Lapeer · Rochester Hills · Telehealth

Breast Cancer
Screening Referrals
Clinical Breast Examination, Mammography Coordination, and High-Risk Assessment

The gynecologist is often the provider who ensures breast cancer screening is current, who performs clinical breast examinations, who identifies women who may benefit from supplemental screening beyond standard mammography, and who acts on findings that warrant further evaluation. This coordination role is an essential component of well-woman care at Lapeer Women’s Health.

Dr. Ramona D. Andrei, MD, PhD, FACOG performs clinical breast examination and coordinates breast cancer screening at both our Lapeer and Rochester Hills offices.

Board-certified gynecology & minimally invasive surgery  ·  Most major insurances accepted
Serving Lapeer County & Oakland County

Breast Cancer Screening — The Gynecologist’s Role

Breast cancer is the most common cancer in women and the second most common cause of cancer death in women in the United States. Annual mammography beginning at age 40 — the recommendation of the American Cancer Society and American College of Radiology — reduces breast cancer mortality significantly by detecting tumors at earlier, more treatable stages. Yet a substantial proportion of women are not current with recommended breast cancer screening, and many do not know whether their breast density or personal risk factors warrant supplemental imaging beyond standard mammography.

The gynecologist is often the clinician who identifies that breast cancer screening is overdue, who performs the clinical breast examination that may detect an abnormality warranting prompt referral, who recognizes that a woman with dense breasts may benefit from supplemental ultrasound or MRI, and who initiates the genetic counseling referral for women with a family history that suggests BRCA or other hereditary breast cancer risk. This coordination role is an integral part of well-woman care at Lapeer Women’s Health.

Breast Cancer Screening — What the Guidelines Say and What the Evidence Supports

Mammography Screening Recommendations

Mammography recommendations vary somewhat between organizations but converge on the importance of annual screening beginning at 40 for average-risk women. The American Cancer Society recommends annual mammography from age 45 to 54, then every other year from 55 onward for average-risk women, with the option to start at 40. The American College of Radiology and the Society of Breast Imaging recommend annual mammography from age 40. The U.S. Preventive Services Task Force (2024 update) recommends screening mammography for all women beginning at age 40. At Lapeer Women’s Health, the recommendation at the well-woman visit is for annual mammography beginning at age 40 for average-risk women — which reflects the most screening-protective approach and aligns with the evidence that annual mammography from 40 provides the greatest mortality reduction.

Dense Breasts — When Supplemental Screening Is Recommended

Approximately 40 percent of women have dense or heterogeneously dense breast tissue, which reduces the sensitivity of mammography and is itself an independent risk factor for breast cancer. Women with dense breasts may benefit from supplemental screening with breast ultrasound or breast MRI. Michigan law requires that mammography reports notify women about their breast density results. At the well-woman visit, Dr. Andrei reviews breast density status from prior mammography reports and discusses whether supplemental screening is recommended based on density category and overall risk.

High-Risk Women — Enhanced Screening Protocols

Women with a lifetime breast cancer risk of 20 percent or greater — calculated based on family history, genetic mutation status, prior breast biopsy results, and other factors — are recommended to have annual breast MRI in addition to annual mammography. This enhanced protocol applies to women with BRCA1 or BRCA2 mutations, women with first-degree relatives with BRCA mutations who have not been tested themselves, women with a strong family history of breast or ovarian cancer, and women with prior chest radiation. Identifying which women meet the threshold for enhanced screening is a specific component of the well-woman visit at Lapeer Women’s Health.

Clinical Breast Examination

Clinical breast examination (CBE) by a trained clinician detects palpable abnormalities that may not yet be visible on mammography and provides a physical baseline for comparison at subsequent examinations. CBE is performed at well-woman visits at Lapeer Women’s Health. Findings that warrant further evaluation — a new lump, skin dimpling, nipple discharge, or lymph node enlargement — are referred promptly for diagnostic imaging and surgical evaluation as indicated.

Breast Self-Awareness

Monthly breast self-examination is no longer formally recommended in guidelines — but breast self-awareness is. Women who know what their breasts normally feel and look like are better positioned to notice changes and report them promptly. Unexplained breast lumps, skin changes, nipple discharge, or axillary lumps should be reported to your gynecologist without waiting for the next scheduled well-woman visit.

Breast Findings That Warrant Prompt Evaluation

Contact our office promptly — do not wait for your next scheduled well-woman visit — if you notice:

  • A new breast lump or thickening, particularly one that is firm, fixed, or growing
  • Unexplained nipple discharge — especially if bloody, from a single duct, or spontaneous
  • Skin changes over the breast — dimpling, puckering, redness, or changes in skin texture
  • Nipple changes — new inversion, retraction, or scaling of the nipple or areola
  • New axillary (armpit) lymph node enlargement that is unexplained
Lapeer: (810) 969-4670  ·  Rochester Hills: (248) 923-3522
Annual Mammography Saves Lives. Is Yours Current?

The evidence for annual mammography beginning at age 40 in reducing breast cancer mortality is substantial and consistent across large studies. The benefit is greatest for women who screen regularly — not for women who catch up after a long gap. If your mammography is overdue, or if you are unsure whether your breast density or family history warrants supplemental imaging, your well-woman visit at Lapeer Women’s Health is the right place to address that.

Both our Lapeer and Rochester Hills offices are here for that visit. No referral required.

Frequently Asked Questions
Breast density refers to the proportion of fibroglandular tissue (which appears white on mammography) relative to fatty tissue (which appears dark). Dense and heterogeneously dense tissue makes mammography harder to interpret because cancers — which also appear white — can be obscured against the white background of dense tissue. Additionally, breast density is an independent risk factor for breast cancer, with women in the highest density category having a 4 to 6 times higher breast cancer risk than women with primarily fatty breasts. If you have dense breasts, supplemental breast ultrasound or MRI may improve cancer detection beyond what mammography alone provides. This is discussed at your well-woman visit at Lapeer Women’s Health based on your specific density category and overall risk profile.
For average-risk women, the recommendation at Lapeer Women’s Health is annual mammography beginning at age 40. Women with a family history of breast cancer — particularly a first-degree relative diagnosed before age 50 — should begin screening earlier: the general recommendation is to start 10 years before the age at which the youngest first-degree relative was diagnosed, but no earlier than age 30. Women with BRCA mutations begin annual MRI at age 25 and annual mammography at 30. Your specific starting age recommendation is individualized based on your family history and risk assessment at your well-woman visit.
Yes. Clinical breast examination, mammography referral coordination, and breast cancer risk assessment are available at both the Lapeer office (1245 N Main St, Lapeer, MI — (810) 969-4670) and the Rochester Hills office (2710 S Rochester Rd, Suite 2, Rochester Hills, MI — (248) 923-3522). No referral is required.
Board-certified gynecology & minimally invasive surgery  ·  Most major insurances accepted  ·  Convenient locations in Lapeer & Rochester Hills
Clinical Breast Examination and Mammography Coordination — At Every Well-Woman Visit.

Our team at Lapeer Women’s Health ensures your breast cancer screening is current and complete. No referral required.

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Educational purposes only. Not medical advice. Content reviewed by Dr. Ramona D. Andrei, MD PhD FACOG.

Gynecologic care for women of every age

Lapeer Women’s Health — Rochester Hills
2710 S Rochester Rd, Suite 2
Rochester Hills, MI 48307

Serving patients in Lapeer, Rochester Hills, and surrounding communities throughout Southeast Michigan.