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Proposed changes to federal mammography regulations aim to provide more information for doctors and patients, as well as standardize patient information on breast density’s impact on screening.
The Food and Drug Administration posted a new proposed rule online March 27 that would “expand the information mammography facilities must provide to patients and health care professionals, allowing for more informed medical decision making,” the agency said in a statement. “It would also modernize mammography quality standards and better position the FDA to enforce regulations that apply to the safety and quality of mammography services.”
Key among the proposed changes is the addition of breast density information to the summary letter provided to patients and to the medical report provided to referring health care professionals.
“The FDA is proposing specific language that would explain how breast density can influence the accuracy of mammography and would recommend patients with dense breasts talk to their health care provider about high breast density and how it relates to breast cancer risk and their individual situation,” the agency said in a statement.
Laurie Margolies, MD, section chief of breast imaging at Mount Sinai Health System in New York, said the regulations would bring some uniformity to the communication process.
“It builds on the experience of the 37 states and the District of Columbia, all of whom have passed dense breast notification laws, and can serve to unify those disparate regulations into one that would be uniform throughout the country to give one clear message to women and health care providers,” Dr. Margolies said in an interview.
She noted that dense breasts are very common and communicating issues that are related to them, including the potential need for supplemental screening, are important.
“Almost half of American women have dense breasts and why that is significant is because the dense breast issue not only increases one’s risk of getting breast cancer, but it also can hide small breast cancers on the mammogram,” she said.
If you take 1,000 women with dense breasts and then do a breast ultrasound as a supplemental screening measure, “you will find three more small node-negative breast cancers that would not have come to light if you didn’t do the extra supplemental screening,” underscoring the importance of communicating dense breast information, she continued.
FDA also is seeking to enhance information provided to health care professionals by codifying three additional categories for mammogram assessments, including the addition of the “known biopsy proven malignancy” category, which the agency says would help identify which scans were being used to evaluate treatment of already diagnosed cancers.
Both patients and health care professionals would receive more detailed information about the mammography facility under the proposed rule.
FDA is proposing modernization of quality standards to help the agency enforce regulations, including giving the agency the authority to notify patients and health care professionals directly if a mammography facility does not meet quality standards and that a reevaluation or repeat of the exam at a different facility may be needed. The proposed amendments also include requiring that only digital accessory components specifically FDA approved or cleared for mammography be used or that facilities use components that otherwise meet the requirements, and stronger record-keeping requirements.
Dr. Margolies did note one potential deficiency in the proposed rule – the lack of any information on health insurance coverage of supplemental screening for women with dense breasts, though she noted this may not fall under the FDA’s authority.
“It would do the most good if everybody could get the supplemental screening without regards to their ability to pay for it out of pocket,” she said.
The proposal amends regulations issued under the Mammography Quality Standards Act of 1992, which gives FDA oversight authority over mammography facilities, including accreditation, certification, annual inspection, and enforcement of standards.
Comments on the proposal are due 90 days after the proposed rule is published in the Federal Register, which is scheduled for March 28.
Proposed changes to federal mammography regulations aim to provide more information for doctors and patients, as well as standardize patient information on breast density’s impact on screening.
The Food and Drug Administration posted a new proposed rule online March 27 that would “expand the information mammography facilities must provide to patients and health care professionals, allowing for more informed medical decision making,” the agency said in a statement. “It would also modernize mammography quality standards and better position the FDA to enforce regulations that apply to the safety and quality of mammography services.”
Key among the proposed changes is the addition of breast density information to the summary letter provided to patients and to the medical report provided to referring health care professionals.
“The FDA is proposing specific language that would explain how breast density can influence the accuracy of mammography and would recommend patients with dense breasts talk to their health care provider about high breast density and how it relates to breast cancer risk and their individual situation,” the agency said in a statement.
Laurie Margolies, MD, section chief of breast imaging at Mount Sinai Health System in New York, said the regulations would bring some uniformity to the communication process.
“It builds on the experience of the 37 states and the District of Columbia, all of whom have passed dense breast notification laws, and can serve to unify those disparate regulations into one that would be uniform throughout the country to give one clear message to women and health care providers,” Dr. Margolies said in an interview.
She noted that dense breasts are very common and communicating issues that are related to them, including the potential need for supplemental screening, are important.
“Almost half of American women have dense breasts and why that is significant is because the dense breast issue not only increases one’s risk of getting breast cancer, but it also can hide small breast cancers on the mammogram,” she said.
