Journal article
Breast cancer screening of women aged 70-74 years: Results from a natural experiment across Australia
C Nickson, KE Mason, AM Kavanagh
Breast Cancer Research and Treatment | SPRINGER | Published : 2014
Abstract
There is a lack of evidence regarding the optimal age at which to cease mammographic screening for breast cancer. This ecological study compared Australian state and territory level screening participation rates and cancer outcomes from 1996 to 2005 to identify the extent to which screening women aged 70-74 results in smaller, earlier stage breast cancers. With each 10 % absolute increase in screening participation, there was no significant difference in cancer incidence, but the incidence of large cancers was 8 % lower (IRR = 0.92, 95 % CI 0.90-0.94, p 15 mm) cancers - and possibly cancers with nodal involvement - without a concomitant increase in overall cancer incidence. © 2013 Springer S..
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Awarded by National Health and Medical Research Council
Funding Acknowledgements
This analysis was originally commissioned by BreastScreen Victoria, with additional funds from National Health and Medical Research Council of Australia (Project Grant 509357). BreastScreen Victoria played no part in the study beyond providing funding. Ethical approval was not required because the study used secondary, population-level aggregate data.