Greetings [$fname],
There is no way as yet to stop women getting a breast cancer, but women who have a yearly mammogram
have an overall 87% cure rate. If the 2 most aggressive cancers (which are less common) are excluded,
the rate increases to 95%. However, women that do not undergo annual screening
and discover a breast cancer, the cure rate falls to 50%. The most important
thing is finding the cancer when it is small, which mammography does.
At Breastnet, we started digital mammography in January of 2007 and this is our experience so far:
- We are seeing microcalcifications more clearly (which translates to earlier) and as a result,
we have found more early pre-invasive cancers, which are curable 99% of the time.
- In denser breast tissue, we can see lumps more easily.
- We have to perform fewer additional views to separate normal overlapping tissue from possible breast lumps.
- The procedure is quicker for the patient and the films are available for review immediately.
Although in 9 years, we have only lost one set of mammograms, lost films are now eliminated
with digital storage (we offer daily sacrifices to the IT god!!)
The computerized second read on digital images is significantly superior to second
read on non-digital mammograms.
The most important take home message though is,
have an annual mammogram.
The statistics I quoted at the beginning of this E-mail are a result of
30 years of annual screening of millions of women in the 'pre-digital' era.
For those of your friends who do not have access to digital mammograms,
they should still have a mammogram. The worst thing to do is not have a
mammogram because it is not yet available in your area.
Thank you for your time and support!
Best regards,
Belinda Barclay-White, MD
www.azbreastnet.com