If you take 1,000 women with dense breasts and then do a breast ultrasound as a supplemental screening measure, “you will find three more small node-negative breast cancers that would not have come to light if you didn’t do the extra supplemental screening,” underscoring the importance of communicating dense breast information, she continued.
FDA also is seeking to enhance information provided to health care professionals by codifying three additional categories for mammogram assessments, including the addition of the “known biopsy proven malignancy” category, which the agency says would help identify which scans were being used to evaluate treatment of already diagnosed cancers.
Both patients and health care professionals would receive more detailed information about the mammography facility under the proposed rule.
FDA is proposing modernization of quality standards to help the agency enforce regulations, including giving the agency the authority to notify patients and health care professionals directly if a mammography facility does not meet quality standards and that a reevaluation or repeat of the exam at a different facility may be needed. The proposed amendments also include requiring that only digital accessory components specifically FDA approved or cleared for mammography be used or that facilities use components that otherwise meet the requirements, and stronger record-keeping requirements.
Dr. Margolies did note one potential deficiency in the proposed rule – the lack of any information on health insurance coverage of supplemental screening for women with dense breasts, though she noted this may not fall under the FDA’s authority.
“It would do the most good if everybody could get the supplemental screening without regards to their ability to pay for it out of pocket,” she said.
The proposal amends regulations issued under the Mammography Quality Standards Act of 1992, which gives FDA oversight authority over mammography facilities, including accreditation, certification, annual inspection, and enforcement of standards.
Comments on the proposal are due 90 days after the proposed rule is published in the Federal Register, which is scheduled for March 28.
Proposed changes to federal mammography regulations aim to provide more information for doctors and patients, as well as standardize patient information on breast density’s impact on screening.
The Food and Drug Administration posted a new proposed rule online March 27 that would “expand the information mammography facilities must provide to patients and health care professionals, allowing for more informed medical decision making,” the agency said in a statement. “It would also modernize mammography quality standards and better position the FDA to enforce regulations that apply to the safety and quality of mammography services.”
Key among the proposed changes is the addition of breast density information to the summary letter provided to patients and to the medical report provided to referring health care professionals.
“The FDA is proposing specific language that would explain how breast density can influence the accuracy of mammography and would recommend patients with dense breasts talk to their health care provider about high breast density and how it relates to breast cancer risk and their individual situation,” the agency said in a statement.
Laurie Margolies, MD, section chief of breast imaging at Mount Sinai Health System in New York, said the regulations would bring some uniformity to the communication process.
“It builds on the experience of the 37 states and the District of Columbia, all of whom have passed dense breast notification laws, and can serve to unify those disparate regulations into one that would be uniform throughout the country to give one clear message to women and health care providers,” Dr. Margolies said in an interview.
She noted that dense breasts are very common and communicating issues that are related to them, including the potential need for supplemental screening, are important.
“Almost half of American women have dense breasts and why that is significant is because the dense breast issue not only increases one’s risk of getting breast cancer, but it also can hide small breast cancers on the mammogram,” she said.
If you take 1,000 women with dense breasts and then do a breast ultrasound as a supplemental screening measure, “you will find three more small node-negative breast cancers that would not have come to light if you didn’t do the extra supplemental screening,” underscoring the importance of communicating dense breast information, she continued.
FDA also is seeking to enhance information provided to health care professionals by codifying three additional categories for mammogram assessments, including the addition of the “known biopsy proven malignancy” category, which the agency says would help identify which scans were being used to evaluate treatment of already diagnosed cancers.
Both patients and health care professionals would receive more detailed information about the mammography facility under the proposed rule.
FDA is proposing modernization of quality standards to help the agency enforce regulations, including giving the agency the authority to notify patients and health care professionals directly if a mammography facility does not meet quality standards and that a reevaluation or repeat of the exam at a different facility may be needed. The proposed amendments also include requiring that only digital accessory components specifically FDA approved or cleared for mammography be used or that facilities use components that otherwise meet the requirements, and stronger record-keeping requirements.
Dr. Margolies did note one potential deficiency in the proposed rule – the lack of any information on health insurance coverage of supplemental screening for women with dense breasts, though she noted this may not fall under the FDA’s authority.
“It would do the most good if everybody could get the supplemental screening without regards to their ability to pay for it out of pocket,” she said.
The proposal amends regulations issued under the Mammography Quality Standards Act of 1992, which gives FDA oversight authority over mammography facilities, including accreditation, certification, annual inspection, and enforcement of standards.
Comments on the proposal are due 90 days after the proposed rule is published in the Federal Register, which is scheduled for March 28.