1. Prioritizing Screening Mammograms for Immediate Interpretation and Diagnostic Evaluation on the Basis of Risk for Recall
- Author
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Ho, Thao-Quyen H, Bissell, Michael CS, Lee, Christoph I, Lee, Janie M, Sprague, Brian L, Tosteson, Anna NA, Wernli, Karen J, Henderson, Louise M, Kerlikowske, Karla, and Miglioretti, Diana L
- Subjects
Clinical Research ,Breast Cancer ,Prevention ,Health Services ,Cancer ,Biomedical Imaging ,Detection ,screening and diagnosis ,4.2 Evaluation of markers and technologies ,Female ,Humans ,Mammography ,Breast Density ,Early Detection of Cancer ,Radiology ,Biopsy ,Breast Neoplasms ,Mass Screening ,Screening mammography ,recall rate ,immediate interpretation ,Breast Cancer Surveillance Consortium ,Clinical Sciences ,Public Health and Health Services ,Nuclear Medicine & Medical Imaging - Abstract
PurposeThe aim of this study was to develop a prioritization strategy for scheduling immediate screening mammographic interpretation and possible diagnostic evaluation.MethodsA population-based cohort with screening mammograms performed from 2012 to 2020 at 126 radiology facilities from 7 Breast Cancer Surveillance Consortium registries was identified. Classification trees identified combinations of clinical history (age, BI-RADS® density, time since prior mammogram, history of false-positive recall or biopsy result), screening modality (digital mammography, digital breast tomosynthesis), and facility characteristics (profit status, location, screening volume, practice type, academic affiliation) that grouped screening mammograms by recall rate, with ≥12/100 considered high and ≥16/100 very high. An efficiency ratio was estimated as the percentage of recalls divided by the percentage of mammograms.ResultsThe study cohort included 2,674,051 screening mammograms in 925,777 women, with 235,569 recalls. The most important predictor of recall was time since prior mammogram, followed by age, history of false-positive recall, breast density, history of benign biopsy, and screening modality. Recall rates were very high for baseline mammograms (21.3/100; 95% confidence interval, 19.7-23.0) and high for women with ≥5 years since prior mammogram (15.1/100; 95% confidence interval, 14.3-16.1). The 9.2% of mammograms in subgroups with very high and high recall rates accounted for 19.2% of recalls, an efficiency ratio of 2.1 compared with a random approach. Adding women
- Published
- 2023