Department of Population Health, New York University School of Medicine, New York, NY, 10016, USA.
Yale School of Medicine, New Haven, CT, USA.
J Gen Intern Med. 2020 Jul;35(7):1940-1945. doi: 10.1007/s11606-019-05590-7. Epub 2020 Jan 8.
To date, 38 states have enacted dense breast notification (DBN) laws mandating that mammogram reports include language informing women of risks related to dense breast tissue.
Nationally representative survey to assess the association between residing in a state with a DBN law and women's awareness and knowledge about breast density, and breast cancer anxiety.
Internet survey conducted in 2018 with participants in KnowledgePanel®, an online research panel.
English-speaking US women ages 40-59 years without a personal history of breast cancer who had received at least one screening mammogram (N = 1928; survey completion rate 68.2%).
(1) Reported history of increased breast density, (2) knowledge of the increased risk of breast cancer with dense breasts, (3) knowledge of the masking effect of dense breasts on mammography, and (4) breast cancer anxiety.
Women residing in DBN states were more likely to report increased breast density (43.6%) compared with women residing in non-DBN states (32.7%, p < 0.01, adjusted odds ratio, 1.70, 95% CI,1.34-2.17). Interaction effect between DBN states and education status showed that the impact of DBN on women's reporting of dense breasts was significant for women with greater than high school education, but not among women with a high school education or less (p value = 0.01 for interaction). Only 23.0% of women overall knew that increased breast density was associated with a higher risk of breast cancer, and 68.0% of women understood that dense breasts decreased the sensitivity of mammography. There were no significant differences between women in DBN states and non-DBN states for these outcomes, or for breast cancer-related anxiety.
State DBN laws were not associated with increased understanding of the clinical implications of breast density. DBN laws were associated with a higher likelihood of women reporting increased breast density, though not among women with lower education.
迄今为止,已有 38 个州颁布了致密型乳腺通知(DBN)法规,要求在乳腺 X 光报告中包含告知女性致密乳腺组织相关风险的语言。
全国代表性调查,评估居住在有 DBN 法规的州与女性对乳腺密度和乳腺癌焦虑的认识和了解之间的关联。
2018 年在 KnowledgePanel®(一个在线研究小组)中进行的互联网调查。
年龄在 40-59 岁、无乳腺癌个人病史、至少接受过一次筛查性乳房 X 光检查的讲英语的美国女性(N=1928;调查完成率为 68.2%)。
(1)报告乳腺密度增加的病史,(2)了解致密乳腺患乳腺癌风险增加,(3)了解致密乳腺对乳房 X 光检查的掩盖作用,以及(4)乳腺癌焦虑。
与居住在无 DBN 州的女性(32.7%,p<0.01,调整后的优势比,1.70,95%置信区间,1.34-2.17)相比,居住在 DBN 州的女性更有可能报告乳腺密度增加(43.6%)。DBN 州和教育程度之间的交互效应表明,DBN 对受教育程度较高的女性报告致密乳房的影响是显著的,但对受教育程度较低的女性则不然(交互作用 p 值=0.01)。只有 23.0%的女性总体上知道乳腺密度增加与乳腺癌风险增加有关,而 68.0%的女性知道致密乳腺会降低乳房 X 光检查的敏感性。在这些结果或与乳腺癌相关的焦虑方面,DBN 州的女性与非 DBN 州的女性之间没有差异。
州 DBN 法规与增加对乳腺密度临床意义的理解无关。DBN 法规与女性报告乳腺密度增加的可能性增加有关,但在教育程度较低的女性中则不然。