While physicians mostly applauded a government-appointed panel’s recommendation that women get routine mammography screening for breast cancer starting at age 40, down from 50, not everyone approves.
Some doctors and researchers who are invested in a more individualized approach to finding troublesome tumors are skeptical, raising questions about the data and the reasoning behind the U.S. Preventive Services Task Force’s about-face from its 2016 guidelines.
“The evidence isn’t compelling to start everyone at 40,” said Jeffrey Tice, a professor of medicine at the University of California-San Francisco.
Tice is part of the WISDOM study research team, which aims, in the words of breast cancer surgeon and team leader Laura Esserman, “to test smarter, not test more.” She launched the ongoing study in 2016 with the goal of tailoring screening to a woman’s risk and putting an end to the debate over when to get mammograms.
Advocates of a personalized approach stress the costs of universal screening at 40 — not in dollars, but rather in false-positive results, unnecessary biopsies, overtreatment, and anxiety.

Dreamstime/Dreamstime/TNS
Physicians mostly applauded a government-appointed panel’s recommendation that women get routine mammography screening for breast cancer starting at age 40, down from 50, but not everyone approves. (Dreamstime/TNS)
The guidelines come from the federal Department of Health and Human Services’ U.S. Preventive Services Task Force, an independent panel of 16 volunteer medical experts who are charged with helping guide doctors, health insurers, and policymakers. In 2009 and again in 2016, the group put forward the current advisory, which raised the age to start routine mammography from 40 to 50 and urged women from 50 to 74 to get mammograms every two years. Women from 40 to 49 who “place a higher value on the potential benefit than the potential harms” might also seek screening, the task force said.
Now the task force has issued a draft of an update to its guidelines, recommending the screening for all women beginning at age 40.
“This new recommendation will help save lives and prevent more women from dying due to breast cancer,” said Carol Mangione, a professor of medicine and public health at UCLA, who chaired the panel.
But the evidence isn’t clear-cut. Karla Kerlikowske, a professor at UCSF who has been researching mammography since the 1990s, said she didn’t see a difference in the data that would warrant the change. The only way she could explain the new guidelines, she said, was a change in the panel.
“It’s different task force members,” she said. “They interpreted the benefits and harms differently.”
Mangione, however, cited two data points as crucial drivers of the new recommendations: rising breast cancer incidence in younger women and models showing the number of lives screening might save, especially among Black women.
There is no direct evidence that screening women in their 40s will save lives, she said. The number of women who died of breast cancer declined steadily from 1992 to 2020, due in part to earlier detection and better treatment.
But the predictive models the task force built, based on various assumptions rather than actual data, found that expanding mammography to women in their 40s might avert an additional 1.3 deaths per 1,000 in that cohort, Mangione said. Most critically, she said, a new model including only Black women showed 1.8 per 1,000 could be saved.
A 2% annual increase in the number of 40- to 49-year-olds diagnosed with breast cancer in the U.S. from 2016 through 2019 alerted the task force to a concerning trend, she said.
Mangione called that a “really sizable jump.” But Kerlikowske called it “pretty small,” and Tice called it “very modest” — conflicting perceptions that underscore just how much art is involved in the science of preventive health guidelines.
Task force members are appointed by HHS’ Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality and serve four-year terms. The new draft guidelines are open for public comment until June 5. After incorporating feedback, the task force plans to publish its final recommendation in JAMA, the Journal of the American Medical Association.
Nearly 300,000 women will be diagnosed with breast cancer in the U.S. this year, and it will kill more than 43,000, according to National Cancer Institute projections. Expanding screening to include younger women is seen by many as an obvious way to detect cancer earlier and save lives.
But critics of the new guidelines argue there are real trade-offs.
“Why not start at birth?” Steven Woloshin, a professor at the Dartmouth Institute for Health Policy and Clinical Practice, asked rhetorically. “Why not every day?”
“If there were no downsides, that might be reasonable,” he said. “The problem is false positives, which are very scary. The other problem is overdiagnosis.” Some breast tumors are harmless, and the treatment can be worse than the disease, he said.
Tice agreed that overtreatment is an underappreciated problem.
