A small number of studies have investigated breast cancer (BC) risk among women with a history of false-positive recall (FPR) in BC screening, but none of them has used time-to-event analysis while at the same time quantifying the effect of false-negative diagnostic assessment (FNDA). FNDA occurs when screening detects BC, but this BC is missed on diagnostic assessment (DA). As a result of FNDA, screenings that detected cancer are incorrectly classified as FPR. Our study linked data recorded in the Flemish BC screening program (women aged 50-69 years) to data from the national cancer registry. We used Cox proportional hazards models on a retrospective cohort of 298 738 women to assess the association between FPR and subsequent BC, while adj...
Abstract Background Breast cancer survivors are increasing followed for new breast cancers / recurre...
OBJECTIVE: The impact of mammography screening recall on quality-of-life (QOL) has been studied in w...
BACKGROUND: The recall rate (i.e., the rate at which mammographically screened women are recalled fo...
Women with a history of false-positive mammogram result may be at increased risk of developing subse...
Women with false-positive results are commonly referred back to routine screening. Questions remain ...
Women with false-positive results are commonly referred back to routine screening. Questions remain ...
AbstractBackground: False-positives are a major concern in breast cancer screening. However, false-p...
INTRODUCTION: After false-positive screening for breast cancer, women are still at risk of developin...
Objective: We aimed to explore whether the type of mammographic feature prompting a false-positive r...
Background: Reducing the false-positive risk in breast cancer screening is important. We examined ho...
RIGHTS : This article is licensed under the BioMed Central licence at http://www.biomedcentral.com/...
Introduction Women attending breast screening may have suspicious mammographic findings that are ...
Item does not contain fulltextBACKGROUND: Women require balanced, high-quality information when maki...
False-positive mammography results are common. Biennial screening may decrease the cumulative probab...
BACKGROUND: We assessed the long-term risk of screen-detected and interval breast cancer in women wi...
Abstract Background Breast cancer survivors are increasing followed for new breast cancers / recurre...
OBJECTIVE: The impact of mammography screening recall on quality-of-life (QOL) has been studied in w...
BACKGROUND: The recall rate (i.e., the rate at which mammographically screened women are recalled fo...
Women with a history of false-positive mammogram result may be at increased risk of developing subse...
Women with false-positive results are commonly referred back to routine screening. Questions remain ...
Women with false-positive results are commonly referred back to routine screening. Questions remain ...
AbstractBackground: False-positives are a major concern in breast cancer screening. However, false-p...
INTRODUCTION: After false-positive screening for breast cancer, women are still at risk of developin...
Objective: We aimed to explore whether the type of mammographic feature prompting a false-positive r...
Background: Reducing the false-positive risk in breast cancer screening is important. We examined ho...
RIGHTS : This article is licensed under the BioMed Central licence at http://www.biomedcentral.com/...
Introduction Women attending breast screening may have suspicious mammographic findings that are ...
Item does not contain fulltextBACKGROUND: Women require balanced, high-quality information when maki...
False-positive mammography results are common. Biennial screening may decrease the cumulative probab...
BACKGROUND: We assessed the long-term risk of screen-detected and interval breast cancer in women wi...
Abstract Background Breast cancer survivors are increasing followed for new breast cancers / recurre...
OBJECTIVE: The impact of mammography screening recall on quality-of-life (QOL) has been studied in w...
BACKGROUND: The recall rate (i.e., the rate at which mammographically screened women are recalled fo...