In diagnostics, finding more is not automatically better.
Rather, it is about finding the right thing - especially in the case of such dangerous diseases as cancer.
This is where early detection comes into play, but it can also have unwanted side effects: For example, there is a risk of also discovering non-aggressive tumours that lead to treatment - but would not have substantively impaired quality of life or become life-threatening in the course of the disease.
Medicine speaks of overdiagnosis.
TOSYMA is also about early detection: the world's largest randomised - i.e. randomly assigned - diagnostic superiority study for the early detection of breast cancer has set itself the task of investigating and improving the systematic early detection of invasive breast cancer.
The researchers at the University of Münster, who are managing the mammoth project, have now published new results on TOSYMA in the highly ranked journal Radiology.
These demonstrate the advantages of the innovative diagnostic approach.
A combination of DBT - short for Digital Breast Tomosynthesis - and Synthetic 2D Mammography (SM) was used for the almost 100,000 TOSYMA study participants.
The interdisciplinary study group led by Prof. Walter Heindel, Director of the Clinic for Radiology at the University Hospital Münster, compared the data obtained with the combined procedure - known as DBT+SM - with that from conventional screening with digital mammography (DM).
The result: DBT+SM leads to the detection of significantly more invasive breast cancers compared to the conventional DM procedure.
However, this does not necessarily mean that women’s health is improved – the keyword here is overdiagnosis.
In other words, it has been shown that DBT+SM "finds" breast cancer better - but the task now was to investigate whether this can be expected to actually lead to an improvement for the affected breast cancer patients.
In an exploratory subanalysis, Prof. Stefanie Weigel, Prof. Walter Heindel and Prof. Hans-Werner Hense examined which tumours are frequently detected at an earlier stage of breast cancer - and found that DBT+SM screening can detect relevant tumours, i.e. those that - in contrast to less aggressive variants - are potentially relevant for a reduction in breast cancer mortality.
Prof. Stefanie Weigel concludes: "From the results of the subanalysis, we conclude that the higher rate of early tumour stages of tumour grades 2 and 3 through the use of DBT+SM could increase the screening effect with regard to breast cancer mortality" - another "plus point" for DBT+SM.
The next step is already in progress: this year, data from the cancer registries of North Rhine-Westphalia and Lower Saxony will be evaluated for follow-up in order to further examine the screening effect of DBT+SM compared to the previous screening standard.
The TOSYMA project began in 2016, comprises 17 screening units in Germany and is financially supported by the German Research Foundation. The current funding period runs until 2025.
Source: University of Münster
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