided here
is for general information purposes only and is not to be construed as
reflecting the knowledge or opinions of the publisher, and is not to be
construed or intended as providing medical or legal advice. The decision
whether or not to vaccinate is an important and complex issue and should
be made by you, and you alone, in consultation with your health care
provider.
"A foolish faith in authority is the worst enemy of truth."
-- Albert Einstein, letter to a friend, 1901
"I know of no safe depository of the ultimate powers of the society but the people themselves, and if we think them not enlightened enough to exercise control with a wholesome discretion, the remedy is not to take it from them, but to inform their discretion by education."
-- Thomas Jefferson, letter to William C. Jarvis, September 28, 1820
"What's the point of vaccination if it doesn't protect you from the unvaccinated?"
-- Sandy Gottstein
"Who gets to decide what the greater good is and how many will be sacrificed to it?"