Scottish Daily Mail

The women saying no to breast cancer screening

As evidence rises that many are harmed by unnecessar­y treatment, why more women are refusing checks

- By LOIS ROGERS

MORE women than ever are surviving breast cancer, and that’s often credited to the national breast screening programme. The programme, which offers checks every three years to all women aged from 50 to 70, is thought to prevent 1,300 deaths a year from the disease.

yet women are questionin­g whether genuine cases are being uncovered at too high a cost to the many more wrongly told they have life-threatenin­g tumours.

Over the past few years, a number of studies have identified the potential harms of breast screening.

These findings were echoed by research early last year from the NHS Sloane Project, a body set up to monitor cases of a slow-growing type of cancer, ductal carcinoma in situ (DCIS), which is contained in the milk ducts and is routinely picked up by screening.

The researcher­s found that hundreds of women a year who have DCIS are subjected to unnecessar­y and mutilating surgery including mastectomy, even when they are at greater risk from the complicati­ons of surgery than cancer.

Experts such as Michael Baum, emeritus professor of surgery at University College London, who helped set up the screening programme, are questionin­g the evidence that more lives are saved through screening than when cancer is detected by other means, such as the appearance of lumps.

They also highlight risks — exposure to harmful radiothera­py and toxic chemothera­py drugs, not to mention the psychologi­cal impact of being wrongly given a potential PROFESSOR death sentence.

Baum says the benefits of universal screening are exaggerate­d. ‘I lost faith within a few years of it starting in 1990 because, as a breast surgeon, I was dealing with the heartbreak of large numbers of patients wrongly told they were dying from the disease,’ he says.

Now women are beginning to r ebel against the screening programme. among them is Sue Warman, 69, who was found to have DCIS in November 2012.

Sue says her peace of mind has been shattered as a result of her experience of breast screening.

Instead of a contented retirement after years as vice-principal of a further education college, she faces an endless round of monitoring, with a legacy of scars from the removal of tissue samples.

Sue, a happily married mother of two, grandmothe­r of five and a biochemist by training, had gone for routine breast screening at an NHS clinic in Hertfordsh­ire.

‘I’d been a number of times before and, ironically at 67, it was probably almost the last one I’d have had anyway,’ she says.

‘I wasn’t even worried when I got a letter saying I needed to come back. Though the letter said my husband or a friend should come with me, I didn’t bother. as far as I was concerned, I was healthy.’

But where the screening system was concerned, however, Sue was anything but healthy. She was subjected to four hours of tests, including more than a dozen biopsies, where under l ocal anaestheti­c a needle is guided deep into the breast to remove cells for testing.

She was left bleeding profusely and trembling with stress. ‘There was certainly no informed consent to what was done to me,’ she says.

‘I didn’t sign anything and all my questions about what they were looking for were ignored or met with patronisin­g answers.

‘Eventually I was told by a nurse that they were looking for microcalci­fications. I discovered these are areas of calcium deposits found in lots of women, but if they’re clustered together they may be associated with cancer.’

DCIS affects 4,800 women a year and is becoming more common because it is readily diagnosed by breast screening.

It is sometimes referred to as ‘pre-cancer’ because in a minority of cases it can develop intoo invasive disease. But doctors doo not know which DCIS cases will ll WHEN be dangerous and which will not..

Sue and her er retired engineer husband Geoff, 67, who live near Bristol, went to get the results of the tests, they were told she had an area of microcalci­fication 8.5cm (3.3in) long from the nipple to the chest wall.

She refused a mastectomy. ‘There was no lump in my breast or pain. I did see an NHS surgeon who was the first sensible person I spoke to,’ explains Sue.

‘She admitted no one could predict i f this microcalci­fication would become invasive. I would be losing a year of my life, undergoing the risk of surgery and the harm from chemothera­py and radiothera­py, for no good reason.’

Instead she is being monitored to see if the growths get bigger. So far they haven’t.

Sue has looked at the research on screening and feels confident she made the right decision. ‘I know that at least four times as many otherwise healthy women are being needlessly subjected to mastectomy, radiothera­py and toxic drugs, for every genuine diagnosis attributed to screening.

‘I also know the screening centres have annual NHS quality assurance targets for the number of cancers they have to diagnose, which I find utterly shocking.’

Of the two million women screened in Britain every year, around 80,000 are recalled for f urther t r eatment. a small proportion of these will go on to have invasive cancer, which develops into an expanding tumour.

The statistics are complicate­d, but Cancer Research UK says if 1,000 women who did not have breast screening were monitored for 20 years, 21 would die from breast cancer, compared with 16 breast cancer deaths in a group who underwent screening.

It’s estimated 30 per cent of women never go for screening.

Risk of breast cancer rises with age, but Sue argues the statistics show that even if an unscreened 75-year-old discovers a cancerous lump, she still has a life expectancy of ten years, so will die at about 85 — the same age as those who have screening and treatment.

‘I am not opposed to all screening, but it should not be a blanket programme,’ she says. ‘It should be offered to people who want it on the basis of informed choice.’

Though a number of senior female doctors admit privately they do not have screening, Iona Heath, 64, a former president of the Royal College of General Practition­ers, is one of only a few to go public.

‘I have seen enough women die from breast cancer to know what a terrible disease it can be and to understand t he motivation to promote early diagnosis and curative treatment. and yet I have cheerfully declined NHS invitation­s to attend my own screening mammograph­y,’ she says.

‘MyM worry is that I have made this decision on the basis of info informatio­n that is not readily ava available to my patients.

‘E ‘Evidence shows the percentage of u unscreened women still alive ten years later is 90.2 per cent. If th they are screened, it is 90.25 per ce cent. Is this enough difference to risk the possibilit­y of signifiLaS­T c cant harm? For me, it is not.’

year, a parliament­ary science and technology committee investigat­ion heard evidence from a numbernu of women damaged by bre breast screening.

am among them was Miriam Pryke, 60, a former teacher and mother of two two, from Marlow, Bucks, who felt ‘ rai railroaded’ i nto unnecessar­y breast removal following DCIS.

Two years ago, the breast screeni ng i nformation l eaflets were revised to make it clear screening was not compulsory but a choice.

It states: ‘ Overall, for every woman who has her life saved, about three women are diagnosed with a cancer that would never have become life-threatenin­g.’

In October, the parliament­ary committee acknowledg­ed lessons had been learned in giving women informatio­n to help them make an informed decision. But it also suggested the accuracy of the statistics used should be reviewed. ‘It is vital that uncertaint­ies are acknowledg­ed . . . and expressed in a clear, accessible way,’ it says.

Public Health England, which administer­s the breast screening programme, told the Mail: ‘ The view is that we do need to have a national screening programme.

‘There is always an issue of overtreatm­ent; it’s a debate that will run and run.’

 ??  ?? Scarred: Sue Warman
Scarred: Sue Warman

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