Since September 10, 2024, every mammogram facility in the U.S. is required to provide patients with a clear summary of their breast density—bringing awareness of this important factor front and center.1
While breast density significantly influences risk, it’s only one piece of a larger puzzle. To improve early detection and deliver truly personalized care, healthcare providers must regularly monitor breast density and use comprehensive risk assessments like the Tyrer-Cuzick model.2 Embracing a comprehensive approach to risk assessment can transform early detection and prevention strategies and save lives. Here are four key considerations to help advance personalized breast cancer prevention.
#1 The New Standard: Risk Assessment Begins at Age 30
According to the American Society of Breast Surgeons (ASBrS), all women aged 30 and above should undergo a formal risk assessment to inform their screening care.2 Early stratification creates opportunities for:
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Tailored patient education
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Informed decisions about supplemental imaging
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Proactive prevention strategies
Tools like Tyrer-Cuzick efficiently evaluate both 10-year and lifetime risks by integrating personal and family history, hormonal factors, prior biopsies, and breast density.2
#2 Why Breast Density Alone Isn’t Enough — But It’s Critical
Approximately 50% of women over 40 have dense breasts,3 which:
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Increases breast cancer risk by 1.2x to 2.0x4
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Reduces mammogram sensitivity due to masking tumors4
However, dense breasts are not the sole indicator of risk—and not all high-risk women have dense tissue. Regularly updating breast density and incorporating it into risk models is essential because risk and density are fluid, changing over time.3
#3 Why Annual Reassessment Matters
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A 2023 JAMA Oncology study shows slower declines in density over time correlate with increased risk.5
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Tyrer-Cuzick scores evolve with age, family history updates, weight changes, and new pathology findings.6
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Without yearly tracking, patients can silently shift into higher risk categories, missing opportunities for earlier intervention.
#4 How The Ambry CARE Program® Supports This Personalized Approach
The Ambry CARE Program® (CARE) simplifies cancer risk assessment by gathering patient personal and family history to accurately calculate Tyrer-Cuzick scores. CARE can also seamlessly embed these TC scores alongside BI-RADS breast density categories (A–D) directly into the electronic health record (EHR). This integration enables clinicians to review and use the most appropriate risk assessment for each patient. This:
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Provides personalized risk estimates aligned with BI-RADS density categories (A–D).
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Supports clinicians with actionable insights at the point of care.
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Moves beyond mere compliance, empowering providers to make precise, evidence-based decisions and supporting informed patient decision-making.
Combining annual breast density monitoring with a validated, evolving risk model like Tyrer-Cuzick offers the most accurate roadmap for personalized screening and early detection. With tools like CARE enabling real-time, data-driven decision-making, providers can empower patients to take control of their breast health—potentially saving lives through smarter, tailored care.
2. https://www.breastsurgeons.org/docs/statements/asbrs-ppr-screening-mammography.pdf
3. https://www.ajronline.org/doi/10.2214/AJR.13.11969
4. https://pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC9530665/