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Your next mammogram could be even more of a lifesaver

A side-by-side mammogram image of cancer in a “not dense” breast and a “dense” breast.

The new rule does not mandate specific follow-ups or next steps, but providers should advise patients with dense breasts to explore further screening.

A woman whose breast cancer went undetected spent years campaigning for this rule

Earlier this year, JoAnn Pushkin, the executive director of the educational resource DenseBreast-info, shared her late cancer diagnosis story with Business Insider.

Pushkin had no apparent breast cancer risk factors. Her only family history was one aunt who’d had breast cancer. She regularly exercised, ate well, performed self-exams, and had mammograms every year after she turned 40, the recommended age to start screening.

Although all her mammograms came back clear, at 45 she felt a lump in her breast. She went for a scan and a biopsy, and was told she had later-stage breast cancer. A follow-up mammogram still showed no signs of cancer. That’s when her doctor explained she had dense breasts, making the cancer almost impossible to spot on a mammogram (though it came up in an ultrasound).

Pushkin needed a double mastectomy, seven surgeries, and eight rounds of chemotherapy. She went into remission, but her cancer returned. She then had another 30 rounds of radiation.

Now in her 60s, Pushkin says she still has to be vigilant, getting screened for recurrences and treating side effects.

She is celebrating the new FDA rule, though she laments that it didn’t come sooner as many of her fellow activists have died from cancers that went undetected.

“Some of them were fighting for these laws literally while sitting in chemo chairs, getting infusions while they’re fighting for these laws,” Pushkin told BI.

“When you think about the fact that these 39 state laws were fought for by sick women, it is quite something that these women and their families have paid the price for this,” she said.

Read the original article on Business Insider

https://www.businessinsider.com/mammograms-screen-for-dense-breasts-spot-hidden-cancers-2024-9