Women with Dense Breasts More Susceptible to Breast Cancer
Women with very dense breast tissue are five times more likely to get breast cancer than those whose breasts contain more fatty tissue, according to a recent study. Doctors should discuss this particular risk factor with their patients who have mammograms.
Fat appears dark on mammograms, but dense tissue is light like tumors, thus more easily hiding cancers. Not only are breast cancers more likely to be hidden by white on white, they also appear more frequently in dense breasts.
Density is a true risk factor, along with other strong predictors such as the woman’s age and whether she carries BRCA1 and 2 gene mutations. Yet, this condition is rarely taken into consideration or discussed between doctor and patient.
This new study — involving 1,112 women whose medical records were examined at cancer centers in Toronto and Vancouver, Canada — is published in a January 2007 issue of the New England Journal of Medicine. Women taking part who had at least 75% dense breasts showed five times more likelihood of developing cancer over the time frame studied than women with less than 10% density. It confirms previous studies that pointed to the masking effect and a separate biological risk.
In this particular study, cancers were 18 times more likely to be found in women with the densest breasts within the first year after their mammograms. These cancers were judged to have been present earlier but masked by the difficulty in diagnosing their condition.
Breast density involves the presence of more connective, duct-lining and milk-gland tissue than fat tissue. It is impossible for a woman to judge the density herself. It must be routinely evaluated with a mammogram.
This most important factor to note is that extremely dense breaks are “an incredible risk factor” that probably accounts for a large percentage of breast cancers being found. Woman whose mammograms indicate dense breast tissue should be followed up rapidly with more sensitive technologies such as digital mammograms, sonograms or magnetic resonance image (MRI).
In this particular study, cancers were 18 times more likely to be found in women with the densest breasts within the first year after their mammograms. These cancers were judged to have been present earlier but masked by the difficulty in diagnosing their condition.
Breast density involves the presence of more connective, duct-lining and milk-gland tissue than fat tissue. It is impossible for a woman to judge the density herself. It must be routinely evaluated with a mammogram.
This most important factor to note is that extremely dense breaks are “an incredible risk factor” that probably accounts for a large percentage of breast cancers being found. Woman whose mammograms indicate dense breast tissue should be followed up rapidly with more sensitive technologies such as digital mammograms, sonograms or magnetic resonance image (MRI).
Some medical experts believe that women with this significant risk factor may be one day be cautioned to make lifestyle changes and even be prescribed medications for cancer prevention. If genes that promote density can be identified, they could serve as targets for cancer drugs.
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