Mammography screening in the county of Fyn. November 1993-December 1999 - PubMed (original) (raw)
Affiliations
- PMID: 12739252
Mammography screening in the county of Fyn. November 1993-December 1999
Sisse Helle Njor et al. APMIS Suppl. 2003.
Abstract
This report covers the outcome of the first three invitation rounds of the organised mammography screening programme in the county of Fyn. The programme started in November 1993, and the third invitation round ended on 31 December 1999. The screening takes place either at a special clinic located at University Hospital Odense or in a mobile unit. Women living in and around the city of Odense are examined at the clinic (about 55%), while the rest are examined in the mobile unit. Two-view mammography is used at the first screening. Women with dense breast tissue will continue to have two-view mammography (about 60%), whereas the rest will have singleview mammography at the subsequent screens. All screening images are exposed at the mammography-screening clinic and evaluated with double reading in the clinic. The programme targets women aged 50-69, except those undergoing treatment for breast cancer or going for regular check-ups following breast cancer. Based on the updated population register, the IT-Centre of the county of Fyn issues the invitations. Invited are all women aged 50-69 and living in the county of Fyn when their general practitioners' patients are invited. During the first 3 invitation rounds, 136,079 screening tests were made. Of these, 129,375 tests were made in the women aged 50-69 targeted by the programme. In addition, 6682 screening tests were made in women aged 70 and above, and 22 screening tests were made in women below the age of 50. As a consequence of the mammography screening 2657 assessments were made, 1145 women had surgery, 782 women were diagnosed with invasive breast cancer, and 109 women were diagnosed with ductal carcinoma in situ. A participation rate for the first invitation round was calculated immediately after the end of the round based on the number of participants divided by the number of women invited. This percentage was 88%. Invitation data are, however, not stored. It is therefore not possible now to calculate the participation rates in previous invitation rounds based on the same method. We have therefore chosen to calculate the participation rate as the coverage, i.e. the number of participants divided by the average number of women in the county of Fyn during a given invitation round. Calculated in this way, 84% participated in the first round, 84% in the second round, and 82% in the third round. It should be remembered that these figures do not take into account that some women are not invited because they 1) were undergoing current treatment for breast cancer or going for regular check-ups following breast cancer, or 2) did not participate in the previous round (and never actively informed the programme that they wanted an invitation to the next invitation round), relevant only for the second and third invitation round. For the second and third invitation rounds, the programme only invited women who participated in the previous invitation round, asked the clinic for an invitation, or entered the target population since the last invitation round. Therefore the participation rate in the second invitation round among actually invited women will be close to 94%, as 94% of those participating in the first round came for the second round. For the third invitation round, the participation rate among actually invited women will be close to 96%, as 96% of those participating in the first and second rounds came for the third round. One per cent of the participants in the first invitation round were diagnosed with invasive breast cancer or ductal carcinoma in situ. The detection rate was 0.5% in both the second and third invitation rounds. Ductal carcinoma in situ cases constituted 14% of the detected cases in the first and second rounds, and 10% in the third round. The percentage of invasive breast cancer 10 mm of less was 38%, 31%, and 32%, respectively, and 68%, 74%, and 73%, respectively, were node-negative. The screening programme of the county of Fyn fulfilled all the quality assessment parameters specified by the European guidelines on breast cancer screening, except two. The proportionate interval cancer rate was higher than specified in the guidelines, probably mainly due to the fact that the Fyn programme operates without early recalls. The proportion of stage II+ cancers was higher than specified in the guidelines, which seems, however, to be due to inconsistency between some of the performance indicators in the European guidelines. This analysis of the outcome from the first three invitation rounds of the mammography screening programme in the county of Fyn thus showed that it is a programme of high quality with a favourable profile of the prognostic indicators. The screening programme is hopefully well on its way to reducing breast cancer mortality in the county of Fyn.
Similar articles
- Danish Quality Database for Mammography Screening.
Mikkelsen EM, Njor SH, Vejborg I. Mikkelsen EM, et al. Clin Epidemiol. 2016 Oct 25;8:661-666. doi: 10.2147/CLEP.S99467. eCollection 2016. Clin Epidemiol. 2016. PMID: 27822113 Free PMC article. Review. - [Tailored Breast Screening Trial (TBST)].
Paci E, Mantellini P, Giorgi Rossi P, Falini P, Puliti D; TBST Working Group. Paci E, et al. Epidemiol Prev. 2013 Jul-Oct;37(4-5):317-27. Epidemiol Prev. 2013. PMID: 24293498 Clinical Trial. Italian. - [Mammography screening in the county of Copenhagen. Results of the first three screening rounds].
Tange UB, Hirsch FR, Jensen MB, Olsen AH, Blichert-Toft M, Rank FE, Vejborg IM, Mouridsen H, Lynge E. Tange UB, et al. Ugeskr Laeger. 2002 Feb 18;164(8):1048-52. Ugeskr Laeger. 2002. PMID: 11894707 Danish. - [The state of the organised mammography screening in Hungary in 2006].
Kovács A, Döbrossy L, Budai A, Boncz I, Cornides A. Kovács A, et al. Orv Hetil. 2007 May 13;148(19):879-85. doi: 10.1556/OH.2007.28092. Orv Hetil. 2007. PMID: 17478403 Review. Hungarian.
Cited by
- Danish Quality Database for Mammography Screening.
Mikkelsen EM, Njor SH, Vejborg I. Mikkelsen EM, et al. Clin Epidemiol. 2016 Oct 25;8:661-666. doi: 10.2147/CLEP.S99467. eCollection 2016. Clin Epidemiol. 2016. PMID: 27822113 Free PMC article. Review. - The relation between socioeconomic and demographic factors and tumour stage in women diagnosed with breast cancer in Denmark, 1983-1999.
Dalton SO, Düring M, Ross L, Carlsen K, Mortensen PB, Lynch J, Johansen C. Dalton SO, et al. Br J Cancer. 2006 Sep 4;95(5):653-9. doi: 10.1038/sj.bjc.6603294. Epub 2006 Aug 8. Br J Cancer. 2006. PMID: 16909141 Free PMC article. - Overdiagnosis in screening mammography in Denmark: population based cohort study.
Njor SH, Olsen AH, Blichert-Toft M, Schwartz W, Vejborg I, Lynge E. Njor SH, et al. BMJ. 2013 Feb 26;346:f1064. doi: 10.1136/bmj.f1064. BMJ. 2013. PMID: 23444414 Free PMC article. - Long-term psychosocial consequences of false-positive screening mammography.
Brodersen J, Siersma VD. Brodersen J, et al. Ann Fam Med. 2013 Mar-Apr;11(2):106-15. doi: 10.1370/afm.1466. Ann Fam Med. 2013. PMID: 23508596 Free PMC article. - A simple way to measure the burden of interval cancers in breast cancer screening.
Andersen SB, Törnberg S, Lynge E, Von Euler-Chelpin M, Njor SH. Andersen SB, et al. BMC Cancer. 2014 Oct 24;14:782. doi: 10.1186/1471-2407-14-782. BMC Cancer. 2014. PMID: 25344115 Free PMC article.
Publication types
MeSH terms
LinkOut - more resources
Full Text Sources
Medical
Research Materials
Miscellaneous