“These cancers would never cause symptoms,” he said, referring to certain kinds of tumors. “Some just regress, shrink, and go away, are just so slow-growing that a woman dies of something else before it causes problems.”
Screening tends to find slow-growing cancers that are less likely to cause symptoms, he said. Conversely, women sometimes discover fast-growing lethal cancers soon after they’ve had clean mammograms.
“Our strong feeling is that one size does not fit all, and that it needs to be personalized,” Tice said.
WISDOM, which stands for “Women Informed to Screen Depending On Measures of risk,” assesses participants’ risk at 40 by reviewing family history and sequencing nine genes. The idea is to start regular mammography immediately for high-risk women while waiting for those at lower risk.
Black women are more likely to get screening mammograms than white women. Yet they are 40% more likely to die of breast cancer and are more likely to be diagnosed with deadly cancers at younger ages.
The task force expects Black women to benefit most from earlier screening, Mangione said.
It’s unclear why Black women are more likely to get the most lethal breast cancers, but research points to disparities in cancer management.
“Black women don’t get follow-up from mammograms as rapidly or appropriate treatment as quickly,” Tice said. “That’s what really drives the discrepancies in mortality.”
Debate also continues on screening for women 75 to 79 years old. The task force chose not to call for routine screening in the older age group because one observational study showed no benefit, Mangione said. But the panel issued an urgent call for research about whether women 75 and older should receive routine mammography.
Modeling suggests screening older women could avert 2.5 deaths per 1,000 women in that age group, more than those saved by expanding screening to younger women, Kerlikowske noted.
“We always say women over 75 should decide together with their clinicians whether to have mammograms based on their preferences, their values, their health history, and their family history,” Mangione said.
Tice, Kerlikowske, and Woloshin argue the same holds true for women in their 40s.
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Mammograms at 40? Breast cancer screening guidelines spark fresh debate
Lordn // Shutterstock
As coronavirus cases rose in 2020 and overwhelmed the health care system, the number of patients seeking non-emergency treatments such as annual checkups and health screenings dropped. In April 2020, breast cancer screenings declined by 87% and cervical cancer screenings were down by 84% from the previous five-year averages, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. The pandemic not only took a toll on those who contracted COVID-19, but also exacerbated timely medical preventive treatment for those with other health conditions.
One study—published in the October 2021 issue of Preventive Medicine—examined the impact of COVID-19 on screenings from the first half of 2020; it confirmed the decline in both cervical and breast cancer screening across geography, various ethnic and racial groups, and rurality. Results correlated with the rapid increase of COVID-19 cases in spring 2020.
As recommended by the CDC, mammograms and Papanicolaou test screenings (also known as Pap smear tests) are vital tools in the fight against breast and cervical cancer. The guidelines recommended by the U.S. Preventive Services Task Force (USPSTF) advise that women between the ages of 50 and 74 have a mammogram every two years. Additionally, screening for cervical cancer is recommended every three years for women ages 21 to 29. The USPSTF advises a Pap test every three years and/or HPV testing every five years for women ages 30 to 65.
However, as awareness grows about the importance of these detection tools, one thing standing in the way of women getting their recommended screenings is access to quality care. Health disparities are a major public health concern and can hinder cancer screening and treatment. Patients who lack insurance, aren’t able to travel to doctor visits, and face language or cultural barriers often have worse health outcomes. To save lives and meet desired screening targets, these gaps must be addressed to ensure quality health care access.
Citing data from the CDC, HealthMatch looked at screening rates for breast and cervical cancers across every state and outlined the role of screenings in detecting early-stage cancers and improving survival outcomes. CDC reports this screening data is specific to ‘women’ but does not detail whether the data categorizes people based on their gender identity or their sex assigned at birth.

Lordn // Shutterstock
As coronavirus cases rose in 2020 and overwhelmed the health care system, the number of patients seeking non-emergency treatments such as annual checkups and health screenings dropped. In April 2020, breast cancer screenings declined by 87% and cervical cancer screenings were down by 84% from the previous five-year averages, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. The pandemic not only took a toll on those who contracted COVID-19, but also exacerbated timely medical preventive treatment for those with other health conditions.
