The Buzz: A novel study from Norway suggests that risk reduction from mammography may be much lower than previously thought.
Citation: M Kalager et. al. Effect of Screening Mammography on Breast-Cancer Mortality in Norway. N Engl J Med 2010; 363:1203-1210
Summary: Previous observational attempts to quantify the benefit of mammography have relied on historical data for control groups, making it difficult to control for the effect that time (increased breast cancer awareness, better treatment methods, e.g.) may have on improvement in breast cancer survival. Norway has a national public health system which rolled out a program for breast cancer screening (mammography every 2 years for women aged 50-69) and treatment (multidisciplinary treatment teams offered to all women with a new diagnosis of breast cancer) staggered region by region from 1996 to 2005. Using data from 40,075 women, this study compared similar groups in counties where the new program simultaneously was and was not available, thus eliminating possible confounding effects of time. The study also looked at geographically matched groups from 1986-1995 when the new program was not available. Absolute risk reduction from the combined screening and treatment program in women 50-69 years old was found to be 10%, though it was not possible to say how much of the benefit was from mammography itself.
To address this question, the study included analysis of women aged 70-84 who did not undergo mammography but who were treated by the new teams. In this group, the benefit of the new treatment teams was an 8% reduction in risk.
According to an accompanying editorial, these data suggest that "2500 women would need to be screened over a 10-year period for 1 to avoid death from breast cancer." Moreover, of those 2500, 1000 would be expected to have a false positive on mammography, and 5 to 15 would be wrongly diagnosed and treated. The editor suggests that the decision to initiate or continue screening mammography might be best decided by an informed patient, and that its use should not be a measure of quality in our current health care system.
By: Spencer Blackman MD
Sunday, September 26, 2010
Saturday, September 25, 2010
Time 2 take ur pill
The Buzz: Text message-based reminder system for OCP use does not seem to improve adherence.
Citation: Hou MY et al. Using daily text-message reminders to improve adherence with oral contraceptives: A randomized controlled trial. Obstet Gynecol 2010 Sep; 116:633.
Summary: Study authors randomized 82 predominantly white, all high-school graduate new or resuming OCP users to to receive daily text-message reminders or no reminders for three cycles. The number of missed pills per cycle was the same in both groups (around 4.5/month). There were no pregnancies in either group.
Commentary: The high rate of missed pills reported in this study suggests that even with advanced reminder systems, many women on OCPs are at higher risk for pregnancy then we might think. OCPs are still a valid option, but this study may aid in shared decision-making around optimal methods.
By: Spencer Blackman MD
Citation: Hou MY et al. Using daily text-message reminders to improve adherence with oral contraceptives: A randomized controlled trial. Obstet Gynecol 2010 Sep; 116:633.
Summary: Study authors randomized 82 predominantly white, all high-school graduate new or resuming OCP users to to receive daily text-message reminders or no reminders for three cycles. The number of missed pills per cycle was the same in both groups (around 4.5/month). There were no pregnancies in either group.
Commentary: The high rate of missed pills reported in this study suggests that even with advanced reminder systems, many women on OCPs are at higher risk for pregnancy then we might think. OCPs are still a valid option, but this study may aid in shared decision-making around optimal methods.
By: Spencer Blackman MD
Labels:
birth control,
blackman,
gynecology,
obstetrics,
ocp
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