Abstract
Cancer screening seems intuitively logical: early detection to prevent worse outcomes. However, this article reveals the complexity behind this assumption. Cancer's linear growth model- on which early detection was based - proves outdated. Cancers grow at vastly different rates; some even stop or disappear spontaneously. The main problem is overdiagnosis: in Dutch breast cancer screening, approximately 2,000 women are treated annually for cancers that would never cause symptoms. Epidemiological data show a persistent increase in stage I cancers without a decline in stage IV cases - a sign of overdiagnosis. Screening has a Janus face: on one hand life-saving potential, on the other unnecessary treatments with side effects. Effectiveness must be proven through randomized trials that reduce cancer-specific and overall mortality. Citizens deserve honest information about this balance between intuition and scientific evidence. Core message: Screening only works if it reduces mortality, not merely by finding more cancers.
| Translated title of the contribution | Cancer screening: blessing or curse? |
|---|---|
| Original language | Dutch |
| Article number | D8758 |
| Journal | Nederlands Tijdschrift voor Geneeskunde |
| Volume | 170 |
| Publication status | Published - 19 Mar 2026 |
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