Photo caption: The BreastCare Center at YRMC East in Prescott Valley has provided high quality screening, diagnostic and treatment options since it opened in 2011.
You’re dedicated to your monthly self-exams, and you follow your health-care provider’s recommendations for breast cancer screenings given your age and family risk factors. But are you aware it’s also necessary to know your breast density? It’s an important and timely question for October, Breast Cancer Awareness Month.
Breast density is a way to describe the composition of a woman’s breasts. It compares the area of breast and connective tissue – as seen on a mammogram – to the area of fat. Breast and connective tissue are denser than fat, so high breast density means there is more breast and connective tissue as compared to fat. On a mammogram, connective tissue appears as solid white, making it difficult to see through. That’s a challenge.
“Breast cancer also is white on a mammogram,” said Michael Macon, MD, FACS, Breast Surgeon and Medical Director of the BreastCare Program at Yavapai Regional Medical Center (YRMC). “The whiter the background, the more difficult it is to identify breast cancer in the white background of a dense breast.”
Who is at Risk for Breast Density?
Generally, women who are younger and thinner have denser breast tissue. As a woman ages, she may gain weight, decreasing the density. Genetics also plays a role. If your mother had dense breasts, you are more likely to as well.
Additionally, breast density is more common among women taking hormone therapy to relieve the symptoms of menopause. Women with dense breasts have a higher risk – up to six times by some estimates – of developing breast cancer. The reason is unknown.
Learn Your Breast Density
How can you learn your breast density? The radiologist administering your mammogram will determine the ratio of your dense to non-dense tissue. Four categories are used in the Breast Imaging Reporting and Database Systems:
- Fatty Replaced Breast (Category A, 0-25% dense tissue) – This mammogram likely would show any abnormalities.
- Scattered Fibroglandular Density (Category B, 25-50% dense tissue) – This breast density has quite a bit of fat, but also a few areas of fibrous and glandular tissue. This is the most common category.
- Heterogeneously Dense (Category C, 50-75% dense breast tissue) – When areas of fibrous and glandular tissue are greater than fatty breast tissue, it can be difficult to see small masses on mammograms.
- Extremely Dense (Category D, 75-100% dense tissue) – This increases the difficulty of detecting cancerous tissue because it can blend in with other white background tissue.
What Should You Do About Breast Density?
“If the radiologist determines you have heterogeneous density or extreme density, it is important to have a 3-D mammogram,” said Dr. Macon. “A 3-D mammogram uses new technology to create a three-dimensional picture.”
To assess your risk for breast cancer, Dr. Macon recommends the Tyrer-Cuzick Model – also known as the Ibis Risk Model – which may be taken online. This risk assessment tool generates a 10-year risk and lifetime risk of breast cancer based on your answers to a series of questions, including one about breast density. Women with Category C or Category D breast density have an increased risk for breast cancer.
“For women with a lifetime risk of breast cancer greater than 20 percent,” explained Dr. Macon, “more aggressive breast surveillance consisting of alternating 3-D mammograms and breast Magnetic Resonance Imaging (MRI) is the standard.”
For screening mammography, including 3D mammography, contact:
- The BreastCare Center at YRMC at 928-442-8900
- Prescott Medical Imaging at 928-771-7577