Yes, that's a pretty good question.
I've been working on prevention. I've been working on screening. I've been working on treatment over the last 25 years. I was co-discoverer of BRCA1 and BRCA2. I've spent a lot of time thinking.
In 1991, when we did the first paper in The Lancet on BRCA1, I thought that, by the time we got to 2023, we'd have something better to offer than removing the breasts. So far, we don't. We just published a paper that using tamoxifen in several thousand women with BRCA1 mutations reduced the risk by about 20%. It's not really good enough.
I could talk all day about prevention. I'm not one who would think that we can tackle the breast cancer problem to a large extent in Canada by current preventive means. We recommend against alcohol. We recommend against obesity—weight loss, etc. Interestingly, for women under 40, being overweight is protective. No one ever talks about that, but it's very strongly protective.
Having worked in all three areas for 30 years, I would emphasize treatment. I think so. I mean, it's a matter of funding.
In terms of prevention, we have an idea of how we think we can do it, but it hasn't received funding yet.
I think a lot of the points made by the other speakers are valid. I do say though that, in our study, the end point was death. There were 500 deaths in one group and 505 deaths in the other group. I applaud Dr. Simard for his effort in trying to change it, but his study doesn't have death as the end point. None of the other studies have death as the end point.
You show me, Dr. Simard, that your program reduces the number of deaths, and I will be a convert to your program.
Interestingly though, Dr. Simard—I've been friends with him forever—is recommending a risk-based study rather than an age-based study. It's really interesting. Currently, the age base is 50 to 70. If we reduce the age base to 40 rather than 50, the genetic risk scores probably go out the window because, even for those people with a high risk score, the recommendation would be to start screening at 40 rather than 50.
Now, I heard all these things about outdated data for the national breast cancer.... Yes, it's outdated, but there are still 170 women who had breast cancer identified and are still alive. It doesn't mean.... You show me the current data. In my understanding, and having read every paper about it, I don't see any current data that supports using mammography to the extent to which the panel thinks it does.
One can talk anecdotally about this and that. The only other study that is always neglected to be mentioned is a U.K. age study done by Stephen Duffy and colleagues, published in 2022. It showed that, in randomized screening in the U.K., when women started at age 40 versus age 50—and we followed them until death or to age 60—it made no difference to the mortality rate, but you will never see that paper cited.
That paper was was written in 2020, and I've been communicating with Dr. Duffy. He actually gave me the information. You will never see the U.K. age study that actually showed that screening from age 40 was exactly the same outcome as screening from age 50.