Showing posts with label breasts. Show all posts
Showing posts with label breasts. Show all posts

Thursday 15 October 2015

50 Years Is The Most Dangerous Age For Women

50 Years Is The Most Dangerous Age For Women.
Breast cancer imperil in women may be tied to the velocity at which their breast-tissue density changes as they age, a supplementary study suggests Dec 2013. Researchers examined 282 breast cancer patients and 317 women without the blight who underwent both mammography and an automated breast-density test. Breast cancer patients under maturity 50 tended to have greater breast density than healthy women under length of existence 50, the researchers said Tuesday at the annual meeting of the Radiological Society of North America, in Chicago. Overall, the salutary women also showed a significant, steady decline in their breast density with age.

There was considerably more modulating in the amount of density loss among the breast cancer patients. "The results are interesting, because there would appear to be some make up of different biological density mechanism for normal breasts compared to breasts with cancer, and this appears to be most perceptible for younger women," study senior writer Nicholas Perry, director of the London Breast Institute in the United Kingdom, said in a fellowship news release. "Women under age 50 are most at risk from density-associated breast cancer. Breast cancer in younger women is as often as not of a more aggressive type, with larger tumors and a higher danger of recurrence".

Breast density, as determined by mammography, is already known to be a strong and independent risk factor for core cancer. The American Cancer Society considers women with extremely dense breasts to be at to a certain extent increased risk of cancer and recommends they talk with their doctors about adding MRI screening to their once a year mammograms. "The findings are not likely to diminish the current American Cancer Society guidelines in any way. But it might unite a new facet regarding the possibility of an early mammogram to show an obvious risk factor (breast density), which may then lead to enhanced screening for those women with the densest breasts".