• Meet Dr. Weil
  • Origins
  • Healthy Aging
  • Marketplace
  • Podcasts
  • Accessibility
  • Subscribe
Dr. Weil Logo Dr. Weil Logo Weil™ Andrew Weil, M.D.
  • Health & Wellness
    Health & Wellness
    Body, Mind & Spirit
    • Addiction
    • Allergy & Asthma
    • Autoimmune Disorders
    • Back Pain
    • Bone & Joint
    • Cancer
    • Colds & Flu
    • Dental & Oral
    • Diabetes
    • Disease & Disorders
    • Ears, Nose, & Throat
    • Feet
    • Gastrointestinal
    • Hair, Skin, & Nails
    • Headache
    • Heart
    • Insects & Parasites
    • Liver & Kidney
    • Mental Health
    • Pregnancy & Fertility
    • Respiratory
    • Sexual Health
    • Sleep Issues
    • Stress & Anxiety
    • Vision
    Balanced Living
    • Exercise & Fitness
    • Gardening
    • Healthy Home
    • Healthy Living
    • Meditation & Inspiration
    • Meet Dr. Weil
    • Pets & Pet Care
    • Technology
    • Wellness Therapies
    Health Centers
    • Aging Gracefully
    • Children
    • Condition Care Guide
    • Men
    • Women
  • Diet & Nutrition
    Diet & Nutrition
    Anti-Inflammatory Diet & Pyramid
    Cooking & Cookware
    Diets & Weight Loss
    Food Safety
    Nutrition
    Recipes
  • Vitamins, Supplements & Herbs
    Vitamins, Supplements & Herbs
    Herbs
    Supplements & Remedies
    Vitamins
  • Ask Dr. Weil
  • Blogs
    Blogs
    Bulletins
    Health Tips
    Spontaneous Happiness
  • Mushrooms
  • Sleep
Press "Enter" to search
Dr. Weil Logo Weil™ Andrew Weil, M.D.
  • Health & Wellness
    Health & Wellness
    Body, Mind & Spirit
    • Addiction
    • Allergy & Asthma
    • Autoimmune Disorders
    • Back Pain
    • Bone & Joint
    • Cancer
    • Colds & Flu
    • Dental & Oral
    • Diabetes
    • Disease & Disorders
    • Ears, Nose, & Throat
    • Feet
    • Gastrointestinal
    • Hair, Skin, & Nails
    • Headache
    • Heart
    • Insects & Parasites
    • Liver & Kidney
    • Mental Health
    • Pregnancy & Fertility
    • Respiratory
    • Sexual Health
    • Sleep Issues
    • Stress & Anxiety
    • Vision
    Balanced Living
    • Exercise & Fitness
    • Gardening
    • Healthy Home
    • Healthy Living
    • Meditation & Inspiration
    • Meet Dr. Weil
    • Pets & Pet Care
    • Technology
    • Wellness Therapies
    Health Centers
    • Aging Gracefully
    • Children
    • Condition Care Guide
    • Men
    • Women
  • Diet & Nutrition
    Diet & Nutrition
    Anti-Inflammatory Diet & Pyramid
    Cooking & Cookware
    Diets & Weight Loss
    Food Safety
    Nutrition
    Recipes
  • Vitamins, Supplements & Herbs
    Vitamins, Supplements & Herbs
    Herbs
    Supplements & Remedies
    Vitamins
  • Ask Dr. Weil
  • Blogs
    Blogs
    Bulletins
    Health Tips
    Spontaneous Happiness
  • Mushrooms
  • Sleep
  • Meet Dr. Weil
  • Origins
  • Healthy Aging
  • Marketplace
  • Podcasts
  • Accessibility
  1. Home
  2. Health & Wellness
  3. Health Centers
  4. Women

Are Mammograms Worthwhile?

I was shocked to hear about two studies showing that mammograms mostly turn up small tumors that would never prove life threatening. What does this mean for women?

Andrew Weil, M.D. | January 5, 2017

mammograms worthwhile
2 min

The first of the two investigations, from Dartmouth University, concluded that mammograms were much more likely to catch small tumors that never would have proved harmful than to detect those destined to become large and life threatening. The second report made news in January 2017, when Danish researchers published strikingly similar findings. They found that as many as one in every three women diagnosed with breast cancer had a tumor that might never become life threatening and had likely received unnecessary treatment as a result.

