We studied the period from 1990 to 1996. During this time 59

947
women aged 50-69 years were invited to a prevalence screen and to
subsequent screens at two year intervals (2.4 years in
practice).
2 At the beginning of 1990 no women had been
invited; by the end of 1994 all the women had been invited to at least
one screen. Attendance rates averaged 60%. We considered cases of
breast cancer with pathological size T
2 or greater to be
late stage. Early stage cases included tumours of less than 2 cm size
and in situ carcinomas.
We plotted absolute rates of mastectomy and breast conserving
surgery—defined as lumpectomy, wide excision, and quadrantectomy—per
thousand women in the population (not per cancer case) against time for
the years 1990-6. We assessed the significance of changes over time by
trend tests in Poisson regression.
The figure shows the absolute rates of mastectomy and breast conserving
surgery over time, with the disease incidence by stage. Rates of breast
conserving surgery increased by around 0.7 per thousand (P=0.01) over
the period 1990-6, and rates of radical surgery declined by 0.5 per
thousand (P<0.001). These rates closely paralleled those of early and
late stage breast cancer. Early disease and breast conserving surgery
peaked in 1993 as the mobile screening units completed the prevalence
screen; this was followed by a reduction in 1994 after the prevalence
screen had finished, as one would expect.
3 The rates were
also strongly related to the amount of screening activity. The peak
number of mammograms was 17

298 in 1993, followed by only 8965 in 1994
when the prevalence screen was largely completed but the first repeat
screen only just beginning. In 1990 the rate of mastectomy was 1.08
(95% confidence interval 0.84 to 1.37) per thousand, whereas in 1996
it was 0.62 (0.44 to 0.86) per thousand. The rates of breast conserving
surgery were 1.18 (0.92 to 1.48) per thousand in 1990 and 1.87 (1.54 to
2.21) per thousand in 1996.