Breast Cancer Rates Soar after Mammograms and Some Cancers may Heal Naturally

<http://www.naturalnews.com/024901.html>http://www.naturalnews.com/024901.html

Monday, November 24, 2008 by: Sherry Baker, Health Sciences Editor


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(NaturalNews) A report just published in the 
Journal of the American Medical Association's 
Archives of Internal Medicine (Arch Intern Med. 
2008;168[21]:2302-2303) reaches a startling 
conclusion. Breast cancer rates increased 
significantly in four Norwegian counties after 
women there began getting mammograms every two 
years. In fact, according to background 
information in the study, the start of screening 
mammography programs throughout Europe has been 
associated with increased incidence of 
<http://www.naturalnews.com/breast_cancer.html>breast cancer.

This raises some obvious and worrisome questions: 
Did the x-rays and/or the sometimes torturous 
compression of breasts during 
<http://www.naturalnews.com/mammography.html>mammography 
actually spur cancer to develop? Or does this 
just look like an increase in the 
<http://www.naturalnews.com/disease.html>disease 
rate because mammography is simply identifying 
more cases of breast <http://www.naturalnews.com/cancer.html>cancer?

The answer to the first question is that no one 
knows (and it isn't addressed in the Archives of 
Internal Medicine study). But the second question 
has an unexpected and – for those interested in 
the human body's innate ability to heal itself – 
potentially paradigm-shifting answer. The 
researchers say they can't blame the increased 
incidence of breast cancer on more cases being 
found because the rates among regularly screened 
women remained higher than rates among women of 
the same age who only received 
<http://www.naturalnews.com/mammograms.html>mammograms 
once after six years. Bottom line: the scientists 
conclude this indicates that some of the 
<http://www.naturalnews.com/cancers.html>cancers 
detected by mammography would have spontaneously 
regressed if they had never been discovered on a 
mammogram and treated, usually with chemotherapy 
and radiation. Simply put, it appears that some 
invasive breast cancers simply go away on their 
own, healed by the body's own immune system.

Per-Henrik Zahl, M.D., Ph.D., of the Norwegian 
Institute of Public Health, Oslo, and his 
research team studied breast 
<http://www.naturalnews.com/cancer_rates.html>cancer 
rates among 119,472 women (age 50 to 64). These 
research subjects were asked to participate in 
three rounds of screening mammograms between 1996 
and 2001, as part of the Norwegian Breast Cancer 
Screening Program. The scientists then compared 
the number of breast cancers found in this group 
to the rate of malignancies among a control group 
of 109,784 women who were the same ages in 1992, 
and who would have been invited for breast 
screenings if the program had been in place that 
year. Cancers were tracked using a national 
registry. Then, after six years, all participants 
were invited to undergo a one-time screening to 
assess for the prevalence of breast cancer.

The researchers were surprised to find that the 
incidence of invasive breast cancer was 22 
percent higher in the group regularly screened 
with mammography. In fact, screened women were 
more likely to have breast cancer at every age.

"Because the cumulative incidence among controls 
never reached that of the screened group, it 
appears that some breast cancers detected by 
repeated mammographic screening would not persist 
to be detectable by a single mammogram at the end 
of six years," the authors stated in their 
report. "This raises the possibility that the 
natural course of some screen-detected invasive 
breast cancers is to spontaneously regress."

The researchers also conclude that their findings 
"provide new insight on what is arguably the 
major harm associated with mammographic 
screening, namely, the detection and treatment of 
cancers that would otherwise regress."

This does not mean breast cancer should be 
ignored or not treated. After all, breast cancer 
is the second leading cause of death among 
American women. But the extraordinarily good and 
hopeful news is that it appears invasive breast 
cancer sometimes can be destroyed naturally -- at 
least in some people -- by the body's own innate defenses.

"Although many clinicians may be skeptical of the 
idea, the excess incidence associated with 
repeated mammography demands that spontaneous 
regression be considered carefully," the 
scientists wrote in their report. "Spontaneous 
regression of invasive breast cancer has been 
reported, with a recent literature review 
identifying 32 reported cases. This is a 
relatively small number given such a common 
disease. However, as some observers have pointed 
out, the fact that documented observations are 
rare does not mean that regression rarely occurs. 
It may instead reflect the fact that these 
cancers are rarely allowed to follow their natural course."

In an editorial in the Archives of Internal 
Medicine that accompanies the breast cancer 
study, Robert M. Kaplan, Ph.D., of the University 
of California, Los Angeles, and Franz Porzsolt, 
M.D., Ph.D., of Clincal Economics University of 
Ulm, Germany, wrote that the most important 
concern raised by the study is "how surprisingly 
little we know about what happens to untreated patients with breast cancer.
In addition to not knowing the natural history of 
breast cancer for younger women, we also know 
very little about the natural history for older 
women. We know from autopsy studies that a 
significant number of women die without knowing 
that they had breast cancer (including ductal 
carcinoma in situ). The observation of a 
historical trend toward improved survival does 
not necessarily support the benefit of treatment."

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