Thursday 16 October 2014 Friday 17 October 2014

Thursday 16 October 2014
5.30pm – 7.00pm
Welcome Reception
Melbourne Cricket Ground (MCG) – Frank Grey Smith Bar
Friday 17 October 2014
7.00am
Registration Opens
9.00am – 9.30am
Offical Welcome / Opening Ceremony
Room: Ballroom 2 & 3
Chair: Vicki Pridmore
Welcome
Vicki Pridmore, CEO, BreastScreen Victoria
Welcome to country – An acknowledgement of traditional ownership
Aunty Joy Murphy Wandin, AO, Wurundjeri Elder
Official opening of conference
Ms Georgie Crozier MLC, Parliamentary Secretary for Health
9.30am – 10.30am
Keynote Address
Room: Ballroom 2 & 3
Chair: Vicki Pridmore
The Impact of current and future genetic research on population breast screening
Professor Gareth Evans, St Mary’s Hospital, Manchester
Questions
10.30am – 11.00am Morning Tea
11.00am – 12.30pm Session 2A: New Technologies
Session 2B: Maximising
Session 2C: Management of
in Screening and Assessment
the Benefits of Population
High Risk Women
Screening
Room: Ballroom 2 & 3
Ballroom 1
Stradbroke Room
Chair: Professor Gareth Evans
Dr Tracey Bessell
Maxine Morand
11.00am – 11.30am Dr Darren Lockie, Maroondah
Professor Jim Butler, Australian Dr Jemma Gilchrist, Breast
BreastScreen Eastern Health,
Centre for Economic Research
Cancer Institute, NSW
VIC
on Health (ACERH), ACT
“2D or not 2D”
Health economics of public
Communication and
Tomosynthesis and Breastscreen, health screening programs
psychological management
a new paradigm?
for women with an increased
genetic risk for breast cancer
11.30am – 11.40am Dr Loren Niklason, Hologic, MA Dr Helen Frazer, St Vincent’s
Elizabeth Buckley, University
Hospital, VIC
South Australia, SA
Oslo Tomosynthesis Screening
Trial: Analysis of results for
digital mammography and
digital mammography with
tomosynthesis versus breast
density
Implications of screening
increased numbers of women
aged 40-44 years on breast
cancer detection and resourcing:
an ecological study using the
BreastScreen Victoria database
from 2009-2013
A typical hyperplasia as a risk
factor for subsequent invasive or
in-situ breast cancer
Janet Brook, BreastScreen WA,
WA
Dr Allison Rose, VIC
HOW MANY IS TOO MANY? How
many screening mammograms should a radiographer perform
each day?
Five-Year analysis of magnetic
resonance imaging as a
screening tool in women at
hereditary risk of breast cancer
Dr Darren Lockie, Maroondah
BreastScreen Eastern Health,
VIC
Dr Anne Kavanagh, University
of Melbourne, VIC
A/Professor Ian Bennett, North
Brisbane BreastScreen, QLD
Evaluation of Digital Breast
Tomosynthesis(DBT) in a
BreastScreen assessment service
Risks and benefits of breast
cancer screening: BreastScreen
WA cohort study of
overdiagnosis and breast cancer
mortality
North Brisbane family history
clinic – A model for managing
high risk women within
BreastScreen Australia
12.00pm – 12.30pm
Discussion
Discussion
Discussion
12.30pm – 1.30pm
Lunch and Poster Presentations
Lunch Workshop – Research Grants and Industry Partnerships
11.40am – 11.50am
11.50am – 12.00pm
Breastscreen 2014 Detailed Program v14.indd 1
13/10/2014 12:46 pm
Friday 17 October 2014 continued
Session 3B: Increasing
Participation Among
Aboriginal and Torres
Strait Islander Women
Session 3C: Clinical
Challenges in
Screening
Session 3D: New
Developments in
Education and
Workforce
Ballroom 1
Huntingfield Room
Stradbroke Room
Rachel Anderson
Jane Burden
Janet Brook
Kathy Pritchard,
BreastScreen Counties
Manukau, Auckland
Professor Sunil
Lakhani, The
University of
Queensland, QLD
Jayne Mullen, Monash
Health, VIC
Increasing BreastScreen
