Comparing sensitivity and specificity of screening mammography in the United States and Denmark

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Comparing sensitivity and specificity of screening mammography in the United States and Denmark. / Kemp Jacobsen, Katja; O'Meara, Ellen S; Key, Dustin; S M Buist, Diana; Kerlikowske, Karla; Vejborg, Ilse; Sprague, Brian L; Lynge, Elsebeth; von Euler-Chelpin, My.

In: International Journal of Cancer, Vol. 137, No. 9, 01.11.2015, p. 2198-2207.

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

Harvard

Kemp Jacobsen, K, O'Meara, ES, Key, D, S M Buist, D, Kerlikowske, K, Vejborg, I, Sprague, BL, Lynge, E & von Euler-Chelpin, M 2015, 'Comparing sensitivity and specificity of screening mammography in the United States and Denmark', International Journal of Cancer, vol. 137, no. 9, pp. 2198-2207. https://doi.org/10.1002/ijc.29593

APA

Kemp Jacobsen, K., O'Meara, E. S., Key, D., S M Buist, D., Kerlikowske, K., Vejborg, I., Sprague, B. L., Lynge, E., & von Euler-Chelpin, M. (2015). Comparing sensitivity and specificity of screening mammography in the United States and Denmark. International Journal of Cancer, 137(9), 2198-2207. https://doi.org/10.1002/ijc.29593

Vancouver

Kemp Jacobsen K, O'Meara ES, Key D, S M Buist D, Kerlikowske K, Vejborg I et al. Comparing sensitivity and specificity of screening mammography in the United States and Denmark. International Journal of Cancer. 2015 Nov 1;137(9):2198-2207. https://doi.org/10.1002/ijc.29593

Author

Kemp Jacobsen, Katja ; O'Meara, Ellen S ; Key, Dustin ; S M Buist, Diana ; Kerlikowske, Karla ; Vejborg, Ilse ; Sprague, Brian L ; Lynge, Elsebeth ; von Euler-Chelpin, My. / Comparing sensitivity and specificity of screening mammography in the United States and Denmark. In: International Journal of Cancer. 2015 ; Vol. 137, No. 9. pp. 2198-2207.

Bibtex

@article{dd90dd2a40b048dfaf974c14edafed15,
title = "Comparing sensitivity and specificity of screening mammography in the United States and Denmark",
abstract = "Delivery of screening mammography differs substantially between the United States (US) and Denmark. We evaluated whether there are differences in screening sensitivity and specificity. We included screens from women screened at age 50-69 years during 1996-2008/2009 in the US Breast Cancer Surveillance Consortium (BCSC) (n = 2,872,791), and from two population-based mammography screening programs in Denmark (Copenhagen, n = 148,156 and Funen, n = 275,553). Women were followed-up for 1 year. For initial screens, recall rate was significantly higher in BCSC (17.6%) than in Copenhagen (4.3%) and Funen (3.1%). Sensitivity was fairly similar in BCSC (91.8%) and Copenhagen (90.5%) and Funen (92.5%). At subsequent screens, recall rates were 8.8%, 1.8% and 1.4% in BCSC, Copenhagen and Funen, respectively. The BCSC sensitivity (82.3%) was lower compared with that in Copenhagen (88.9%) and Funen (86.9%), but when stratified by time since last screen, the sensitivity was similar. For both initial and subsequent screenings, the specificity of screening in BCSC (83.2% and 91.6%) was significantly lower than that in Copenhagen (96.6% and 98.8%) and Funen (97.9% and 99.2%). By taking time since last screen into account, it was found that American and Danish women had the same probability of having their asymptomatic cancers detected at screening. However, the majority of women free of asymptomatic cancers experienced more harms in terms of false-positive findings in the US than in Denmark.",
author = "{Kemp Jacobsen}, Katja and O'Meara, {Ellen S} and Dustin Key and {S M Buist}, Diana and Karla Kerlikowske and Ilse Vejborg and Sprague, {Brian L} and Elsebeth Lynge and {von Euler-Chelpin}, My",
note = "{\textcopyright} 2015 UICC.",
year = "2015",
month = nov,
day = "1",
doi = "10.1002/ijc.29593",
language = "English",
volume = "137",
pages = "2198--2207",
journal = "International Journal of Cancer",
issn = "0020-7136",
publisher = "JohnWiley & Sons, Inc.",
number = "9",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Comparing sensitivity and specificity of screening mammography in the United States and Denmark

