Breast density is an important risk factor for breast cancer but no study had asked women what they know or think about breast density in relation to the screening they have had. In a new qualitative study, scientists sought to explore women's knowledge and perceptions of breast density and experiences of breast cancer screening across three US states with and without notification laws.
The study was published in the Journal of General Internal Medicine.
A number of states do have notification laws about breast density, but these laws vary.
The focus group study found that women from all states had varying knowledge about their own breast density and breast density in general. A number of women were aware of the difficulty of detecting cancer with dense breasts, but only one woman knew that density increased breast cancer risk.
A team of scientists at Dartmouth and Dartmouth-Hitchcock's Norris Cotton Cancer Center and the Breast Cancer Surveillance Consortium led by Karen Schifferdecker, PhD, MPH, and Anna Tosteson, ScD conducted the study.
According to Schifferdecker, "We found that very few women received information about breast density during healthcare visits although some were encouraged to get supplemental imaging or to pay for new types of mammography such as breast tomosynthesis."
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"Women who were offered more imaging or different technology usually thought these were 'better,' even though they were given little information about the effectiveness or harms," says Schifferdecker.
The study also found, importantly, that women from all states expressed a strong desire for more information about breast density. All of these results are in the article, "Knowledge and Perception of Breast Density, Screening Mammography, and Supplemental Screening: in Search of 'Informed.'"
"The findings in this paper are exciting because no research on dense breasts has explored women's knowledge and experiences in their own words and compared this across different states," said Schifferdecker. "We partnered with the National Breast Cancer Surveillance Consortium to identify and recruit women who had recent screening and also had dense breasts. In this way, we knew all women had dense breasts and could explore what they knew or did not know, including their own personal breast density."
The conclusions also identify opportunities for improvements in educating women so they may make informed decisions related to mammography and supplemental screening. "Women want--and deserve--more usable information about breast cancer risk," asserted Schifferdecker. "More research needs to be done to understand how the medical community can better assist women in making informed decisions related to breast density and screening.
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