News
Half of women missing recommended mammograms – US data

Concerning AI-generated data showing the low attendance of women at breast screenings has been published in the US.
Data suggests that 53.3 per cent of commercially insured women received their recommended screening mammogram between 2022 and 2023. This is up from 47.3 per cent in the prior two-year period, an increase of nearly 13 per cent. But almost half of women are still missing out on these critical screenings.
Cedar Gate Technologies’ predictive AI model has identified that approximately 52 per cent of women due for a mammogram in the coming year are unlikely to get it. This could leave millions of women at risk of missing an early detection opportunity.
“Our data shows that more women are getting mammograms, but there is still a concerning potential for gaps in preventive care,” said David Snow, chairman and CEO of Cedar Gate.
“Providers, payers, and employers need to understand how trends could impact their own patient and member populations to increase the rate of necessary mammograms. Early detection remains the most effective way to improve breast cancer outcomes. Our predictive model enables healthcare organizations to identify women at risk of missing these critical screenings and target their outreach to improve care.”
The analysis evaluated nearly 3.4 million women in Cedar Gate’s National Healthcare Benchmark Database, which includes anonymised data for approximately 15 million individuals.
The AI model examines multiple data points and assigns a probability score on whether the person is unlikely to get a mammogram based on U.S. Preventive Services Task Force (USPSTF) guidelines.
These guidelines recommend biennial screenings for women between the ages of 40 and 75 who are at average risk for breast cancer. Of the women analyzed, almost 1.75 million were flagged as unlikely to get a mammogram.
The average age of women with breast cancer as a primary diagnosis in Cedar Gate’s database of commercially insured members is 58 years – four years younger than the national median age of 62 for the entire population, which includes Medicare and Medicaid patients. By starting regular mammogram screenings at 40, women and their doctors may detect early signs of cancer sooner, which can lead to more treatment options and better outcomes.
According to 2024 estimates, there will be 310,720 new cases of invasive breast cancer among women in the US, excluding recurrences.
Additionally, there will be 56,500 new cases of ductal carcinoma in situ (DCIS), a non-invasive or pre-invasive form of breast cancer, and 42,250 breast cancer-related deaths. The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) advocates for regular mammogram screenings as one of the most effective ways to catch breast cancer early.
Hormonal health
Researcher explores weight loss jab impact on PCOS
Diagnosis
Researchers teach AI to spot cancer risk by squeezing individual breast cells
Diagnosis
Experimental drug drowns triple-negative breast cancer cells in toxic fats

An experimental drug slowed triple-negative breast cancer in mice by flooding tumour cells with toxic fats.
Triple-negative breast cancer lacks three common drug targets, making it one of the hardest-to-treat and most aggressive forms of the disease.
The compound, known as DH20931, appears to push cancer cells past their limits by triggering a surge in ceramides, fat-like molecules that place the cells under intense stress until they self-destruct.
In lab experiments, the drug also made standard chemotherapy more effective. When combined with doxorubicin, researchers were able to reduce the dose needed to kill cancer cells by about fivefold.
The drug targets an enzyme known as CerS2 to sharply increase production of these lipids and stress cancer cells. Healthy cells, by contrast, showed lower sensitivity to the drug in lab tests.
While the early results are promising, further preclinical and clinical trials would still be needed to determine the safety and effectiveness of DH20931 in humans.
Satya Narayan, a professor in the University of Florida’s College of Medicine, led the study with an international group of collaborators.
The researchers published their results on human-derived tumours on 21 April and presented their findings on combination therapy at the annual meeting of the American Association for Cancer Research in San Diego.
Narayan likened the drug’s effects to a home’s electrical system handling a power surge.
While healthy cells act like a properly grounded and installed circuit, cancer cells are more like a jumble of mismatched wires and faulty fuses. DH20931 overwhelms cells not with electricity, but with fats.
He said: “When that surge goes into the cancer cells, they cannot handle the amount of power they are getting. The fuses burn out, the cell can’t handle the surge and it dies.”
The compound was developed at the University of Florida in the lab of Sukwong Hong.
Hong, now a professor at the Gwangju Institute of Science and Technology in South Korea, created DH20931 as one of many drug candidates tested for efficacy in Narayan’s lab.
In the study, researchers implanted human triple-negative breast cancer tumours into mice and treated them with DH20931.
The drug significantly slowed tumour growth without causing noticeable weight loss or signs of toxicity in the animals. In separate lab experiments, it also showed activity against other breast cancer subtypes.
In addition to increasing lipid levels, DH20931 triggers a second stress signal by flooding cells with calcium.
Together, these effects disrupt the mitochondria, the structures that produce a cell’s energy, ultimately leading to cell death.
Narayan said: “It does not just follow one pathway but it goes through multiple pathways. It’s a two-hit hypothesis.
“These pathways are common in all breast cancer types and other solid tumours, so we think this drug can be useful not only in triple-negative breast cancer but potentially other cancers as well.”
Entrepreneur4 weeks agoThree sessions that show exactly where women’s health is heading in 2026
Entrepreneur4 days agoFuture Fertility raises Series A financing to scale AI tools redefining fertility care worldwide
Pregnancy4 weeks agoHow NIPT has evolved and what AI NIPT means in 2026
News4 weeks agoTwo weeks left to make your mark in women’s cardiovascular health
Opinion4 weeks agoQ1 momentum: Female founders are advancing, but the system still hasn’t caught up
Fertility2 weeks agoFuture Fertility partners with Japan’s leading IVF provider, Kato Ladies Clinic
Menopause2 weeks agoMore research needed to understand link between brain fog and menopause, expert says
Mental health6 days agoLifting weights shows mental health and cognitive benefits in older women, study finds















3 Comments