J
Am Med Womens Assoc 2000 Summer;55(4):210-5
Breast and cervical cancer screening for older women: recommendations
and challenges for the 21st century.
Mandelblatt JS, Yabroff KR.
Department of Oncology, Georgetown University School of Medicine, Washington,
DC, USA.
The incidence of both breast and cervical cancer increases with age,
and older socioeconomically disadvantaged and minority women are most
likely to develop or die of these diseases. Early detection has the potential
to decrease the disproportionate burden of disease in these vulnerable
groups at a reasonable cost to society. Yet despite impressive overall
gains in use of mammography and Pap smears, older women, especially older
minority women, remain underrepresented in screening programs. Physician
recommendation is one of the most powerful predictors of screening across
all age, socioeconomic, and ethnic groups. The overwhelming majority of
older women, make one or more physician visits each year, each of which
represents an opportunity to screen for breast and cervical cancer. Although
older women will accept screening if it is offered by their providers,
physicians are less likely to offer it to them than to their younger,
white patients. Conflicting professional recommendations for screening
older women, leaving older women out of clinical trials of screening efficacy,
competing causes of mortality with increasing age, and possible negative
attitudes held by physicians and patients all contribute to the underscreening
of older women. Cancer control challenges for the next century include
defining groups of women most likely to benefit from screening (based
on age, disease risk, competing mortality, and quality of life), improving
regular use of early detection, educating providers, and conducting research
on age-mediated differences in breast or cervical cancer biology that
could affect screening recommendations.
PMID: 10935354 [PubMed - indexed for MEDLINE]