Extra cancer scans for women with dense breasts could save 700 lives a year – UK study
Adding scans to existing screening could catch harder-to-detect early-stage cases of disease, research shows
Hundreds of lives could be saved every year with extra cancer checks for women with very dense breasts, a study suggests.
Millions of women undergo breast screening, but regular mammograms can be less effective at spotting cancer in the 10% with very dense breasts, as the tissue can hide tumours on X-rays. This is because very dense breasts look whiter on scans, making it harder to detect early-stage disease, which also appears white.
Continue reading...
By Andrew Gregory Health editor
Extra cancer scans for women with dense breasts could save 700 lives a year – UK study to Continue reading...
NHS Forums - For NHS Staff | Patient Forums
Adding scans to existing screening could catch harder-to-detect early-stage cases of disease, research shows
Hundreds of lives could be saved every year with extra cancer checks for women with very dense breasts, a study suggests.
Millions of women undergo breast screening, but regular mammograms can be less effective at spotting cancer in the 10% with very dense breasts, as the tissue can hide tumours on X-rays. This is because very dense breasts look whiter on scans, making it harder to detect early-stage disease, which also appears white.
Continue reading...
By Andrew Gregory Health editor
Extra cancer scans for women with dense breasts could save 700 lives a year – UK study to Continue reading...
NHS Forums - For NHS Staff | Patient Forums