participation of Maaori
and Pacific Island
women
Current science of a
diagnosis of DCIS from
a pathological view
Increasing access
to mammography
education for
radiographers through
e-learning innovation Zoe Aitken, The
University of
Melbourne, VIC
Carolyn McNamara,
BreastScreen Victoria,
VIC
Elizabeth Buckley,
University of South
Australia, SA
Beverlee MacDonellScott, BreastScreen
Northern Sydney, NSW
Mammographic breast
density and screening
performance since the
introduction of digital
mammography
Reducing barriers
for Aboriginal and
Torres Strait Islander
communities using
culturally safe
environments for
screening
Ductal carcinoma insitu as a risk factor for
subsequent occurrence
of invasive breast
cancer
Current developments
in mammography
education: BreastScreen
NSW Radiographer
Assessment Clinic
Course (BRACC)
Dr Jill Evans,
BreastScreen Victoria,
VIC
Karen Forster,
BreastScreenNT, NT
Prof Bruce Mann,
The Royal Womens
Hospital, VIC
Carmel Smith,
BreastScreen
Queensland, QLD
Digital compared
with screen-film
mammography: Cancer
detection rates in
concurrent cohorts
within an organized
breast screening
program
Community
Engagement: the key
to delivering successful
remote screening
Breast cancer
outcomes according
to mammographic
screening status
State-wide image
quality audit
Dr Warwick Lee,
Cancer Institute NSW,
NSW
Michelle Tornabene,
BreastScreen QLD, QLD
Dr Amy Y I Ting, Royal
Melbourne Hospital,
VIC
Dr Kelly Spuur, Charles
Sturt University, NSW
Comparison of cancer
detection rates in
BreastScreen NSW
before and after
conversion to digital
mammography
Statewide Closing
the Gap Project for
Aboriginal and Torres
Strait Islander women in
Queensland
The impact of widening
criteria for core biopsy
of microcalcifications
in a breast screening
program
Mammography
education –
The graduate diploma
of mammography
2.30pm – 3.00pm
Discussion
Discussion
Discussion
Discussion
3.00pm – 3.30pm
Afternoon Tea
3.30pm – 4.30pm
Keynote Address
1.30pm – 3.00pm
Session 3A: Enhancing
Screening outcomes
Room: Ballroom 2 & 3
Chair:
1.30pm – 2.00pm
A/Professor Wendy
Ingman, The Queen
Elizabeth Hospital
&Robinson Institute, SA
Mammographic density,
understanding the
associated biology and
pathology
2.00pm – 2.10pm
2.10pm – 2.20pm
2.20pm – 2.30pm
3.30pm – 4.10pm
4.10pm – 4.30pm
4.30pm – 5.00pm
7.00pm – 11.00pm
Room: Ballroom 2 & 3
Chair:
The role of tomosynthesis in breast cancer screening programs: Maximising the benefits for women
Dr Elizabeth Morris, Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Centre
Questions
Wrap up of Day 1 outcomes
Conference Dinner – Hilton on the Park
Breastscreen 2014 Detailed Program v14.indd 2
13/10/2014 12:46 pm
Saturday 18 October 2014
7.30am – 8.45am
Hologic Breakfast
Room: Ballroom 1
New horizons in imaging for breast cancer screening
Dr Elizabeth Morris, Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Centre
Chair:
10.00am – 10.30am
Morning Tea
10.30am – 12.00pm
Session 4A: New Technology
Session 4B: Balancing Benefits
Applications and Outcomes
and Harms of Screening
Room: Ballroom 2 & 3
Ballroom 1
Chair: Jill Evans
Dr Janet Gray
10.30am – 11.00am
Dr Don McLean, The Canberra
Dr Carolyn Nickson, The
Hospital, ACT
University of Melbourne, VIC
Radiation safety / tomosynthesis
Population modelling to
and other technologies
examine the benefits and harms
of different screening strategies
9.00am – 10.00am
11.00am – 11.10am
Session 4C: Minimal Treatment
Stradbroke Room
Professor Gareth Evans,
St Mary’s Hospital, Manchester
Can breast screening lead to
minimal treatment?
