RT Journal Article SR Electronic T1 Early diagnosis of breast cancer: experience in a consultant breast clinic JF Canadian Medical Association Journal JO CMAJ FD Canadian Medical Association SP 1129 OP 1131 VO 116 IS 10 A1 Mahoney, L. J. A1 Bird, B. L. A1 Cooke, G. M. A1 Ball, D. G. YR 1977 UL http://www.cmaj.ca/content/116/10/1129.abstract AB Of 2839 women referred to a consultant breast clinic for clinical, mammographic and thermographic examination, 480 underwent biopsy and 126 were found to have cancer. Ten percent of the tumours were occult and were classified as very early biologic disease; they were identified by routine mammography in women whose breasts were clinically normal. Biopsy of solid mass lesions non-suspicious on mammography identified 20% of the cancers; half these lesions, classified as early biologic disease, were discovered by doctors at routine annual clinical breast examination, though the earliest cancers were detected by women who were confident and competent in monthly self-examination of the breasts. Biopsy of solid mass lesions suspicious on mammography identified 70% of the cancers; these were classified as late biologic disease. Skin or nipple dimpling or retraction was evident in two thirds of the patients; their lesions seemed to be later biologically than the lesions of the patients without clinical signs, and 75% had discovered the lesions themselves accidentally.