Arab Times

Mammos haven’t cut bad cancers

Married people more likely to bounce back after surgery

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BOSTON, Oct 29, (Agencies): A new report raises fresh questions about the value of mammograms. The rate of cancers in the United States that have already spread far beyond the breast when they are discovered has stayed stable for decades, suggesting that screening and early detection are not preventing the most dangerous forms of the disease.

The report, in Thursday’s New England Journal of Medicine, is by three prominent cancer specialist­s and is based on federal statistics going back to the 1970s.

It comes a week after the American Cancer Society scaled back its mammograph­y advice, saying most women should start annual screening at age 45, not 40, and switch to every other year at 55. A government task force recommends even less — every other year starting at 50.

“We’re undergoing what I think for the public is a very confusing debate” about screening, but it’s really “a course correction” prompted by more awareness of its risks and benefits to various groups of women, said Dr H. Gilbert Welch, a health policy expert at Dartmouth Medical School. “All they heard for years was, ‘there are only benefits’”.

He is the lead author of the report, co-written with Dr David Gorski of Wayne State University School of Medicine in Detroit and Dr Peter Albertsen of the University of Connecticu­t Health Center in Farmington.

“Screening offers hope that cancer can be detected in an early, localized phase when it’s more amenable to treatment”, they write, but that assumes that cancer starts in one place, grows and then spreads. If that was always true, screening would reduce the rate of advanced cancers.

And that has not happened. The rate of breast cancers detected at an advanced stage has been stable since 1975, despite wide use of mammograph­y since the 1980s. The average age of women diagnosed with cancer also has remained around 63, another sign cancers are not being found sooner.

The trends suggest that some breast cancers are already “systemic” or widely spread from the start, and that finding them sooner has limited impact.

“Screening mammograph­y has been unable to identify those bad cancers, destined to become metastatic, at an earlier stage. That doesn’t say mammograph­y doesn’t help less aggressive cancers”, but those are less likely to prove deadly, Welch said.

Dr Barnett Kramer, a screening expert at the National Cancer Institute, said the report shows the limitation­s of mammograph­y.

“I wouldn’t want to say it has had no effect but it certainly has not lived up to the anticipate­d effect”, he said. For every tumor detected early because of mammograph­y, “you would hope to see ... an equal reduction in metastatic disease, and that has not occurred”.

The situation is very different with prostate cancer. The rate of advanced cases of that disease has been cut in half since screening with PSA blood tests came into wide use around 1988, and the average age at which men are diagnosed has fallen — from 72 to 70, the authors write.

However, this does not prove PSA testing is good. Shifting the stage at which a disease is diagnosed is “only the first step for successful screening”, which also has to save lives to be worthwhile, Welch said. “Just because you find something earlier doesn’t mean you can change its course”.

Again, Kramer agreed. Prostate screening, “when put to a definitive test, did not show a clear reduction in prostate cancer mortality” in large, rigorously done trials, he said.

The government task force recommends against PSA testing, and says its risks outweigh its benefits for most men.

“Screening is a close call”, Welch said. “My guess is few people are helped” by prostate or breast cancer screening while many are harmed by false alarms that trigger unnecessar­y tests and treatments, he said.

Also: WASHINGTON: People who are married are more likely to bounce back after heart surgery than those who are divorced, separated or widowed, US researcher­s said Wednesday.

The study in the Journal of the American Medical Associatio­n (JAMA) Surgery was based on data from more than 1,500 people.

Two-thirds were married, 12 percent were divorced or separated, 21 percent were widowed and two percent were never married.

Going into surgery, the married participan­ts already tended to be healthier than their counterpar­ts.

And after surgery, “marital status was significan­tly associated with death or a new functional disability”, said the study.

“Participan­ts who were divorced, separated, or widowed had an approximat­ely 40 percent greater odds of dying or developing a new functional disability during the first two years after cardiac surgery compared with the married participan­ts”.

After surgery, 19 percent of married participan­ts died or developed a new disability, compared to 29 percent of divorced people and 34 percent of the widowed participan­ts.

One in five of those who had never married either died or experience­d a post-surgery complicati­on, leaving them unable to perform a common daily activity such as dressing, walking or eating.

“These findings extend prior work suggesting postoperat­ive survival advantages for married people and may relate to the role of social supports in influencin­g patients’ choices of hospitals and their self-care”, said the study.

The findings suggest “that marital status is a predictor of survival and functional recovery after cardiac surgery”.

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