4.7 Article

The potential of breast cancer screening in Europe

Journal

INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF CANCER
Volume 148, Issue 2, Pages 406-418

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/ijc.33204

Keywords

breast cancer mortality; breast cancer mortality reduction; breast cancer screening; screening coverage; screening guidelines

Categories

Funding

  1. Horizon 2020 Framework Programme [634753]

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The study found that if all European countries biennially screen all women aged 50 to 69 for breast cancer, despite the existing impact of breast cancer screening in Europe, there are still a significant number of breast cancer deaths that could be prevented. By increasing screening coverage, the breast cancer mortality rate in Europe can be substantially reduced.
Currently, all European countries offer some form of breast cancer screening. Nevertheless, disparities exist in the status of implementation, attendance and the extent of opportunistic screening. As a result, breast cancer screening has not yet reached its full potential. We examined how many breast cancer deaths could be prevented if all European countries would biennially screen all women aged 50 to 69 for breast cancer. We calculated the number of breast cancer deaths already prevented due to screening as well as the number of breast cancer deaths which could be additionally prevented if the total examination coverage (organised plus opportunistic) would reach 100%. The calculations are based on total examination coverage in women aged 50 to 69, the annual number of breast cancer deaths for women aged 50 to 74 and the maximal possible mortality reduction from breast cancer, assuming similar effectiveness of organised and opportunistic screening. The total examination coverage ranged from 49% (East), 62% (West), 64% (North) to 69% (South). Yearly 21 680 breast cancer deaths have already been prevented due to mammography screening. If all countries would reach 100% examination coverage, 12 434 additional breast cancer deaths could be prevented annually, with the biggest potential in Eastern Europe. With maximum coverage, 23% of their breast cancer deaths could be additionally prevented, while in Western Europe it could be 21%, in Southern Europe 15% and in Northern Europe 9%. Our study illustrates that by further optimising screening coverage, the number of breast cancer deaths in Europe can be lowered substantially.

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