WASHINGTON -- Radiologists examining mammogram X-rays gave false-positive cancer readings up to 15.9 percent of the time, with the youngest and most recently trained doctors having two to four times the false-positive rate of older radiologists, a study has found.
The study, in the Journal of the National Cancer Institute, found that the rate of false positives could be reduced significantly if radiologists could compare films from previous mammogram screenings.
Dr. Joann Elmore of the University of Washington School of Medicine in Seattle said the rate of false positives -- breast cancer mammogram screenings that require follow-up tests -- are becoming increasingly common in the United States, but it should not discourage women from having annual screenings.
"Mammography is not a perfect test, but it is the best test we have," said Elmore, first author of the study in the Journal of the National Cancer Institute. "Women should realize that they have a 10 percent chance of being called back for additional tests."
The results of the study, she said, carry this message: women should continue to have mammograms, but they should try to return to the same testing facility each time so radiologists can compare past test films. False positives are reduced by about 70 percent when radiologists compare current films with images from past tests, Elmore said.
The study involved an evaluation of mammogram readings from 2,169 women by 24 radiologists in a community clinic practice from the years 1985 to 1993, which gave time for follow-up studies of the patients. The study analyzed the rate of false-positive interpretations by the doctors, then related that to the experience and training of the radiologists and to the age and other characteristics of the women patients.
It found that the false positive rate ranged from 2.6 percent to 15.9 percent. But when this rate was adjusted for the effect of patient characteristics, such as age, the false positive rate dropped to 3.5 percent to 7.9 percent. Age affects the false positive rate because breast tissue is denser in younger women, making their mammograms more difficult to interpret.
The study found that doctors who graduated from medical school in the last 15 years had false-positive rates two to four times higher than more experienced doctors.
Elmore suggested the young doctors may have had training that concentrated on finding cancer without emphasizing that false positives "can cause a lot of women who don't have breast cancer to be called back" for additional tests.
Older doctors also have more experience, she said, and "experience matters."
The threat of malpractice lawsuits also may affect mammogram interpretations by causing doctors to err on the side of caution, said Elmore.
"Mammograms are very challenging to interpret," she said. "There is a definite art to reading them."
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