» Articles » PMID: 10856064

US Women's Attitudes to False Positive Mammography Results and Detection of Ductal Carcinoma in Situ: Cross Sectional Survey

Overview
Journal BMJ
Specialty General Medicine
Date 2000 Jun 16
PMID 10856064
Citations 57
Authors
Affiliations
Soon will be listed here.
Abstract

Objective: To determine women's attitudes to and knowledge of both false positive mammography results and the detection of ductal carcinoma in situ after screening mammography.

Design: Cross sectional survey.

Setting: United States.

Participants: 479 women aged 18-97 years who did not report a history of breast cancer.

Main Outcome Measures: Attitudes to and knowledge of false positive results and the detection of ductal carcinoma in situ after screening mammography.

Results: Women were aware that false positive results do occur. Their median estimate of the false positive rate for 10 years of annual screening was 20% (25th percentile estimate, 10%; 75th percentile estimate, 45%). The women were highly tolerant of false positives: 63% thought that 500 or more false positives per life saved was reasonable and 37% would tolerate 10 000 or more. Women who had had a false positive result (n=76) expressed the same high tolerance: 39% would tolerate 10 000 or more false positives. 62% of women did not want to take false positive results into account when deciding about screening. Only 8% of women thought that mammography could harm a woman without breast cancer, and 94% doubted the possibility of non-progressive breast cancers. Few had heard about ductal carcinoma in situ, a cancer that may not progress, but when informed, 60% of women wanted to take into account the possibility of it being detected when deciding about screening.

Conclusions: Women are aware of false positives and seem to view them as an acceptable consequence of screening mammography. In contrast, most women are unaware that screening can detect cancers that may never progress but feel that such information would be relevant. Education should perhaps focus less on false positives and more on the less familiar outcome of detection of ductal carcinoma in situ.

Citing Articles

Risk perception of patients with ductal carcinoma (DCIS) of the breast and their healthcare practitioners: The importance of histopathological terminology, and the gaps in our knowledge.

Riggi J, Galant C, Vernaeve H, Vassilieff M, Berliere M, Van Bockstal M Histol Histopathol. 2024; 40(3):297-306.

PMID: 39324807 DOI: 10.14670/HH-18-806.


Using Artificial Intelligence to Stratify Normal versus Abnormal Chest X-rays: External Validation of a Deep Learning Algorithm at East Kent Hospitals University NHS Foundation Trust.

Blake S, Das N, Tadepalli M, Reddy B, Singh A, Agrawal R Diagnostics (Basel). 2023; 13(22).

PMID: 37998543 PMC: 10670411. DOI: 10.3390/diagnostics13223408.


Why Was the US Preventive Services Task Force's 2009 Breast Cancer Screening Recommendation So Objectionable? A Historical Analysis.

Lerner B, Curtiss-Rowlands G Milbank Q. 2022; 100(3):702-721.

PMID: 36148791 PMC: 9576241. DOI: 10.1111/1468-0009.12583.


A Procedure for Eliciting Women's Preferences for Breast Cancer Screening Frequency.

Grayek E, Yang Y, Fischhoff B, Schifferdecker K, Woloshin S, Kerlikowske K Med Decis Making. 2022; 42(6):783-794.

PMID: 35067067 PMC: 9277327. DOI: 10.1177/0272989X211073320.


Building the case for the use of gut feelings in cancer referrals: perspectives of patients referred to a non-specific symptoms pathway.

Smith C, Kristensen B, Sand Andersen R, Ziebland S, Nicholson B Br J Gen Pract. 2021; 72(714):e43-e50.

PMID: 34844921 PMC: 8714524. DOI: 10.3399/BJGP.2021.0275.


References
1.
Woloshin S, Schwartz L, Byram S, Fischhoff B, Welch H . A new scale for assessing perceptions of chance: a validation study. Med Decis Making. 2000; 20(3):298-307. DOI: 10.1177/0272989X0002000306. View

2.
Sutton S, Saidi G, Bickler G, Hunter J . Does routine screening for breast cancer raise anxiety? Results from a three wave prospective study in England. J Epidemiol Community Health. 1995; 49(4):413-8. PMC: 1060131. DOI: 10.1136/jech.49.4.413. View

3.
Blendon R, Scheck A, Donelan K, Hill C, Smith M, Beatrice D . How white and African Americans view their health and social problems. Different experiences, different expectations. JAMA. 1995; 273(4):341-6. View

4.
Lerman C, Trock B, Rimer B, Jepson C, Brody D, Boyce A . Psychological side effects of breast cancer screening. Health Psychol. 1991; 10(4):259-67. DOI: 10.1037//0278-6133.10.4.259. View

5.
Nystrom L, Rutqvist L, Wall S, Lindgren A, Lindqvist M, Ryden S . Breast cancer screening with mammography: overview of Swedish randomised trials. Lancet. 1993; 341(8851):973-8. DOI: 10.1016/0140-6736(93)91067-v. View