Childhood Cancer Survivors Not Getting Recommended
Mammograms
2009-Jan-27
TUESDAY, Jan. 27 (HealthDay News) -- Almost half of female
childhood cancer survivors under the age of 40 who had chest
radiation as part of their treatment are not following the
recommended advice to get screening mammograms sooner than other
women, new research shows.
The recommendation suggests starting screening mammograms at age
25, or 8 years after the last radiation treatment, whichever comes
last. These guidelines are in place because women who've had chest
radiation as children, teens or young adults have a significantly
higher risk for breast cancer.
"Although the majority of women who've had chest radiation will
never have breast cancer, between 12 and 20 percent will have
breast cancer by age 45," explained study author Dr. Kevin
Oeffinger, director of the program for adult survivors of pediatric
cancer at Memorial Sloan-Kettering Cancer Center, in New York
City.
"When we looked at how frequently these women were having breast
cancer screening, we found that only 37 percent of women age 25 to
39 had been screened in the last two years. In women between 40 and
50, about 77 percent had been screened in the last two years, but
most were not in a regular pattern of screening," he said.
Results of the study appear in the Jan. 28 issue of the
Journal of the American Medical Association.
The risk of developing breast cancer begins as soon as 8 years
after radiation treatment ends, according to background information
in the study. Those at highest risk of breast cancer are women who
survived Hodgkin lymphoma through treatment with high-dose
radiation, reports the study. However, any woman who received
radiation for cancer treatment as a child is at increased risk, as
are women who received radiation prior to heart-lung transplants,
noted Dr. Freya Schnabel, director of breast surgery at the New
York University Cancer Institute, in New York City.
Oeffinger's study included 551 randomly selected women who had
survived a pediatric cancer and had undergone chest radiation as
part of their treatment.
Overall, 55 percent of the women reported having a screening
mammogram during the past two years. Forty-seven percent of those
under 40 had never had a screening mammogram, and only 53 percent
of those between 40 and 50 years old participated in regular
mammogram screenings.
The study found that screening rates were three times higher
among women whose physicians recommended the test.
Oeffinger said many different factors could account for why
these women aren't being screened.
"These are women who were treated in the 70s and 80s, largely
before we had survivor programs, and they weren't given treatment
summaries," he said. And, because it's a small group of people --
probably only about 20,000 to 25,000 women across the United
States, most doctors will only have one patient or less who has
survived a childhood cancer and had chest radiation, so it's not
something they may be familiar with.
Schnabel recommended that when "women transition to an adult
practitioner, make sure you let them know what your pediatric
diagnosis was, and the details of your treatment. And you need to
be aware that having this radiation does put you at an increased
risk of breast cancer, and if you have any family history of breast
cancer, it's even more important to get screened."
More information
To learn more about what researchers know about childhood cancer
survivors, visit the
National Cancer Institute.
HealthDay News
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