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Tata Memorial conducts landmark study on alternative to mammography

Clinical breast examination is a woman-friendly and cost-effective alternative to mammography

A 20-year landmark study by Tata Memorial Hospital (TMC) in Mumbai has proved that clinical breast examination is a woman-friendly and cost-effective alternative to mammography to check for breast cancer. 

Dr Rajendra Badwe, Director, TMC, a co-author on the study said, “If implemented as a breast screening method in India, CBE would save 15,000 deaths from breast cancer each year, and 40,000 lives globally in low and middle-income countries (LMICs). All this at a fraction of screening cost, thereby reducing stress on the overburdened healthcare systems.”

Dr Badwe was speaking at a press conference held at TMC, Mumbai to discuss the findings of the study.

Breast cancers in LMICs are frequently detected in advanced stages, and consequently, more than half the global deaths from breast cancer occur in these countries. Mammography is the standard screening technique for early detection of breast cancer which is widely used in the Western world. Although intuitively appealing, the self-breast examination has not been found to be effective in reducing mortality from breast cancer. The study by TMC establishes Clinical Breast Examination as an effective technique that suits LMICs as it is highly affordable in comparison to mammography.

As part of the study, 75,360 women in the screening arm were offered four rounds of CBE conducted by trained female primary health workers and cancer awareness information every two years, followed by five rounds of active surveillance by way of home visits every two years. Another 76,178 women in the control arm received one round of cancer awareness followed by eight rounds of active surveillance every two years. Participants in both arms were eligible for free diagnostic evaluation and treatment at the Tata Memorial Hospital.

Breast cancer was detected at an earlier age in the screening arm than in the control arm (55 v 57 years), with a significant reduction in the proportion of women with more advanced stage (III or IV) disease (37 per cent v 47 per cent) – known as down-staging. The results of the study showed a 30 per cent reduction in mortality due to breast cancer in women aged 50 years and above. This degree of mortality reduction is similar to that of mammography. Although this study did not find benefit in women below the age of 50 years, it did find a 34 per cent reduction of mortality in these women provided they regularly attended all four rounds of screening.

The use of mammography for screening for breast cancer requires expensive machinery, highly trained radiologists and radiographers and a high level of quality control. In India, the cost of a digital mammography machine is approximately Rs 3 crores, and each examination cost around Rs. 2000. Clearly, India cannot afford mass screening by mammography for all its women. CBE on the other hand is low-cost, technically simple, woman-friendly and a touch-sensitive procedure, without the discomfort of compression or the hazard of radiation.

A highlight of the study is the involvement of primary health care workers whose academic qualification was matriculation. Dr Vani Parmar, Surgeon, TMC trained the first batch of health workers for performing the CBE procedure. Dr Gauravi Mishra, Professor of Preventive Oncology, is a Co-investigator on the study and has been associated with the trial since its early years and refers to it as her lifetime research project. 

“It has been a herculean task according to Dr Mishra. It involved tracing 150,000 participants scattered in different areas of Mumbai, meticulously maintaining their records, counselling them to attend for screening and keeping surveillance over two decades. With the research reaching its culmination, it is immensely gratifying to see the findings being translated into evidence-based guidelines and strengthen the national cancer control policies in India and other LMICs.”

Although the impact of this intervention will be strongly felt and perceived in developing countries with scarce resources, its importance in high resource countries cannot be ignored, with mammography being susceptible to over-diagnosis and overtreatment. It is estimated that nearly 30 per cent of breast cancers are unnecessarily detected and treated with the use of mammography.

The Mumbai study is clearly a stimulus for more research to help mitigate the problems of over-detection and overtreatment. Some studies further indicate that about 15-35 per cent of women are non-compliant to mammography, due to certain factors like physical discomfort, fear of procedure and delay in receiving results. CBE could easily serve as a more acceptable, humane and quick screening intervention.

The study spanning over 20 years was conducted by a team of researchers, led by Dr Indraneel Mittra, Surgeon, Tata Memorial Centre. He conceived a randomised trial to investigate the efficacy of CBE in reducing death rates from breast cancer in the early 1990s. Following a successful pilot study, he obtained a major research grant from the US National Cancer Institute for a 15-year study. The present randomised trial was initiated in 1998 which consist of 151,538 women aged 35-64 from 20 clusters in the city of Mumbai.

PIB

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