Global mammographic asymmetry and short-term breast cancer risk by breast density: a nationwide screening cohort of 5.5 million women
Sangjun Lee, Soyeoun Kim

TL;DR
Breast asymmetry seen in mammograms is linked to a higher short-term breast cancer risk, especially in women with less dense breasts.
Contribution
The study reveals that global mammographic asymmetry significantly increases short-term breast cancer risk, particularly in non-dense breasts.
Findings
Global mammographic asymmetry is associated with a 1.15-fold increased breast cancer risk overall.
In women with non-dense breasts (BI-RADS 1), asymmetry quadruples short-term breast cancer risk.
Asymmetry adds little long-term risk in extremely dense breasts (BI-RADS 4).
Abstract
Global mammographic asymmetry (GA) is generally considered benign, and its association with subsequent breast cancer risk is unclear. We examined whether GA on screening mammography predicts short-term and long-term breast cancer and whether this varies by Breast Imaging Reporting and Data System (BI-RADS) breast density. In this retrospective cohort study using the Korean National Health Insurance Service screening programme, we included women aged ≥40 years who underwent screening mammography in 2009–2010 and had no prior breast cancer. GA and BI-RADS density were recorded on baseline mammograms; incident invasive breast cancer through December 31, 2019 was ascertained from insurance claims. Cox proportional hazards models estimated adjusted hazard ratios (aHRs) for breast cancer associated with GA overall and by BI-RADS density and follow-up interval (<1, 1–2 and ≥2 years), adjusting…
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Taxonomy
TopicsDigital Radiography and Breast Imaging · Breast Lesions and Carcinomas · Breast Cancer Treatment Studies
