See original CBC article here The Nova Scotia government is touting new hospital software it says can better predict breast cancer risk, but the province is not routinely sharing the results with patients or their family doctors. In October, software designed by Nova Scotia company Densitas was installed in hospitals throughout the province to automatically record breast density during mammograms. The idea is to use the technology instead of relying on a radiologist’s eyes because, like cancer, dense breast tissue appears white in mammograms, making it difficult for radiologists to see. A woman with dense breasts also has more dense tissue than fatty, and that means her chances of getting cancer are higher. But unless a woman specifically asks her doctor to request the breast density recordings from the radiologists, the results are filed away. Cheryl Stewart-Walsh said women deserve to know that information, along with the potential health risks of having dense breasts. The Dartmouth, N.S., woman said she still wonders about her examination four years ago. She had noticed some lumps and was told she had dense breasts, but her mammogram came back clear.
Knowledge is power
“If somebody had said to me back then, ‘You have dense breast tissue and it means that you need to be more vigilant because you have a higher risk of breast cancer,’ I would have been doing more regular exams,” she said. This spring, the 39-year-old noticed a lump in the same spot doctors had first examined. Within weeks, she was diagnosed with breast cancer and has since undergone a lumpectomy, 18 weeks of chemotherapy and 21 rounds of radiation. She just completed cancer treatment last month. Paula Gordon, a Vancouver-based radiologist with the national advocacy group Dense Breasts Canada, said women deserve to know their breast-density information so they can be more vigilant with self-exams.Cancer risks
“Knowing your breast density is like knowing that you have high blood pressure or that you have high cholesterol,” Gordon said. “Can you imagine a family doctor taking somebody’s blood pressure and finding it high, and not sharing that information with the patient?” Approximately 43 per cent of women aged 40 to 74 have dense breast tissue, according to Gordon’s group, which means more than 100,000 women in Nova Scotia could be affected. Some women with dense breasts have four to six times the risk of getting breast cancer compared with women who don’t have dense breasts, according to the Canadian Cancer Society.
Dr. Paula Gordon says women across Canada are being left in the dark.

New software automatically records breast density on a woman’s mammogram. (Patrick Callaghan/CBC)