Dr Michelle Reintals, Dr Jones
and Partners Medical Imaging,
SA
Kerri Beckmann, University of
Adelaide, SA
Professor Gelareh Farshid,
BreastScreen SA, SA Pathology
and the University of Adelaide,
SA
MRI
Overdiagnosis Due to
Mammography Screening
Programs: Estimates from South
Australia using Two Different
Methods
An evaluation of assessment
of the axilla in women with
screen detected breast
lesions with imaging features
highly suspicious for invasive
carcinoma
Jolyn Hersch, The University of
Sydney, NSW
Dr Emma Gannan, The Royal
Melbourne & Royal Womens
Hospital, VIC
11.10am – 11.20am
Overdetection in Breast
Management of early nodeScreening: Randomised
positive breast cancer in
Controlled Trial of a Decision Aid Melbourne: A multi-centre study
to Support Informed Choice
Stephanie Nunan, BreastScreen
QLD, QLD
Gemma Jacklyn, University of
Sydney, NSW
Professor Gelareh Farshid,
BreastScreen SA, SA Pathology
and the University of Adelaide,
SA
Harnessing the benefit of picture
archiving and communication
system technology to ensure
consistent, high quality and
timely reading for women
attending BreastScreen
Queensland
Model of outcomes of screening
mammography: Information to
support informed choices
The management of
lobular neoplasia, including
pleomorphic LCIS diagnosed
at screening
11.30am – 12.00pm
Discussion
Discussion
Discussion
12.00pm – 1.00pm
Lunch and Poster Presentations
1.00pm – 2.30pm
Session 5A: Future directions
in population screening
Session 5B: Communication
Strategies for Underscreened
women
Session 5C: Quality
Improvement
Ballroom 1
Stradbroke Room
11.20am – 11.30am
Room: Ballroom 2 & 3
Chair: Gail Ward
1.00pm – 1.30pm
Professor Gareth Evans,
St Mary’s Hospital, Manchester
Risk stratified screening: a
potential way to balance
benefits and harms in population
screening lessons from the
PROCAS study
Breastscreen 2014 Detailed Program v14.indd 3
Vicki Pridmore
Sarah McGill
Dr Marli Gregory, BreastScreen
Aotearoa, Christchurch
Maxine Morand, Breast Cancer
Network Australia, VIC
Communicating with women
and influencing rescreening
from a New Zealand perspective
QA from a consumers
perspective
13/10/2014 12:46 pm
Saturday 18 October 2014 continued
Session 5A: continued
Session 5B: continued
Session 5C: continued
A/Professor Wendy Ingman,
Tricia Malowney, VIC
The Queen Elizabeth Hospital &
The Robinson Institute, SA
Tracey Bessell, ACT
Development of a new resource
to support biomarker discovery
Physical barriers to
breastscreening may be
addressed for women with
disabilties – Time now to
address attitudinal issues
Review of the BreastScreen
Australia accreditation system
Natasha Levy, BreastScreen
Victoria, VIC
Jenny Parkes, Maroonda
BreastScreen, VIC
Driving participation through an
integrated recruitment strategy
Utilising a sonographer in a
Victorian assessment clinic
Gemma Jacklyn, University of
Sydney, NSW
Sonya Schultz, BreastScreen
WA, WA
Genevieve Webb, BreastScreen
Victoria, VIC
Information about the benefit
and harms of mammography
screening provided to women
Strategies to increase breast
cancer screening among CaLD
women in Western Australia
BreastScreen Victoria timeliness
review
2.00pm – 2.30pm
Discussion
Discussion
Discussion
2.30pm – 3.00pm
Afternoon Tea
3.00pm – 4.00pm
Panel Discussion – Why don’t women come back? How to boost second screening round
return rates.
1.30pm – 1.40pm
1.40pm – 1.50pm
1.50pm – 2.00pm
4.00pm – 4.30pm
Room: Ballroom 2 & 3
Facilitator: Jean Kittson
Carolyn Miller, Communications Strategist
Jon Williams, PwC Australia
A/Professor Kirsten McCaffery, University of Sydney
Alyson Pierce, National Marketing Director, The Australian Red Cross Blood Service
Wrap up of Day 2 outcomes and Conference outcomes
Chair: Louise Galloway
Breastscreen 2014 Detailed Program v14.indd 4
13/10/2014 12:46 pm