AI Article Synopsis

  • The study assessed how various breast cancer risk factors influence the follow-up procedures women undergo after receiving abnormal mammography results.
  • Women aged 40-80 from diverse backgrounds completed surveys about their risk factors and diagnostic tests taken after abnormal mammograms.
  • Findings showed that while demographic factors influenced risk factors and types of mammograms, the level of mammogram abnormality was the main determinant for further diagnostic evaluations, with differences noted depending on where care was received.

Article Abstract

Objective: We evaluated the association of risk factors for breast cancer with reported follow-up procedures after abnormal mammography among diverse women.

Methods: Women ages 40--80 years were recruited from four clinical sites after receiving a screening mammography result that was classified as abnormal but probably benign, suspicious or highly suspicious, or indeterminate using standard criteria. A telephone-administered survey asked about breast cancer risk factors (family history, estrogen use, physical inactivity, age of menarche, age at birth of first child, parity, alcohol use), and self-reported use of diagnostic tests (follow-up mammogram, breast ultrasound, or biopsy).

Results: Nine hundred and seventy women completed the interview, mean age was 56, 42% were White, 19% Latina, 25% African American, and 15% Asian. White women were more likely to have a positive family history (20%), use estrogen (32%), be nulliparous (17%) and drink alcohol (62%). Latinas were more likely to be physically inactive (93%), African Americans to have early onset of menarche (53%) and Asians first child after age 30 (21%). White women were more likely to have suspicious mammograms (40%) and to undergo biopsy (45%). In multivariate models, Latinas were more likely to report breast ultrasound, physical inactive women reported fewer follow-up mammograms, and care outside the academic health center was associated with fewer biopsies. Indeterminate and suspicious mammography interpretations were significantly associated with more biopsy procedures (OR=8.4; 95% CI=3.8-18.5 and OR=59; 95% CI=35-100, respectively).

Conclusions: Demographic profile and breast cancer risk factors have little effect on self-reported use of diagnostic procedures following an abnormal mammography examination. Level of mammography abnormality determines diagnostic evaluation but variance by site of care was observed.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2936818PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s10552-004-4028-yDOI Listing

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