Breast cancer screening programs can cause more harm than good, according to a Danish professor who suggests women should not get screening mammograms at all.
Medical researcher Professor Peter Gotzsche argues that for every three or four lives saved by a widespread mammogram program, there is a risk of up to nine lives lost from the harm caused by radiography and other medical interventions.
But an Australian surgeon has refuted the claims, saying it would be a “tragedy” if more women came to him with “large, more advanced cancers” because they did not have screenings done.
Professor Gotzsche told the ABC’s 7.30 program that “mammography screening is harmful”.
Over the past two weeks Professor Gotzsche has been touring Australia presenting his findings that preventative screening does not reduce mortality rates.
Read more: When a woman beats breast cancer, she deserves to feel sexy and powerful.
“What you have heard about breast screening is that it reduces breast cancer mortality usually by 30 per cent. That’s probably also what you have heard here in Australia. It’s not true,” his lecture stated.
“Those who might avoid dying from breast cancer are neutralised or cancelled out by those who are actually killed by having a therapy they did not need because they are over diagnosed breast cancer.”
Improved cancer detection leading to more treatments is a key factor in the analysis.
Top Comments
All women should be given the option of paying for an MRI, which doesn't involve the use of radiation, we shouldn't be using radiation at all in this day and age but cost still precludes everyone from having access to MRI instead of CT unfortunately.
There is a type of breast cancer (10-15% of the total) that isn't well seen on mammogram (and occasionally not seen on MRI) and doesn't produce discrete 'lumps' to be found on breast self examination either. For those women, the current screening programs may do no good at all and no-one ever seems to be told about the limitations of mammogram effectiveness. We could do with more research into finding this early rather than flipping it off as 'just a minority of cases'.