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What Happens After You Get That Mammogram

This graphic lays out the possible outcomes for 10,000 50-year-old women who get screening mammograms for 10 years.
Courtesy of JAMA
This graphic lays out the possible outcomes for 10,000 50-year-old women who get screening mammograms for 10 years.

Women and their doctors have a hard time figuring out the pluses and minuses of screening mammograms for breast cancer. It doesn't help that there's been fierce dissent over the benefits of screening mammography for women under 50 and for older women.

To make it easier to grasp the big picture, Dr. Jill Jin, an adjunct instructor at the Northwestern University School of Medicine, put together this graphic on the odds of various outcomes from screening mammography. It's based on a review of studies on the risks and benefits of mammography earlier this year and was published Wednesday in JAMA, the journal of the American Medical Association.

Because mammograms aren't perfect screening tests, they can miss some cancers and falsely diagnose cancer that's not there. Those false positives can lead to more testing, including biopsies, and needless anxiety.

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Mammograms can also lead to overdiagnosis, when a scan finds something that would never become life-threatening but can lead to surgery, radiation and chemotherapy. Some studies estimate that 20 percent of cancers found on mammograms are overdiagnosed and lead to unnecessary treatment, according to Jin.

Bottom line: Mammograms are the best tool we have for early detection of breast cancer, but they're not perfect. It's best to know the likelihood of possible harms, as well as the benefits.

Copyright 2014 NPR. To see more, visit http://www.npr.org/.