Dr Jeff Swartzberg

Dr Jeff Swartzberg Mammography & Bone Density Dr. J Swartzberg, Radiologist has relocated to 13 Scott Street, Waverley. Early detection can save your life.

The department is equiped with the latest advanced digital imaging, for mammography, stereotactic breast biopsy procedures, bone densitometry, and ultrasound. Importantly, this new technology delivers a decreased radiation dose for patients’ breast screening and imaging, as well as patient ease and comfort. All these modalities are in one private area, patients’ move from one room to the next, in total privacy, in a safe, friendly and dedicated imaging centre, away from the normal clinical environment. Patient privacy and comfort, a focus on wellbeing, advanced digital imaging and on site breast biopsies make the department an excellent choice for breast care. Although, there has been a decline in the rate of deaths from Breast Cancer in recent years, it is still the second leading cause of cancer death in women. Studies have shown that when detected early, the chance for successful treatment of breast cancer is nearly 100%. All examinations are done by a female radiographer. Recommended Medical Aid tariffs are charged, and submitted directly. We look forward to being of assistance

12/11/2019
April 08, 2019New ACP Guidelines Would Result in Thousands of Unnecessary Breast Cancer DeathsWomen and Healthcare Provi...
24/05/2019

April 08, 2019
New ACP Guidelines Would Result in Thousands of Unnecessary Breast Cancer Deaths
Women and Healthcare Providers Should Be Skeptical of the ACP and USPSTF Guidance for Average Risk Women
Screening only women ages 50-74 every other year, as now recommended by the American College of Physicians (ACP) and the US Preventive Services Task Force, may result in up to 10,000 additional, and unnecessary, breast cancer deaths in the United States each year. That approach would also likely result in thousands more women enduring extensive surgery, mastectomies and chemotherapy for advanced cancers - and do little to nothing to address overdiagnosis or the harms of screening named in the ACP guidelines.

The American Cancer Society (ACS), USPSTF, American College of Radiology (ACR) and the Society of Breast Imaging (SBI) agree that the most lives are saved by annual screening starting at age 40. The ACR and SBI continue to recommend that women start getting annual mammograms at age 40 and continue as long as they are in good health. The ACR advises women to have a risk assessment by the age of 30 to see if earlier screening is right for them.

Inaccurate Claims

The ACP claims that guidelines recommending that screening start at age 40 ignore the “low incidence of breast cancer for women younger than 60 years.” In fact, the majority of in situ cancer and nearly half of all breast cancers occur in women under 60. Also, the majority of life years lost to breast cancer occur in women diagnosed younger than age 60. Breast cancer is the most common cancer in women and the second leading cause of cancer death in women. It should be taken seriously at all ages.

The ACP also claims “Every other year mammography screening results in no significant difference in breast cancer mortality.” This is incorrect. There have been no randomized controlled trials to test this ACP claim. In fact, the NCI/CISNET models that were used by the USPSTF and the ACS actually show a major decline in deaths among women screened annually vs. every other year.

Racial Disparities

The ACP guidelines also fail to address groups who have a greater risk of developing breast cancer at a young age and dying from the disease. For instance, black women have a 30 percent higher breast cancer death rate than white women (DeSantis et al ). Also, breast cancer incidence peaks in the late forties in non-white women and in the sixties in white women (Stapleton et al ). The ACP approach may exacerbate racial disparities in breast cancer outcomes.

The ACP Guidance Underestimates Mammography Benefits and Greatly Overstates Risk of Harm

More doctors support annual screening in women 40 and older than screening later in life or less frequently. National Cancer Institute (SEER) data show that, since mammography became widespread in the 1980s, the U.S. breast cancer death rate, unchanged for the previous 50 years, has dropped 43 percent. A recent study in Cancer showed that women screened regularly for breast cancer have a 47 percent lower risk of dying from the disease within 20 years of diagnosis than those not regularly screened. Large studies (Otto et al and Coldman
et al
) show that regular mammography use cuts the risk of dying from breast cancer nearly in half.

Screening risks are often overstated due to faulty assumptions, methodology and hyperbole in articles on which such claims are based. Overdiagnosis means finding cancers that will not grow to kill you before something else does. Overdiagnosis will not be reduced by delayed or less frequent screening. These “overdiagnosed” cancers would still be found by the next screening exam and result in the same work-up, biopsy and treatment. If an aggressive cancer goes undiagnosed because of a longer interval between screenings or starting screening at a later age, treatment will be delayed with higher potential morbidity and a lower chance of saving a woman’s life. Screening-detected breast cancers do not disappear or regress if left untreated.

A British Medical Journal study , using direct patient data, shows that breast cancer overdiagnosis is about 2 percent. An article in The Oncologist shows that studies with high overdiagnosis claims are not well-founded. American Cancer Society findings re-confirmed that overdiagnosis claims based on modeling studies are inflated.

A Journal of The American Medical Association (JAMA) study has shown that normal and understandable anxiety from inconclusive mammogram results or false positives is brief and has no lasting health effects. Research shows that nearly all women who have a false-positive exam still endorse regular screening and want to know their status.

Short- term anxiety from test results, a small percentage of women called back to double-check something and overstated overdiagnosis claims do not outweigh the thousands of lives saved each year through annual mammography screening starting at age 40.

Shared decision making requires more accurate accounting of the pros and cons, as well as a more nuanced approach to assessing individual patient risk factors than proposed by the ACP.

For more information regarding mammography and breast cancer screening visit MammographySavesLives.org , RadiologyInfo.org and sbi-online.org/endtheconfusion.

24/06/2016

Dr. Elise Berman, Medical Director
of the Breast Imaging Section for
FRC, fully appreciates the benefit
3D mammography brings in finding
small cancers not seen on 2D images,
but she is equally excited about the
confidence it gives readers to reduce
unnecessary recalls. Dr. Berman says,
“Getting that phone call telling you
that you need to come back for
additional evaluations is very anxiety provoking.
If we can decrease the
number of women who have to
come back, then we’ve provided
a wonderful service for our patients

23/06/2016

Digital Breast Tomosynthesis Could Reduce Total Radiation Dose.

Replacing standard full field digital mammography (FFDM) with two view digital
breast tomosynthesis (DBT) could cut the breast radiation dose by about half, researchers say.
Compared with FFDM, DBT has been shown to increase breast cancer detection rates by 10% to 53% and to reduce recall rates by 20% to 59%.
Despite these advantages, along with the reduction in compression and, therefore, patient discomfort.

05/11/2015

Did you know that a baseline mammogram can be done at the age of 35!

05/11/2015

Contact us to book your annual mammogram on 011 440 7877

05/11/2015

Early Detection is Key

16/07/2012

The department is equiped with the latest advanced digital imaging, for mammography, stereotactic breast biopsy procedures, bone densitometry, and ultrasound.
Importantly, this new technology delivers a decreased radiation dose for patients’ breast screening and imaging, as well as patient ease and comfort.
All these modalities are in one private area, patients’ move from one room to the next, in total privacy, in a safe, friendly and dedicated imaging centre, away from the normal clinical environment.
Patient privacy and comfort, a focus on wellbeing, advanced digital imaging and on site breast biopsies make the department an excellent choice for breast care.

09/07/2012

Reception area

09/07/2012

Address

13 Scott Street
Waverley
2192

Opening Hours

Monday 07:30 - 16:30
Tuesday 07:30 - 16:30
Wednesday 07:30 - 16:30
Thursday 07:30 - 16:30
Friday 07:30 - 16:30

Telephone

0114407877

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