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'Kylie Effect' prompted more breast checks, expert says
(Agencies)
Updated: 2008-10-27 15:52

Singer Kylie Minogue arrives for the Brit Awards at Earls Court in London February 20, 2008.[Agencies]

Singer Kylie Minogue's public battle with breast cancer prompted more women to have screening checks, even though some of these were ineffective, an Australian expert said Monday, according to AFP.

The pint-sized Minogue, who was diagnosed with the disease in 2005 aged 36, had created a rise in screening tests, the so-called "Kylie Effect", said doctor Helen Zorbas, the director of the National Breast and Ovarian Cancer Centre.

Zorbas said when more and more famous women such as Minogue and actress Christina Applegate developed the disease, "you could be forgiven for thinking there was an epidemic among the young."

But while breast cancer was the most common cancer and the greatest cause of cancer death in women, only about six percent of the 12,000 Australian women diagnosed with the disease each year were under 40.

Zorbas said a mammogram, a type of imaging X-ray screening used to detect and diagnose breast disease, was able to clearly detect a cancer in older women.

But it was almost impossible to find a lump in young women's breasts because of the difference in tissue.

Zorbas said the best way for young women to detect the disease was for them to know their own bodies and pick up any changes in their breasts or signs of the disease early.