Manitoba should offer breast cancer screening starting at 40, says woman diagnosed at age 42 - Action News
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Manitoba

Manitoba should offer breast cancer screening starting at 40, says woman diagnosed at age 42

A Winnipeg woman who was diagnosed with Stage 3 breast cancer almost two years ago is pushing for the province to lower the breast cancer screening age from 50 to 40 in the hopes of saving people's lives.

Routine screening currently for women age 50 and older

A woman sits in a chair in a hospital room while holding a sign that says it's her first round of chemotherapy on October 3, 2022.
Shannon Coates was diagnosed with an aggressive form of Stage 3 cancer two years ago. She wants the province to lower the breast cancer screening age from 50 to 40 in hopes of saving people's lives. (Submitted by Shannon Coates)

A Winnipeg woman who was diagnosed with Stage 3 breast cancer almost two years ago is pushing for the province to lower the breast cancer screening age from 50 to 40 in the hopes of saving people's lives.

Shannon Coates got her breast cancer diagnosisin August 2022, when she was 42 years old seven years after she first began asking for an annual breast cancer screening and was denied.

Coates,who is now six months post-chemotherapy, told CBC's Information Radio there is a history of breast cancer in her family, andit's unfortunate people in Manitoba from 40 and 49 can't refer themselves for a breast cancer screening.

"I was angry. I was frustrated. I was upset at our health system here in Manitoba, that I had been denied," Coates told hostMarcy Markusa in a Thursday interview.

"I think it's reckless for women's health that we're not taking this more seriously."

Breast cancer is a major health concern in Canada, with one in eight Canadian women diagnosed in their lifetime.

In Manitoba, routine screenings are recommended for women age 50 to 74, who don't need a doctor's referral for a screening. Routine screening mammograms aren't recommended for women under 50 or over 74.

But that's not the case everywhere in Canada.

Women aged 40-49 can self-refer tobreast screening programs inBritish Columbia, Nova Scotia, Newfoundland and Labrador, Prince Edward Island andYukon.

New Brunswick has announced it will support self-referral for that age group as of next month, and Ontario says it will do so in the fall.

Both the Northwest Territories and Alberta have recently lowered program start age from 50 to 45, and Saskatchewan recently announced that it will lower its program start age to 40, using a phased-in approach beginning in 2025.

In a 2022 study, when researchers at the University ofOttawa compared breast cancer statistics from provinces that screened women in their 40s to data from provinces that followed the task force guidelines, they concluded earlier screening led to significantly improved survival rates.

Earlier this month, the Canadian Cancer Societyurged all provinces to lower the screening age.

A woman wearing a hot pink dress sits on a hospital chair holding a sign that reads,
'I wish chemo on no one,' said Coates, who is now six months post-chemotherapy. (Submitted by Shannon Coates)

However,new Canadian screening guidelines suggest that people should be able to get a mammogram starting at age 40, but it shouldn't be routinely offered to all women under 50.

TheCanadian Task Force on Preventive Health Care aPublic Health Agency of Canada-created panel of health professionals that offersguidance on creating guidelines for health-carepractitioners "does not recommend regular screenings for women under 50 who are of average risk," a spokesperson said in an email to CBC News.

"However, the task force believes breast cancer screening is a personal choice, and that any woman who wants a screening should be able to get one."

Nonetheless, Coatesis hopeful for change.

She was training to run her eighth Manitoba Marathon in 2022 when she noticed she had an inverted nipple, which looked abnormal to her.

When a mammogram and ultrasound cameback positive for an aggressive triple-negative breast cancer, she started chemotherapy.

A woman smiles while wearing bright pink lipstick and a white turtleneck sweater in a kitchen.
Coates was 42 when she was diagnosed with an aggressive form of breast cancer. (Submitted by Shannon Coates)

Coatesendured 16 rounds of chemotherapy and radiation and a double mastectomy in February last year.

Said her first round of chemotherapy was debilitating.

"I wasn't able to walk, I had no quality of life. My hair fell out and [it] burned my scalp every single round. It was horrificI wish chemo on no one," she said.

She also estimated approximately 17 health care professionals helped during her breast cancer treatmentasignificant strain on the health-care systemcompared to preventative measures like routine screening, she said.

Kathleen Cook, the health-care critic for the Manitoba Progressive Conservatives, accused the NDP government of "hiding behind"the task force's guidelines.

"Is the premier really going to stand alone on this in Canada and deny younger women the access to breast cancer screening, or will he do the right thing for Manitoba women today?" Cook said during question period Thursday.

Manitoba Health Minister Uzoma Asagwara said Wednesday the province is looking into makingchanges, but it first has toensure it hasthe technologists and other health-care professionals who can provide expanded screening.

"I understand yes, there is a capacity issue," said Coates."But there is also women's health, early screening and early detection that could help these women."