One study—published in the October 2021 issue of Preventive Medicine—examined the impact of COVID-19 on screenings from the first half of 2020; it confirmed the decline in both cervical and breast cancer screening across geography, various ethnic and racial groups, and rurality. Results correlated with the rapid increase of COVID-19 cases in spring 2020.
As recommended by the CDC, mammograms and Papanicolaou test screenings (also known as Pap smear tests) are vital tools in the fight against breast and cervical cancer. The guidelines recommended by the U.S. Preventive Services Task Force (USPSTF) advise that women between the ages of 50 and 74 have a mammogram every two years. Additionally, screening for cervical cancer is recommended every three years for women ages 21 to 29. The USPSTF advises a Pap test every three years and/or HPV testing every five years for women ages 30 to 65.
However, as awareness grows about the importance of these detection tools, one thing standing in the way of women getting their recommended screenings is access to quality care. Health disparities are a major public health concern and can hinder cancer screening and treatment. Patients who lack insurance, aren’t able to travel to doctor visits, and face language or cultural barriers often have worse health outcomes. To save lives and meet desired screening targets, these gaps must be addressed to ensure quality health care access.
Citing data from the CDC, HealthMatch looked at screening rates for breast and cervical cancers across every state and outlined the role of screenings in detecting early-stage cancers and improving survival outcomes. CDC reports this screening data is specific to ‘women’ but does not detail whether the data categorizes people based on their gender identity or their sex assigned at birth.

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Mammograms at 40? Breast cancer screening guidelines spark fresh debate
HealthMatch
Healthy People 2020 was a national public health goal to increase the percentage of women who receive breast cancer screening by 2020. Women between the ages of 50 and 74 were advised to have a mammogram every two years. According to State Cancer Profiles, 78.3% of women were screened in the U.S. by 2020, a median percentage that fell short of the target goal of 81.1%.
There were, however, 10 states and territories that did meet the target goal (>81.1%): Maryland, Connecticut, Iowa, New York, Louisiana, Maine, Puerto Rico, Hawaii, Rhode Island, and Massachusetts.
Healthy People 2030 continues to aim towards percentage point improvement. The target goal is to have 77.1% of women screened for breast cancer in all states in this decade.
HealthMatch
Healthy People 2020 was a national public health goal to increase the percentage of women who receive breast cancer screening by 2020. Women between the ages of 50 and 74 were advised to have a mammogram every two years. According to State Cancer Profiles, 78.3% of women were screened in the U.S. by 2020, a median percentage that fell short of the target goal of 81.1%.
There were, however, 10 states and territories that did meet the target goal (>81.1%): Maryland, Connecticut, Iowa, New York, Louisiana, Maine, Puerto Rico, Hawaii, Rhode Island, and Massachusetts.
Healthy People 2030 continues to aim towards percentage point improvement. The target goal is to have 77.1% of women screened for breast cancer in all states in this decade.
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Mammograms at 40? Breast cancer screening guidelines spark fresh debate
HealthMatch
In 2019, 73.5% of women ages 21-65 were up-to-date with a cervical cancer screening. While this may look like a high percentage, it is important to note that this number has decreased sharply in the past 10 years. State Cancer Profiles—an interactive map engine maintained by the CDC and National Cancer Institute—verifies that no states were able to meet the national target of having 93% screened by 2020.
Connecticut had the highest percentage of screenings recorded at 82.4%. The median value for the U.S. is just 77.9%. The national goal for this decade is to strategically increase the number of cervical cancer screenings based on the most recent guidelines by working with both patients and providers. The target is to have 84.3% of women screened for cervical cancer by 2030.
HealthMatch
In 2019, 73.5% of women ages 21-65 were up-to-date with a cervical cancer screening. While this may look like a high percentage, it is important to note that this number has decreased sharply in the past 10 years. State Cancer Profiles—an interactive map engine maintained by the CDC and National Cancer Institute—verifies that no states were able to meet the national target of having 93% screened by 2020.
Connecticut had the highest percentage of screenings recorded at 82.4%. The median value for the U.S. is just 77.9%. The national goal for this decade is to strategically increase the number of cervical cancer screenings based on the most recent guidelines by working with both patients and providers. The target is to have 84.3% of women screened for cervical cancer by 2030.
