Abstract
Most breast cancer screening programs rely only on demographic data without considering individual risk factors of the population, which might limit their effectiveness by over- and underscreening specific subgroups. Therefore, the aim of this study is to highlight health and economic disparities in outcomes from such a uniform screening strategy. With the microsimulation model MISCAN, we simulated outcomes of the Dutch screening program considering 16 subgroups varying by their 5-year breast cancer risk and breast density. All outcomes showed significant disparities across risk-density subgroups. Notably, women with extremely dense breasts showed a mortality reduction from the current screening of 16–17 % compared to 25–29 % in other groups. Absolute benefits (breast cancer deaths averted, and life-years gained) increased with risk and varied independently by density. The range of false-positive rates varied almost twofold across the span of subgroups and nearly a ninefold difference in the medical costs incurred with lifelong follow-up. These findings emphasize the potential for stratified screening strategies to improve equity in health outcomes and reduce the burden of breast cancer.
Original language | English |
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Article number | 115220 |
Number of pages | 4 |
Journal | European Journal of Cancer |
Volume | 217 |
DOIs | |
Publication status | Published - 25 Feb 2025 |
Keywords
- Breast density
- Breast neoplasms
- Computational modeling
- Cost of illness
- Early detection of cancer
- Mammography
- Netherlands
- Population health
- Risk factors