Personalized Breast Cancer Screening: A Smarter, Risk-Based Approach

A major study from UCSF advocates for a shift from age-based to risk-based breast cancer screening, using individual genetic and lifestyle factors to determine screening schedules. This personalized approach was found to lower the chance of advanced cancers without increasing their frequency, proving more efficient than the standard annual mammogram model. Crucially, the research revealed that 30% of women with high-risk genetic variants had no family history of breast cancer, meaning they would be missed under current guidelines. The findings suggest a transformation in clinical practice is needed to better target resources and prevention strategies.

Key Points: Risk-Based Breast Cancer Screening Outperforms Age-Based Method

  • Lowers advanced cancer risk
  • Uses genetic & lifestyle factors
  • 30% with risk genes lack family history
  • More efficient than age-based screening
2 min read

Study finds risk-based approach better for breast cancer screening

A UCSF study of 46,000 women shows personalized risk assessment for breast cancer screening is more effective than annual mammograms based on age alone.

"Shifting resources from lower-risk women to higher-risk women is an efficient, effective approach to screening for and preventing breast cancer. - Jeffrey A. Tice, UCSF"

New Delhi, Dec 27

An individualised approach to breast cancer screening that assesses patients' risk, rather than annual mammograms, can lower the chance of more advanced cancers, while still safely matching people to the amount of screening they need, according to a study.

The findings, by the University of California, San Francisco (UCSF), based on a study of 46,000 US women, support shifting the approach to screening from one that is based on age alone to one that starts with comprehensive risk assessment to determine each woman's optimal screening schedule.

"The findings should transform clinical guidelines for breast cancer screening and alter clinical practice," said Laura J. Esserman, director of the UCSF Breast Care Center.

"The personalised approach begins with risk assessment, incorporating genetic, biological, and lifestyle factors, which can then guide effective prevention strategies," Esserman added.

Breast cancer is the most common cancer in women, accounting for an estimated 2.3 million cases and 670,000 deaths globally.

For decades, screening assumed all women have the same risk, and guidelines were based largely on age, despite strong evidence that individual risk varies widely.

The new study, published in JAMA, compared the standard annual mammogram with an approach based on individual risk.

The results showed that the risk-based screening approach did not increase the frequency of higher-stage cancers.

"Shifting resources from lower-risk women to higher-risk women is an efficient, effective approach to screening for and preventing breast cancer," said co-author Jeffrey A. Tice, Professor of Medicine at UCSF.

Importantly, the study found that 30 per cent of the women who tested positive for a genetic variant that increased their risk of breast cancer did not report a family history of breast cancer. Under current clinical guidelines, these people would not normally be offered genetic testing.

- IANS

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Reader Comments

R
Rohit P
Good research, but implementing this in India will be a huge challenge. We need widespread genetic testing facilities and trained doctors first. Right now, even basic mammograms are not accessible in many tier-2 and tier-3 cities.
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Sarah B
The statistic about 30% with the genetic variant having no family history is startling. It shows we can't rely on family history alone. More awareness about genetic testing is needed everywhere, including here.
A
Ananya R
Finally, medicine is moving towards personalisation! This makes so much sense. It will reduce unnecessary anxiety and procedures for low-risk women and focus resources where they are truly needed. Hope Indian medical bodies take note.
V
Vikram M
While the science is sound, I have a respectful criticism. In a country like ours, there's a risk that "risk assessment" could become an excuse for insurance companies to deny coverage or charge exorbitant premiums. Strong data protection laws must come first.
K
Kavya N
This is the future of healthcare. Lifestyle factors are so crucial in India too - diet, stress, physical activity. A comprehensive assessment that includes these along with genetics is the right way forward. More power to such research!

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