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Center
for
the
Advancement
of
Health
Breast
Cancer
Risk
Lower
Than
Most
Senior
Women
Think
March 29, 2001 - A
new
study
estimates
that
the
average
50-year-old
woman
has
about
a
1-in-18
chance
of
developing
breast
cancer
in
her
next
20
years--half
the
risk
implied
by
the
oft-repeated
statistic
1-in-9.
Although
breast
cancer
is
much
more
common
in
older
women
than
younger
women,
the
risk
of
developing
breast
cancer
during
the
remainder
of
an
older
womans
life
is
actually
lower
than
the
risk
for
a
newborn.
An
older
woman
has
already
survived
several
decades
free
of
breast
cancer,
while
a
newborn
is
still
at
risk
of
developing
breast
cancer
(or
dying
of
other
causes)
until
she
reaches
that
particular
age,
Morris
says
in
the
paper.
Many
women
overestimate
their
risk
because
of
a
faulty
understanding
of
the
numbers,
which
become
more
accurate
when
broken
down
by
race
and
ethnicity.
This
study
also
suggests
that
projections
over
a
shorter
time
period,
5
to
20
years,
may
be
more
meaningful
than
the
lifetime
risk
statistic.
Lifetime
risk
is
the
likelihood
that
a
newborn
girl
will
develop
breast
cancer
sometime
during
her
entire
life.
The
1-in-9
statistic
does
not
apply
to
women
of
all
ages,
explains
Cyllene
R.
Morris
DVM,
PhD,
of
the
Public
Health
Institutes
California
Cancer
Registry
in
Sacramento,
California.
Several
studies
have
shown
that
women
generally
overestimate
their
risk
of
developing
breast
cancer.
Even
women
who
are
counseled
or
educated
on
breast
cancer
may
still
misinterpret
the
1-in-9
statistic
as
a
short-term
probability
rather
than
as
the
lifetime
risk
of
a
newborn
girl.
Morris
and
colleagues
at
the
California
Department
of
Health
Services
compiled
data
from
the
registry
on
109,165
women
in
the
state
diagnosed
with
breast
cancer
between
1993
and
1997.
The
study
will
be
published
in
the
April
issue
of
the
American
Journal
of
Preventive
Medicine.
They
found
that,
on
average,
a
50-year-old
woman
has
a
1-in-86
risk
of
developing
breast
cancer
in
the
next
five
years.
Most
guidelines
call
for
women
to
start
getting
screened
regularly
at
about
age
50,
a
recommendation
the
authors
dont
question.
In
comparison,
the
average
40-year-old
woman
has
a
1-in-189
risk
of
developing
breast
cancer
in
that
time
period
and
a
1-in-26
risk
within
20
years.
A
60-year-old
woman
still
has
only
a
1-in-61
risk
over
5
years
and
1-in-14
over
20
years.
These
numbers
assume
the
woman
has
not
already
had
a
breast
cancer
diagnosis.
At
50
years
old,
a
Caucasian
woman
has
a
1-in-15
risk
of
developing
breast
cancer
in
the
next
20
years
of
her
life,
while
an
African-American
woman
has
a
1-in-20
risk,
an
Asian/Pacific
Island
woman
has
a
1-in-26
risk
and
a
Hispanic
woman
a
1-in-27
risk.
Within
a
5-year
period,
a
50-year-old
Caucasian
women
has
a
1-in-75
risk
of
developing
breast
cancer.
In
comparison,
an
African
American
has
a
1-in-98
risk,
an
Asian/Pacific
Islander
a
1-in-107
risk
and
a
Hispanic
a
1-in-133
risk
in
5
years.
Risk
estimates
are
projections
of
current
rates
into
the
future
and
are,
therefore,
valid
only
if
these
rates
remain
stable
over
time.
In
the
short
term,
such
an
assumption
may
hold
true,
but
is
not
realistic
over
a
long
period
of
time,
Morris
and
colleagues
say.
Incidence
rates
of
breast
cancer
are
unlikely
to
remain
stable
over
time
because
of
advances
in
screening
technologies,
which
lead
to
more
tumors
being
detected
earlier,
and
improvements
in
prevention
strategies,
which
reduce
the
number
of
women
who
develop
breast
cancer,
they
say.
In
contrast,
risk
estimates
based
on
current
age
and
calculated
for
the
next
decade
or
two
may
be
more
accurate,
less
prone
to
misconceptions
and,
therefore,
more
meaningful
to
the
public,
they
say,
adding
the
cautionary
not
that
breast
cancer
is
still
poorly
understood
and
that
age
and
race/ethnicity
alone
cannot
predict
the
risk
of
developing
cancer
for
an
individual
woman.
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