Mammogram Call Back Anxiety: Stories to Relieve Your Fears

Years ago, I wrote this post to help other women struggling with mammogram call back anxiety. Since then, more than one hundred women have provided mammogram call back stories of their own.

If a mammogram call back has left you feeling anxious or afraid, I encourage you to read this post and the comments below.

More than one hundred women have returned to this post to let me know their mammogram call back results were all clear.

I don’t know what your follow-up scans will reveal, but I believe you will find hope and encouragement here.

My Story

I walked into that examination room and up to the 3D mammogram machine without the tiniest bit of nervous energy. I chatted with the technician as she performed the test. She was a nice older woman who told me she loved her job and performed more mammograms than she could count in a day.

When the test was over, I thanked that smiling tech, put my bra and shirt back on, and cheerfully went about the rest of my day. I never thought I’d be back in that same exam room for a follow up mammogram.

I didn’t expect a call back mammogram on the same day of my exam, because I didn’t think the exam would reveal a problem.

Mammogram Call Back Same Day

So when my cell phone began vibrating on the table beside me I glanced down at the screen, but didn’t think much of it. I didn’t recognize the number, so I choose to ignore it. I flipped the phone over and returned to the game of Monopoly Junior I was playing with my four-year-old.

If the caller ID doesn’t show one of four numbers (my husband’s cell phone, my parent’s house, or one of my children’s schools), I assume someone is trying to sell me something. If it’s important, they’ll leave a message.

At that moment, it didn’t occur to me that the radiologist might’ve found a suspicious area during my annual cancer screening. It didn’t dawn on me that this was a call I didn’t want to miss.

The Dreaded Mammogram Call Back

Mammogram call back anxiety
Mammogram call back anxiety.

Later that day, a bright red #4 appeared on the phone icon on my cell. I clicked on it and found two missed calls and two voice mails waiting for me.

I fully expected them to be SPAM. The first was a young woman offering to lower my debts. Yup, SPAM, just like I thought it would be, but the second message was not the robotic voice I expected to hear.

“This is the radiology department…,” the kind, melodic voice said. My heart started to race, and I immediately took a seat.

I restarted the message from the beginning. “This is the radiology department. Please call us regarding your recent mammogram,” the voice said.

Then the caller provided the call back number, a string of digits I couldn’t write down as quickly as she recited them. I returned to the beginning of the message over and over. By the fourth time, I’d gathered them all.

Before I called the radiology department, I tried to settle myself. I wasn’t prepared for the dreaded mammogram call back that morning. Who would be?

I took a deep breath and reminded myself that no one in my family has ever had breast cancer. Then I slowly and carefully dialed the number as though I was entering secret, nuclear launch codes. I paused after I pushed each button on the phone.

I Had a 3D Mammogram and They Called Me Back

The kind receptionist can’t provide many details. “I’m not a doctor. I can’t tell you what they see, only that you need to come back in for a follow up mammogram and ultrasound. The doctor requires additional imaging. Would you like to schedule that now,” she asks?

“Yes,” I say without a moment of hesitation. “That will cost $371,” the receptionist says. “Fine, fine,” I tell her as if money matters at all at this moment.

“Okay,” she says. “You are scheduled for a diagnostic mammogram and ultrasound, but on the day of your appointment you’ll need a referral.”

I hang up the phone and immediately call my gynecologist. Of course, the nurse isn’t at her desk, so I leave a message. Slowly, I state my name. Then I spell it twice and repeat my phone number three times.

I want the gynecologist’s staff to call me back immediately, so I make damn sure they know who I am and which number to call.

I Am Waiting for Mammogram Results, and I’m Terrified

As I wait the world keeps on spinning. I wait for mammogram results that might change everything, and I’m terrified. It’s normal to feel anxiety waiting for mammogram results, but I can’t put my mind at ease.

I sit in my basement, watching my four-year-old race marbles. After each race, my son walks over and shows me the marble that won. I fight back my tears as I watch him and wait for the phone to ring.

Two hours later, the nurse calls back. “You were next on my list of patients to call,” she says, sounding surprisingly chipper. “Let me pull up your mammogram report and read it to you.”

Architectural Distortion Scared Anxiety

“There is a focus of architectural distortion in the left breast,” she says, “and suspicious microcalcifications.”

I’m immediately scared and anxious. My mind swirls with frightening thoughts.

