There's a gap in breast cancer screening
It's critical that women have access to a doctor, says
How dense are you? This is a conversation between women that I wish we had over coffee or dinner, but we aren't quite there yet.
Before 2018, despite recording it on mammography reports for more than three decades, no province had informed women about their breast density (BI-RADS categories A to D). In 2018, B.C. was the first to add this information to screening result letters.
This is critical information. An individual's breast density can't be felt or seen. Those with dense breasts are at greater risk of having a cancer missed, given that both cancerous tumours and dense tissue appear white on a mammogram — this has been compared with finding a snowball in a snowstorm. To make things worse, women with Category D are four to six times more likely to develop breast cancer in their lifetime.
Dense Breasts Canada was established in 2016 by a group of women who experienced the consequences of not knowing our breast density. We rallied women to request their density category through their screening program, to complete petitions, to send letters to government officials and to speak in the B.C. legislature until policies were changed.
We were thrilled when the policy was changed to include breast density information. Women with dense breasts could now be aware of the risks and advocate for supplemental ultrasound or MRI screening, which is shown to identify breast cancer earlier, improve survival and reduce the severity of treatment options.
Since 2016, we have continued our advocacy efforts to ensure that all Canadian women are notified of their breast density, no matter their postal code. The final province, Newfoundland, committed to notifying women there last month.
Unfortunately, there is still a gap in screening, and it's vast. Firstly, B.C. Cancer's breast screening program doesn't provide ultrasound or MRI. A woman needs a requisition through her family doctor, which leaves a disconnect between mammogram results and supplemental screening.
Secondly, to get a doctor's requisition, one needs a doctor. In B.C., 23 per cent of people don't have a family doctor, leaving walk-in clinics and the associated waiting times as the only option.
Thankfully, we are a province with innovation at our core.
CanScreen B.C. was co-founded in 2022 by doctors Cal Shapiro and Stuart Bax, who saw a consistent gap in access to cancer screening and surveillance. In response, they created a virtual cancer screening service to make screening more accessible for anyone in B.C. without a doctor or who has difficulty getting screening requisitions. CanScreen B.C. has since sent thousands of patients for screening and supplemental screening for breast, colorectal and lung cancer.
Here lies the last obstacle: Women are challenged with finding clinics that provide the dense breast ultrasound or MRI, and when they do, the waiting list can be up to a year. Why? A critical shortage of medical imaging technologists and an MSP code fee that isn't enough to cover screening time and costs.
Again, B.C.'s problem-solving shines bright.
In 2023, West Coast Medical Imaging in Victoria procured an automated breast-imaging ultrasound machine (ABUS), which scans up to 16 women a day compared with three using traditional hand-held ultrasound. In four months, the team obliterated backlogs in ultrasound screening for patients with dense breasts on Vancouver Island. In the 600-plus scans performed, six small cancers missed entirely through mammography were identified using ABUS, changing the prognosis for these women had the cancers progressed to a noticeable lump.
If supplemental screening were recognized as necessary so that all women, no matter their breast density, had the same chance of finding cancer early, then maybe it would be a regular topic of conversation over coffee.
But there is more to be done to take this over the finish line.