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Stuart Collins Centre for Cancer Epidemiology, University of
Manchester, Christie Hospital NHS Trust, Manchester
M20 4QL
Correspondence to: Mr Collins
The NHS breast screening programme invites women aged
50-64 for screening every 3 years. In this programme the term interval cancer is applied to a breast cancer occurring within 3 years of a
screening test with negative results. Substantially higher than
anticipated rates of interval cancers have already been reported from the NHS breast screening programme,
1 2
and there is conflicting evidence on whether the survival rates of women with interval cancers are different from those of women with breast cancer occurring in an unscreened population.
3 4
Were
interval cancers to have a worse prognosis than cancers in an
unscreened population, the reduction in mortality from breast
cancer in the screened population might be substantially less than
predicted.
To interpret survival estimates for women with interval cancers
requires identification of a suitable group of unscreened women for
compari- son. In the context of a national screening programme
this is difficult. Women who do not respond to an invitation for
screening, for example, have been shown to have a worse outcome than unscreened women and are therefore unsuitable.4 The
use of historical controls may also be inappropriate because of recent advances in managing breast cancer. Fortuitously, the phased
introduction of the NHS screening programme in the north west has
resulted in a group of women with breast cancer who lived in
areas where screening had yet to be intro- duced whose survival
can be compared with that of women diagnosed with interval cancers
during the same calendar period. We report for the first time
survival rates for interval cancers diagnosed during 1988-91 in
the NHS breast screening programme.
The NHS breast screening programme in the north west started in
1988 and by 1991 was under way in 14 district health authorities. Women
resident in the five remaining districts in the region were not invited
for screening before 1991 and form the control population. We
identified all invasive interval cancers diagnosed between 1988 and
1991, using published methods.1 We identified breast cancers presenting during this period in women aged 50-67 years in the
control population from records held by the regional cancer registry.
We determined date of death from data routinely notified to the
registry. We calculated estimates of relative survival over five years
and made comparisons using an appropriate proportional hazards
regression that controlled for age.5
Seventy three interval cancers and 565 cancers from the control
population were diagnosed during the study period. No significant difference could be shown between the relative survival rates of women
from the control population with breast cancer and those of women
presenting with interval cancers during the same period (hazards ratio
0.81 (95% confidence interval 0.50 to 1.31), Although our results suggest no difference between the survival
rates of women with interval cancers and those of women from the
control population, variations in the quality of care provided for
women from the two distinct areas could have invalidated this comparison. However, an analysis of survival rates for breast cancer,
undertaken for the period immediately before the introduction of the
screening programme in the north west, showed no significant differences when women were grouped according to their district of
residence. It is reassuring that breast screening has not been detrimental to the survival of those women who presented with an
interval cancer in the NHS screening programme. However, minimising the
occurrence of interval cancers must remain a high priority if
substantial reductions in mortality are to be achieved.
Contributors: SC participated in the discussion of core ideas
and in identifying the study population, carried out data verification,
undertook the survival analyses and interpretation of the results, and
contributed to writing the paper. CBJW initiated and coordinated the
research, participated in the discussion of core ideas, helped in
interpreting the results, and contributed to the writing of the paper.
AT initiated the research, participated in the discussion of core
ideas, identified and collated data on the study population, and
contributed to the writing of the paper. PP participated in the
discussion of core ideas, helped in interpreting the results and
contributed to the writing of the paper. All authors are guarantors for
the study.
Funding: None.
Conflict of interest: None.
(Accepted 22 October 1997)
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Subjects, methods, and results
=0.67, df=1, P=0.41).
The robustness of this result is supported by the analysis of a further
441 interval cancers diagnosed after 1991, which showed a survival
curve similar to that based on the 73 cancers
(figure).

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Relative survival rates for women with interval cancers and
women with breast cancer in control group
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Comment
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Acknowledgments
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References
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References
© BMJ 1998