Literature DB >> 10555768

Interval cancers in the Dutch breast cancer screening programme.

J Fracheboud1, H J de Koning, P M Beemsterboer, R Boer, A L Verbeek, J H Hendriks, B M van Ineveld, M J Broeders, A E de Bruyn, P J van der Maas.   

Abstract

The nationwide breast cancer screening programme in The Netherlands for women aged 50-69 started in 1989. In our study we assessed the occurrence and stage distribution of interval cancers in women screened during 1990-1993. Records of 0.84 million screened women were linked to the regional cancer registries yielding a follow-up of at least 2.5 years. Age-adjusted incidence rates and relative (proportionate) incidences per tumour size including ductal carcinoma in-situ were calculated for screen-detected and interval cancers, and cancers in not (yet) screened women, comparing them with published data from the UK regions North West and East Anglia. In total 1527 interval cancers were identified: 0.95 and 0.99 per 1000 woman-years of follow-up in the 2-year interval after initial and subsequent screens respectively. In the first year after initial screening interval cancers amounted to 27% (26% after subsequent screens) of underlying incidence, and in the second year to 52% (55%). Generally, interval cancers had a more favourable tumour size distribution than breast cancer in not (yet) screened women. The Dutch programme detected relatively less (favourable) invasive cancers in initial screens than the UK programme, whereas the number of interval cancers confirms UK findings. Measures should be considered to improve the detection of small invasive cancers and to reduce false-negative rates, even if this will lead to increasing referral rates.

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Year:  1999        PMID: 10555768      PMCID: PMC2374303          DOI: 10.1038/sj.bjc.6690786

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Br J Cancer        ISSN: 0007-0920            Impact factor:   7.640


  21 in total

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Authors:  P Prior; C B Woodman; S Wilson; A G Threlfall
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2.  Results from the NHS breast screening programme 1990-1993.

Authors:  S M Moss; M Michel; J Patnick; L Johns; R Blanks; J Chamberlain
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3.  Monitoring interval cancers in breast screening programmes: the east Anglian experience. Quality Assurance Management Group of the East Anglian Breast Screening Programme.

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4.  An evaluation of the prevalent round of the breast screening programme in south east Thames, 1988-1993: achievement of quality standards and population impact.

Authors:  L Garvican; P Littlejohns
Journal:  J Med Screen       Date:  1996       Impact factor: 2.136

5.  Breast cancer after a negative screen: follow-up of women participating in the DOM Screening Programme.

Authors:  C T Brekelmans; H J Collette; C Collette; J Fracheboud; F de Waard
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6.  Breast cancer in the southeastern Netherlands, 1960-1989: trends in incidence and mortality.

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8.  Quantitative interpretation of age-specific mortality reductions from the Swedish breast cancer-screening trials.

Authors:  H J de Koning; R Boer; P G Warmerdam; P M Beemsterboer; P J van der Maas
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Journal:  Br J Cancer       Date:  1997       Impact factor: 7.640

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2.  Interval cancers in the NHS breast cancer screening programme in England, Wales and Northern Ireland.

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3.  The Breast Imaging Reporting and Data System (BI-RADS) in the Dutch breast cancer screening programme: its role as an assessment and stratification tool.

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5.  Screen detection of ductal carcinoma in situ and subsequent incidence of invasive interval breast cancers: a retrospective population-based study.

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6.  Detection and interval cancer rates during the transition from screen-film to digital mammography in population-based screening.

Authors:  Valérie D V Sankatsing; Jacques Fracheboud; Linda de Munck; Mireille J M Broeders; Nicolien T van Ravesteyn; Eveline A M Heijnsdijk; André L M Verbeek; Johannes D M Otten; Ruud M Pijnappel; Sabine Siesling; Harry J de Koning
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10.  Breast Cancer Screening Program in Lithuania: Interval Cancers and Program Sensitivity After 7 Years of Mammography Screening.

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  10 in total

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