6533b835fe1ef96bd129ffbf
RESEARCH PRODUCT
Dépistage du cancer du sein : en route vers le futur
Charles CoutantRoman RouzierFrédérique Penault-lorcaMarc DebledDavid AzriaBernard AsselainEtienne BrainAnne TardivonThomas BachelotPatrick ArveuxMarc EspiéAnne-claire Hardy-bessardChristelle LevyWilliam JacotJérôme LemonnierJoseph GligorovDavid G. CoxCorinne BalleyguierFabrice AndreJean-philippe JacquinHugues BourgeoisMario CamponeFrançois-clément BidardAnthony GonçalvesHervé BonnefoiBruno CoudertFlorence DalencJ. GrenierJohanna ArvisMartine CastroThierry PetitGérard GanemSuzette DelalogeAlain LortholaryLaurence Venat-bouvetsubject
RiskCancer Researchmedicine.medical_specialtyPersonalized[SDV.CAN]Life Sciences [q-bio]/CancerDiseaseRisque03 medical and health sciencesBreast cancer screening0302 clinical medicineBreast cancerBreast cancer[SDV.CAN] Life Sciences [q-bio]/CancerPersonnalisémedicineMammographyRadiology Nuclear Medicine and imaging030212 general & internal medicineIntensive care medicineScreening proceduresCancer du seinBiomarqueursCancer preventionmedicine.diagnostic_testbusiness.industryHematologyGeneral Medicinemedicine.disease3. Good healthClinical trialOncologyDépistage030220 oncology & carcinogenesisScreeningBiomarker (medicine)businessBiomarkersdescription
Breast cancer remains a potentially lethal disease, which requires aggressive treatments and is associated with long-term consequences. Its prognosis is linked to both tumor biology and burden at diagnosis. Although treatments have allowed important improvements in prognosis over the past 20 years, breast cancer screening remains necessary. Mammographic screening allows earlier stage diagnoses and a decrease of breast cancer specific mortality. However, breast cancer screening modalities should be revised with the objective to address demonstrated limitations of mammographic screening (limited benefit, imperfect sensitivity and specificity, overdiagnoses, radiation-induced morbidity). Furthermore, both objective and perceived performances of screening procedures should be improved. Numerous large international efforts are ongoing, leading to scientific progresses that should have rapid clinical implications in this area. Among them is improvement of imaging techniques performance, development of real time diagnosis, and development of new non radiological screening techniques such as the search for circulating tumor DNA, development of biomarkers able to allow precise risk evaluation and stratified screening. As well, overtreatment is currently addressed by biomarker-based de-escalation clinical trials. These advances need to be associated with strong societal support, as well as major paradigm changes regarding the way health and cancer prevention is perceived by individuals
year | journal | country | edition | language |
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2016-09-01 |