Breast cancer deaths averted over 3 decades

Background From 1975 to 1990, female breast cancer mortality rates in the United States increased by 0.4% per year. Since 1990, breast cancer mortality rates have fallen between 1.8% and 3.4% per year, a decrease that is attributed to increased mammography screening and improved treatment. Methods T...

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Veröffentlicht in:Cancer 2019-05, Vol.125 (9), p.1482-1488
Hauptverfasser: Hendrick, R. Edward, Baker, Jay A., Helvie, Mark A.
Format: Artikel
Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Background From 1975 to 1990, female breast cancer mortality rates in the United States increased by 0.4% per year. Since 1990, breast cancer mortality rates have fallen between 1.8% and 3.4% per year, a decrease that is attributed to increased mammography screening and improved treatment. Methods The authors used age‐adjusted female breast cancer mortality rate and population data from the Surveillance, Epidemiology, and End Results (SEER) program to estimate the number of breast cancer deaths averted by screening mammography and improved treatment since 1989. Four different assumptions regarding background mortality rates (in the absence of screening mammography and improved treatment) were used to estimate deaths averted for women aged 40 to 84 years by taking the difference between SEER‐reported mortality rates and background mortality rates for each 5‐year age group, multiplied by the population for each 5‐year age group. SEER data were used to estimate annual and cumulative breast cancer deaths averted in 2012 and 2015 and extrapolated SEER data were used to estimate deaths averted in 2018. Results The number of single‐year breast cancer deaths averted ranged from 20,860 to 33,842 in 2012, from 23,703 to 39,415 in 2015, and from 27,083 to 45,726 in 2018. Breast cancer mortality reductions ranged from 38.6% to 50.5% in 2012, from 41.5% to 54.2% in 2015, and from 45.3% to 58.3% in 2018. Cumulative breast cancer deaths averted since 1989 ranged from 237,234 to 370,402 in 2012, from 305,934 to 483,435 in 2015, and from 384,046 to 614,484 in 2018. Conclusions Since 1989, between 384,000 and 614,500 breast cancer deaths have been averted through the use of mammography screening and improved treatment. Since the mid‐1980s, mammography screening has become widespread in the United States, and currently screens approximately one‐half of US women either annually or biennially. Since 1989, between 384,000 and 614,500 breast cancer deaths have been averted by mammography screening and improved breast cancer treatment.
ISSN:0008-543X
1097-0142
DOI:10.1002/cncr.31954