Both analysis showed that mammography doesn’t reduce the number of large tumors detected, results that contradict the long-held belief that finding tumors when they are small helps save lives.

The Dartmouth investigators analyzed data collected over the past 35 years and reported that since 1975, two-thirds of the invasive tumors detected via mammograms were smaller than two centimeters or were in-situ carcinomas, growths that are not harmful and are unlikely to progress to invasive cancer. They also concluded that while breast cancer deaths declined during the study period, improvements in treatment were responsible for most of this – not early detection of tumors by mammography.

The Dartmouth team looked at breast cancer and the size of the tumors detected in women age 40 and older between 1975 and 1979, when mammograms were not widely available, and compared those data to cases diagnosed between 2000 and 2002 after mammography had become much more common. They then tracked the women affected, their treatment and whether they were alive 10 years later.

They found that more breast cancer was diagnosed among women having routine mammograms and that the tumors were more likely to be smaller than those found in the earlier time period. They also saw a relatively small decline in the number of large tumors detected by mammograms between 1975 and 2012. All told, the investigators determined that 80 percent of the small tumors found never would have proved deadly.

The Danish researchers reviewed the medical records of all women in Denmark diagnosed with invasive breast cancer between 1980 and 2010. Because mammograms became available in different areas of the country at different times, the researchers were able to compare women who were screened with those who weren’t. Overall, they concluded that some 15 to 39 percent of the breast tumors detected would not have become life threatening.

The Danish team leader, Karsten Juhl Jorgensen, deputy director of research for the Nordic Cochrane Centre at the Rigshospitalet in Copenhagen, questioned the value of regular mammograms. He said that breast screening “has not lived up to its promises”.

These conclusions are sure to be controversial, even though they are hardly the first to suggest that mammograms can lead to over-diagnosis and unnecessary treatment. In 2012, researchers at the Harvard School of Public Health, using data from Norway, found that between 15 and 25 percent of all cases of breast cancer revealed by mammograms are over-diagnosed and that those tumors would never be life threatening.

These studies won’t be the last word on the subject. They don’t tell us which women should have screening mammograms and how often. But they do suggest that mammography is overused.

Andrew Weil, M.D.

Sources:

Gilbert Welch et al, “Breast-Cancer Tumor Size, Overdiagnosis, and Mammography Screening Effectiveness.” New England Journal of Medicine, October 13, 2016, DOI: 10.1056/NEJMoa1600.249

Karsten Juhl Jørgensen et al, “Breast Cancer Screening in Denmark: A Cohort Study of Tumor Size and Overdiagnosis.” Annals of Internal Medicine, January 10, 2017, DOI: 10.7326/M16-0270

Dr. Weil on Healthy Aging

Start Your 14-Day Free Trial

Free Newsletters

Stay Connected With Dr. Weil

Anti-Inflammatory Diet

Follow Dr. Weil’s Food Pyramid

Get Dr Weils Newsletter Updates

Exclusive Lifestyle, Nutrition & Health Advice

Dr. Weil's FREE health living advice delivered to you!

By clicking "Subscribe," you agree to the DrWeil.com Terms and Conditions and Privacy Policy. You also agree to receive emails from DrWeil.com, and you may opt out of DrWeil.com subscriptions at any time.

Trending Now

A Healthy Valentine's Day? | Andrew Weil, M.D.
Women

A Healthy Valentine's Day?

A Mug Of Mugwort Tea? | Women | Andrew Weil, M.D.
Women

A Mug Of Mugwort Tea?

Mature Woman Experiencing Hot Flush From Menopause
Women

A New Treatment for Hot Flashes?

a test for ovarian cancer
Cancer

A Test for Ovarian Cancer?

Dr. Weil Logo Weil™ Andrew Weil, M.D.
Dr. Weil's Signature

Exclusive Lifestyle, Nutrition & Health Advice

  • About Us
  • Press Information
  • Advertising
  • Contact Us
  • Terms of Use
  • Privacy Policy

Terms of Use | Privacy Policy

Information on this website is provided for informational purposes only and is not intended as a substitute for the advice provided by your physician or other healthcare professional. You should not use the information on this website for diagnosing or treating a health problem or disease, or prescribing any medication or other treatment. Any third party offering or advertising on this website does not constitute an endorsement by Andrew Weil, M.D. or Healthy Lifestyle Brands.

© Copyright 2024 Healthy Lifestyle Brands, LLC. All rights reserved. Reproduction in whole or in part without permission is prohibited. www.drweil.com