At the current time, there is a lot of discussion about risk assessment. It's been generally recommended, even by the NCCN guidelines, that women between 25 and 30 years of age can get a basic risk assessment profile. They are not yet at the age where systematic screening is offered, but they should at least get a risk assessment performed so that, in case there's a flag that they're high risk, appropriate steps can be taken. High-risk women generally get screened much earlier than average-risk women. That's what we want to offer to all these young women.
On June 13th, 2024. See this statement in context.