The
Facts About
Breast
Cancer and Mammograms

Getting the facts about breast
cancer and mammograms is an important step in taking care of your health.
This pamphlet will help you to get the information that you need. it provides
information on a woman's risk for breast cancer, the National Cancer Institute's
recommendations about mammograms, and the benefits and limitations of
the procedure.
After
skin cancer, breast cancer is the most frequently diagnosed cancer in
women in the United States. It is second only to to lung cancer in cancer-related
deaths. Approximately 180,000 new cases of breast cancer are estimated
for 1997, and about 44,000 women are expected to die from the disease.

A
Woman's Chances of Getting Breast Cancer Change With Age
| By Age
30 |
1 out of 2,525
women |
| By Age
40 |
1 out of 217
women |
| By Age
50 |
1 out of 50
women |
| By Age
60 |
1 out of 24
women |
| By Age
70 |
1 out of 14
women |
| By Age
80 |
1 out of 10
women |
Source: NCI's Surveillance,
Epidemiology, and End Results (SEER) Program & American Cancer Society,
1993 Who
Is at Risk for Breast Cancer?
Simply being a woman
and getting older puts you at some risk for breast cancer. Your risk for
breast cancer continues to increase over your lifetime. Several known
factors can further increase your risk for breast cancer. Most women who
get breast cancer have no known risk factors such as a family history
of the disease. Talk to your doctor about the known risk factors for breast
cancer.
What factors
can increase your risk for breast cancer?
One or more of the
following conditions place a woman at higher than average risk for breast
cancer:
- personal history
of a prior breast cancer
- evidence of a
specific genetic change that increases susceptibility to breast cancer
(BRCA1/BRCA2 mutations)
- mother, sister,
daughter, or two or more close relatives, such as cousins, with a history
of breast cancer (especially if diagnosed at a young age)
- a diagnosis of
a breast condition (i.e., atypical hyperplasia) that may predispose
a woman to breast cancer, or a history of two or more breast biopsies
for benign breast disease
Additional factors
can play a role in a woman's risk for breast cancer.
- Women age 45 or
older who have at least 75 percent dense tissue on a mammogram are at
some increased risk.
- A slight increase
in risk for breast cancer is associated with having a first birth at
age 30 or older.
In addition, women
who receive chest irradiation for conditions such as Hodgkin's disease
at age 30 or younger, remain at higher risk for breast cancer throughout
their lives.
Not having
any of the above risk factors does NOT mean that you
are "safe." The majority of women who develop breast cancer
do not have a family history of the disease, nor do they fall into any
other special high-risk category.
What
Can You Do?
- If you are in
your 40s or older, get a mammogram on a regular basis, every 1 to 2
years.
- Talk with your
doctor or nurse about planning your personal schedule for screening
mammograms and breast exams.
- Gather as much
information as you can about your family history of cancer, breast cancer,
and screening mammograms.
- Call the National
Cancer Institute's Cancer Information Service for more information
about breast cancer and mammograms at 1-800-4-CANCER (1-800-422-6237).
People with TTY equipment, dial 1-800-332-8615.
- For the latest
information on cancer, visit the National Cancer Institute's website
for patients and the public at http://www.nci.nih.gov/.
What
Are the Benefits of Getting Mammograms
- A mammogram can
find breast cancer before a lump can be felt.
- A mammogram is
the best method available today to detect breast cancer early. Early
detection of the disease may allow more treatment options.
What
Are the Limitations* of Getting Mammograms?
- Mammograms may
miss cancer that is present.
- Mammograms may
find something that turns out NOT to be cancer.
*These limitations
occur more often in women under age 50.
Recommendations
for Women of Different Ages
| Age |
Recommendation |
Benefit |
| Under
Age 40 |
|
No
data |
| Age
40 to 49 |
- Breast exam
by doctor
- Mammogram
every 1 to 2 years
|
May
reduce your chances of dying from breast cancer by about 17 percent |
| Age
50 or Over |
- Breast exam
by doctor
- Mammogram
every 1 to 2 years
|
May
reduce your chances of dying from breast cancer by about 30 percent. |

To learn more about
mammograms, call the National Cancer Institute's Cancer Information Service
at
1-800-4-CANCER
(1-800-422-6237)
People with TTY equipment, dial
1-800-332-8615.
Visit NCI's website
for patients and the public at http://www.nci.nih.gov/.
National Cancer Institute
Office on Women's Health |