Mammogram: Can it find cancer in dense breasts?
Dense breasts can make mammograms more challenging for doctors to interpret. But this doesn't mean a mammogram is useless for detecting cancer or other breast abnormalities in women with dense breasts.
Breast tissue is composed of fatty (nondense) tissue and connective (dense) tissue. Women with dense breasts have more connective tissue than fatty tissue. About half of women undergoing mammograms have dense breasts.
Dense breast tissue appears as a solid white area on a mammogram, and fat appears as a dark area. Mammogram X-rays do not penetrate — or "see through" — dense tissues as well as they do through fat. So, in women with dense breasts, mammograms may be more difficult to interpret.
Some studies have found that newer digital mammography does a better job detecting cancer in dense breasts than does mammography that uses film. A digital mammogram produces images on a computer screen that can be enhanced and magnified for closer viewing. Nearly all mammogram machines in the United States are digital mammogram machines.
Another newer breast-imaging test called 3-D mammography (breast tomosynthesis) may provide an improved way of seeing through dense breast tissue. A 3-D mammogram combines multiple low-dose mammogram images to create a 3-D image of the breast. Though not available everywhere, 3-D mammography is becoming more common.
Additional screening tests intended to be combined with regular mammograms are being developed for women with dense breasts. But unlike mammograms, none is proved to reduce the risk of dying of breast cancer. Each additional test has its own set of risks and benefits to consider. None of these tests is intended to replace routine mammograms for breast cancer screening.
Discuss your breast cancer screening options with your doctor. Together you may decide that, based on your risk factors, additional breast cancer screening tests may be right for you.