Whole-Breast Ultrasound for Dense Breasts

 

Better Breast Cancer Detection for Dense Breasts

Having dense breast tissue is common. It doesn’t mean anything is wrong. If your mammogram shows you have dense breast tissue, your provider may recommend adding an ultrasound to your screening after discussing your personal health history with you. 

Our breast cancer specialists are leaders in using advanced technology to provide you with high-quality, compassionate care. Women who have dense breast tissue can have a higher risk for developing breast cancer, and dense breast tissue can make it harder for doctors to see cancer on a mammogram. 

What Is Dense Breast Tissue?

Breasts are made up of fat and two kinds of tissue: fibrous tissue and glandular tissue. Dense breasts have more fibrous and glandular tissue than fat.

The only way to tell if you have dense breasts or not is to get a mammogram. We classify breasts into one of four categories:

  • Fatty: The breasts are almost all fat. It’s rare to have these kinds of breasts.
  • Scattered fibroglandular density: The breasts are mostly fatty breast tissue with some areas of dense glandular and fibrous connective tissue.
  • Heterogeneously dense: The breasts have large areas of dense fibrous and glandular tissue, and some fatty tissue.
  • Extremely dense: The breasts have almost all dense glandular and fibrous connective tissue. It is also rare to have these kinds of breasts.

Your provider will consider your breasts dense if they’re heterogeneously dense or extremely dense. 

Why Does Breast Density Matter?

Fatty breast tissue shows up dark on a mammogram. Fibrous and glandular tissue appears white on a mammogram. Cancers and other abnormalities also show up white on a mammogram. The more dense tissue there is, the harder it can be to tell the difference between healthy tissue and cancer.

What Are the Benefits of Whole-Breast Ultrasound?

SonoCiné is an automated whole-breast ultrasound meant to be done with your mammogram. Studies show that an additional breast ultrasound using the SonoCiné technology can find 40% to 100% more cancers than with mammography alone. Because it’s computer-guided, SonoCiné doesn’t compress your breast or involve any radiation or injections. 

Ultrasound isn’t a replacement for mammography. Mammograms are still effective in detecting breast cancers in dense breast tissue. Finding breast cancer earlier makes it easier to treat. Traditional mammography typically finds cancers small enough to be treated successfully. 

Considering Whole-Breast Ultrasound

Discuss your personal health factors and breast density with your provider. They can help you decide if adding breast ultrasound to your mammogram is right for you. Breast ultrasound exam coverage varies by health insurance provider and plan. Ask your insurance provider about your coverage.

 

Contact St. Luke’s Women’s Center

Talk to a breast health specialist about screenings for dense breasts.