Defining
what digital can do
(continued)
"The question
is, is digital any better or even equal to regular film-screen mammography
in its ability to detect breast cancer and characterize lesions?"
Lindfors said.
As it is now,
with standard mammography, about 10 percent of screened women are
called back to the radiologist for further examination if their
mammogram shows a possible abnormality. Fewer than 25 percent of
those women will require a biopsy, and when a biopsy is done, only
25 to 30 percent of the time does it actually turn out to be cancer,
Lindfors said.
As it is now,
with standard mammography, about 10 percent of screened women are
called back to the radiologist for further examination if their
mammogram shows a possible abnormality. Fewer than 25 percent of
those women will require a biopsy, and when a biopsy is done, only
25 to 30 percent of the time does it actually turn out to be cancer,
Lindfors said.
"We are
investigating digital mammography to see if we can do a better job
characterizing lesions so we can improve that yield," Lindfors
said. "We want to determine if we have improved capability
with digital for determining whether an abnormality is real and
what the risk is that it represents cancer."
While it is
good news for women to hear that what at first looked like a possible
cancer turns out not to be, being called back for further examination
is stressful.
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A
leading advocate for womens health, Karen Lindfors studies
digital mammograms for their usefulness as an early cancer detection
tool.
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