AU - Kemp Jacobsen, Katja

AU - O'Meara, Ellen S

AU - Key, Dustin

AU - S M Buist, Diana

AU - Kerlikowske, Karla

AU - Vejborg, Ilse

AU - Sprague, Brian L

AU - Lynge, Elsebeth

AU - von Euler-Chelpin, My

N1 - © 2015 UICC.

PY - 2015/11/1

Y1 - 2015/11/1

N2 - Delivery of screening mammography differs substantially between the United States (US) and Denmark. We evaluated whether there are differences in screening sensitivity and specificity. We included screens from women screened at age 50-69 years during 1996-2008/2009 in the US Breast Cancer Surveillance Consortium (BCSC) (n = 2,872,791), and from two population-based mammography screening programs in Denmark (Copenhagen, n = 148,156 and Funen, n = 275,553). Women were followed-up for 1 year. For initial screens, recall rate was significantly higher in BCSC (17.6%) than in Copenhagen (4.3%) and Funen (3.1%). Sensitivity was fairly similar in BCSC (91.8%) and Copenhagen (90.5%) and Funen (92.5%). At subsequent screens, recall rates were 8.8%, 1.8% and 1.4% in BCSC, Copenhagen and Funen, respectively. The BCSC sensitivity (82.3%) was lower compared with that in Copenhagen (88.9%) and Funen (86.9%), but when stratified by time since last screen, the sensitivity was similar. For both initial and subsequent screenings, the specificity of screening in BCSC (83.2% and 91.6%) was significantly lower than that in Copenhagen (96.6% and 98.8%) and Funen (97.9% and 99.2%). By taking time since last screen into account, it was found that American and Danish women had the same probability of having their asymptomatic cancers detected at screening. However, the majority of women free of asymptomatic cancers experienced more harms in terms of false-positive findings in the US than in Denmark.

AB - Delivery of screening mammography differs substantially between the United States (US) and Denmark. We evaluated whether there are differences in screening sensitivity and specificity. We included screens from women screened at age 50-69 years during 1996-2008/2009 in the US Breast Cancer Surveillance Consortium (BCSC) (n = 2,872,791), and from two population-based mammography screening programs in Denmark (Copenhagen, n = 148,156 and Funen, n = 275,553). Women were followed-up for 1 year. For initial screens, recall rate was significantly higher in BCSC (17.6%) than in Copenhagen (4.3%) and Funen (3.1%). Sensitivity was fairly similar in BCSC (91.8%) and Copenhagen (90.5%) and Funen (92.5%). At subsequent screens, recall rates were 8.8%, 1.8% and 1.4% in BCSC, Copenhagen and Funen, respectively. The BCSC sensitivity (82.3%) was lower compared with that in Copenhagen (88.9%) and Funen (86.9%), but when stratified by time since last screen, the sensitivity was similar. For both initial and subsequent screenings, the specificity of screening in BCSC (83.2% and 91.6%) was significantly lower than that in Copenhagen (96.6% and 98.8%) and Funen (97.9% and 99.2%). By taking time since last screen into account, it was found that American and Danish women had the same probability of having their asymptomatic cancers detected at screening. However, the majority of women free of asymptomatic cancers experienced more harms in terms of false-positive findings in the US than in Denmark.

U2 - 10.1002/ijc.29593

DO - 10.1002/ijc.29593

M3 - Journal article

C2 - 25944711

VL - 137

SP - 2198

EP - 2207

JO - International Journal of Cancer

JF - International Journal of Cancer

SN - 0020-7136

IS - 9

ER -

ID: 144571248