AARP Hearing Center
Key takeaways
- Evidence shows overdiagnosis rises sharply with age, meaning some detected tumors may never cause harm.
- Studies suggest many breast cancers found after 70 would not become symptomatic during a woman’s lifetime.
- Decisions after 75 often hinge on health, life expectancy and tolerance for follow-up tests, not age alone.
At age 77, I was diagnosed with breast cancer. I haven’t had a recurrence, but I’m still advised to get a mammogram every year. However, that’s not the case for many women my age.
In fact, routine mammograms are recommended only for women between the ages of 40 and 74, according to the latest guidelines from the U.S. Preventive Services Task Force. After that, the task force says, women should decide with their doctor whether to continue getting screened for breast cancer, given the lack of evidence that the benefits of screening outweigh the risks.
In 2019, roughly half (54 percent) of women 75 and older had a mammogram, according to federal data, compared with 78 percent of women 65 to 74.
Are mammograms covered for those 75-plus?
Yes. For women 40 and older, Medicare covers baseline mammograms as a free preventive service under Part B. Diagnostic mammograms are subject to a 20 percent copayment after you’ve met your Part B deductible.
American Cancer Society data shows that 57 percent of women over 75 had a mammogram in 2023, up from 56 percent in 2021. The organization is reviewing guidelines for women 75 and older, according to Priti Bandi, the ACS's scientific director of cancer risk factors and screening surveillance research.
Meanwhile, more than half of breast cancer deaths occur in women 70 and older, the latest data from the ACS shows.
What’s the harm in screening?
Letting cancer go undetected may seem more harmful than catching it early on, but doctors say there are some risks with screening, especially for older women.
Research shows that the risk of overdiagnosis — finding a slow-growing cancer or one that will not grow at all — is much higher in women 70 and older, and this risk increases with age. And treating such a cancer could cause additional harm for someone who is frail or has other health issues.
A recent study of nearly 55,000 women, published in Annals of Internal Medicine, found that about 31 percent of breast cancer cases discovered in women 70 to 74 would likely not cause any symptoms or harm. That share jumped up to 47 percent for women 75 to 84 and 54 percent in women 85 and older.
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