Abstract
Purpose: To evaluate the effect of old mammograms on the specificity and sensitivity of radiologists in mammography screening.
Material and Methods: One hundred and fifty sets of screening mammograms were examined by 3 experienced screeners twice: once without and once in comparison with older mammograms. The films came from a population-based screening done during the first half of 1994 and comprised all 35 cancers detected during screening in 1994, 12/24 interval cancers, 14/34 cancers detected in the following screening and 89 normal mammograms.
Results: Without old mammograms, the screeners detected an average of 40.3 cancers (range 37–42), with a specificity of 87% (85–88%). With old mammograms, the screeners detected 37.7 cancers (range 34–42) with a specificity of 96% (94–99%). The change in detection rate was not significant. However, the increase in specificity was significant for each screener (p = 0.0002–0.03).
Conclusion: Mammography screening with old mammograms available for comparison decreased the false-positive recall rate. The effect on sensitivity, however, was unclear.
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