The long-term psychosocial consequences of screen-detected ductal carcinoma in situ and invasive breast cancer
Permanent lenke
https://hdl.handle.net/10037/30078Dato
2023-06-07Type
Journal articleTidsskriftartikkel
Peer reviewed
Forfatter
Gram, Emma Grundtvig; Manso, Túlia Filipa Roberto; Heleno, Bruno; Siersma, Volkert; á Rogvi, Jessica; Brodersen, JohnSammendrag
Methods - We surveyed a Danish mammography-screening cohort from 2004 to 2018. We assessed outcomes at six-time points: baseline, 1, 6, 18, 36 months, and 14 years after the screening. We measured psychosocial consequences with the Consequences Of Screening – Breast Cancer (COS-BC): a condition-specific questionnaire that is psychometrically validated and encompasses 14 psychosocial dimensions. We used weighted linear models with generalized estimating equations to compare responses between groups. We used a 1% level of significance.
Results - 170 out of 1309 women were diagnosed with breast cancer (13.0%). 23 were diagnosed with DCIS (13.5%) and 147 with IBC (86.5%). From baseline to six months after diagnosis, there were no significant differences between women with DCIS and IBC. However, mean scores indicated that IBC generally was more affected than DCIS. After six months, we observed that women with DCIS and IBC might be affected differently in the long term; mean scores and mean differences showed that IBC were more affected on some scales, while DCIS were on others.
Conclusion - Overall, the DCIS and IBC experienced similar levels of psychosocial consequences. Women might benefit from renaming DCIS to exclude cancer nomenclature.