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Patient Care

Breast Cancer Screening: Finally, 40 is the New 50, Experts Say

May. 2, 2024
Friendly Female Doctor Explains the Mammogram Procedure to a Topless Latin Female Patient with Curly Hair Undergoing Mammography Scan. Healthy Female Does Cancer Prevention Routine in Hospital Room.

A national panel reversed its decision and officially lowered the recommended age when individuals should receive routine screening mammograms from 50 to 40. Experts cited rising rates of breast cancer among younger women and Black individuals in the decision.

“This is a major win,” said Anna Weiss, MD, surgeon-scientist, leader of the Wilmot Cancer Institute Comprehensive Breast Care Program, and director of Wilmot’s breast cancer service line.    

“We are not only seeing a younger population of patients being diagnosed with breast cancer, but also people from underserved groups,” she said. “For example, Black women sometimes develop breast cancer as many as five years earlier than white patients — so these new guidelines help to build equity into the system. Fifty years old is too late to start screening for Black women. I am also excited that the new guidelines will support insurance coverage for younger women.”

A panel known as the U.S. Preventive Services Task Force () issued the new guidelines It provides evidenced-based, influential advice on health that is often widely adopted.

However, the USPSTF breast cancer screening recommendations have been controversial: Years ago, for example, the panel raised the recommended screening age from 40 to 50, suggesting that earlier screening could lead to unnecessary biopsies and needless anxiety. Evidence now shows those risks are outweighed by the benefits of earlier screening.

The latest ruling was first drafted in 2023 and published on April 30, 2024, in the . It states that women of average risk should be screened every other year from 40 until age 74, when risk drops off significantly. (Some doctors believe yearly screening is more effective.) Lowering the age from 50 to 40 brings the task force’s guidance back in line with other cancer organizations, including the American Cancer Society.

Jennifer Harvey, MD, chair of Imaging Sciences at the Â鶹ÊÓƵ and a breast cancer specialist, wrote a on this topic in 2020 during a period of particular racial unrest in the U.S.

Harvey explained that clinical trials used as the basis for USPSTF decisions had few women of color, thus skewing outcomes and not considering that research has shown differences in biology in breast cancer among Black patients.

“Large scale population-based real-world data from the U.S. that reflects our diversity should be used to make decisions that affect the entirety of our female population,” Harvey’s editorial stated in the Journal of Breast Imaging. “Black lives matter, and we need to recognize and support the need for change regarding breast cancer screening recommendations.”

Harvey also noted:

  • The American College of Radiology suggests an even earlier screening age — 25 — for high-risk groups that include Black women and Ashkenazi Jewish people, to address disparities and improve survivorship.
  • Some women may need follow-up tests after routine mammograms. The task force did not make new recommendations in these cases.
  • Breast cancer is the second most common cancer and the second highest cause of cancer death among U.S. women. It is most treatable when caught early.

UR Medicine Imaging in partnership with Wilmot launched a mobile mammography van last year to make screening more accessible in the community. See the calendar and locations or call 844-870-0002 or email MammoVan@urmc.rochester.edu to make an appointment. Women 40 and older can also schedule routine screening mammograms via MyChart.

For additional services and locations, visit UR Medicine Breast Imaging. The New York State  support people who are uninsured or underinsured and need important cancer screenings.