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Mammograms at 40? Breast cancer screening guidelines spark fresh debate
ORION PRODUCTION // Shutterstock
The CDC reports 255,000 cases of breast cancer are diagnosed in women and about 2,300 in men every year in the United States. Furthermore, 42,000 women and 500 men succumb to the disease.
Breast cancer often is undetectable in its early stages, but mammograms can help health care providers identify cancer before the patient is symptomatic—and before it spreads to other locations in the body. When found after symptoms appear—such as new lumps or swelling of a breast—the cancer is already at an advanced stage. Nearly 99% of women diagnosed with breast cancer at the earliest stage will live for 5 years or longer. Only about 27% of those diagnosed at the most advanced stage will survive that long.
The dramatic increase in screening rates can be largely attributed to the introduction of national guidelines recommending mammograms every two years for all women ages 50-74 in 2003. Mammogram screening can reduce mortality and late-stage cancer diagnosis while increasing survival rates and life expectancy. It can also improve quality of life and limit the cost of potential medical expenses related to treatment.
ORION PRODUCTION // Shutterstock
The CDC reports 255,000 cases of breast cancer are diagnosed in women and about 2,300 in men every year in the United States. Furthermore, 42,000 women and 500 men succumb to the disease.
Breast cancer often is undetectable in its early stages, but mammograms can help health care providers identify cancer before the patient is symptomatic—and before it spreads to other locations in the body. When found after symptoms appear—such as new lumps or swelling of a breast—the cancer is already at an advanced stage. Nearly 99% of women diagnosed with breast cancer at the earliest stage will live for 5 years or longer. Only about 27% of those diagnosed at the most advanced stage will survive that long.
The dramatic increase in screening rates can be largely attributed to the introduction of national guidelines recommending mammograms every two years for all women ages 50-74 in 2003. Mammogram screening can reduce mortality and late-stage cancer diagnosis while increasing survival rates and life expectancy. It can also improve quality of life and limit the cost of potential medical expenses related to treatment.
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Mammograms at 40? Breast cancer screening guidelines spark fresh debate
Thomas Andreas // Shutterstock
While progress has been made in recent years to increase early detection and treatment, much more needs to be done to close the gap between those who can’t access quality care. A variety of reasons may hinder patients from cancer screening, including language barriers, lack of transportation, complex health care systems that are hard to navigate, and limited provider time to discuss preventive care.
It’s estimated that the annual patient cost is about $353 for breast cancer screenings and follow-up tests, according to a 2020 study of participants insured through Blue Cross Blue Shield. For those with limited or no health insurance who can’t afford care, the American Rescue Plan (ARP) Act provides help for many of the financial problems caused by the COVID-19 pandemic. The 2021 law focuses on lowering insurance premiums and improving access to affordable health care coverage in the U.S.
The National Breast and Cervical Cancer Early Detection Program provides free and low-cost breast and cervical cancer screening to women without health insurance. The program—which is administered in every state—aims to reach underserved communities, including the elderly, uninsured, and members of racial and ethnic minorities.
This story originally appeared on HealthMatch and was produced and distributed in partnership with Stacker Studio.
Thomas Andreas // Shutterstock
While progress has been made in recent years to increase early detection and treatment, much more needs to be done to close the gap between those who can’t access quality care. A variety of reasons may hinder patients from cancer screening, including language barriers, lack of transportation, complex health care systems that are hard to navigate, and limited provider time to discuss preventive care.
It’s estimated that the annual patient cost is about $353 for breast cancer screenings and follow-up tests, according to a 2020 study of participants insured through Blue Cross Blue Shield. For those with limited or no health insurance who can’t afford care, the American Rescue Plan (ARP) Act provides help for many of the financial problems caused by the COVID-19 pandemic. The 2021 law focuses on lowering insurance premiums and improving access to affordable health care coverage in the U.S.
The National Breast and Cervical Cancer Early Detection Program provides free and low-cost breast and cervical cancer screening to women without health insurance. The program—which is administered in every state—aims to reach underserved communities, including the elderly, uninsured, and members of racial and ethnic minorities.
This story originally appeared on HealthMatch and was produced and distributed in partnership with Stacker Studio.