“They want you to repeat the test with a follow up mammogram. This often occurs after an abnormal finding is found during your annual cancer screening. The technicians will get a closer look and then perform an ultrasound. The doctor already took a look at your results. He thinks it’s a good idea to get retested. I’ll send in the referral for you.”

That’s it. The nurse hangs up the phone. She can’t provide any other information. A minute passes, and the phone rings again. It’s the nurse calling back, “Oh, sorry,” she says. “I misread the report. It says it’s NOT suspicious. I thought you would like to know that.”

There is a HUGE difference between suspicious and not suspicious. I’ve never been so grateful to hear the word NOT used in a sentence before. At least now, I’m only dealing with one abnormal finding on my mammogram report.

Dr. Google

mammogram call back stories

I take a deep breath, one of those deep, deep breaths where it feels like your lungs sucked in all of the air around you.

Then I pull out my laptop and immediately consult Dr. Google. I have so many unanswered questions.

  • How often do people get called back for a follow up mammogram?
  • How often are forty-year-olds diagnosed with cancer?
  • Where in the breast is cancer typically found?

I find the answers:

  • Did you know that breast cancer occurs most often on the left side of the body?
  • Or that 50 percent of malignant lumps appear in the breast’s upper, outer quadrant, extending into the armpit, where tissue is thicker than elsewhere?
  • Did you know that younger women tend to get more aggressive cancers and have a lower chance of survival?

No? I didn’t know any of it either.

The tissue in question is on my left side, in the upper quadrant, and I am younger than fifty, so I’m batting three for three.

Mammogram Call Back Fear and Anxiety

This isn’t my first medical crisis. I’ve faced medical traumas in the past. I nearly died of a pulmonary embolism at age twenty-seven, but this time it’s different. An embolism occurs quickly. You don’t have time to worry about it. You barely have time to get to the hospital. Breast cancer is not like an embolism. It’s drawn out and painful, plus this time I have kids.

I am anxious and terrified. Having kids changes everything. I look down at my four-year-old and feel hot tears pouring down on my cheeks. I put down the laptop and snuggle my little one into my lap. The tears drip onto his face, and he looks up and asks why I’m crying.

“I just love you,” I tell him because it’s true.

The Facts: Architectural Distortion

Later that night, I decide to search Google again. This time I’m armed with specific questions about architectural distortion. I’m terrified. I mean, scared right down to the bone. I feel my hands shaking as I type words into my computer. Can I overcome anxiety as it rushes over me?

I’ve received questionable results from blood tests in the past, but I’ve never felt this frightened before. Every website tells me architectural distortion is the third most common sign of cancer and that the most aggressive types of cancer are often discovered this way.

I promise myself I can only search the Internet for a few more minutes. I’ll drive myself crazy if I keep reading about breast cancer. I search one more time and come across an article published in May of 2019 by Moose and Doc.

It says, “Breast cancer commonly causes architectural distortion.” It also says, “Architectural distortion uncommonly indicates cancer. More common is for architectural distortion to be ‘imaginary’ in the perception of the radiologist.”

Architectural Distortion Statistics

An article about mammogram abnormalities also says, “Specialists estimate that around 4% of women who undertake a screening mammogram present with an architectural distortion. The number of those women in which the architectural distortion would represent invasive breast cancer is very low, perhaps 5%-7% of the 4% with architectural distortion, which becomes a much small number.”

My heart stops racing. I have a 93% chance that this abnormality won’t be breast cancer. Why couldn’t I have found that link earlier?

Another helpful piece of information. According to the American Cancer Society, radiologists will call back 10% of women who have a mammogram for further testing. Some women will be called back for a mammogram on the same day they took the initial test. It all depends on how quickly the radiologist reviews images.

The good news: Doctors will give 90% of women returning for a call back mammogram the all-clear after subsequent tests are complete.

My Mammogram: Architectural Distortion

I open my digital mammogram images and scan for the architectural distortion. I’m not a radiologist, but I find the spot immediately. It’s a small, bright white piece of tissue surrounded by four or five long strands. It looks different than the rest of my mammogram.

I browse through the images of my prior annual screening. It looks different from those breast images too.

I take a snapshot of that image and obsess over it for ten days. I look at it once every morning and once every evening before bed. Oh, and another fifty times throughout the day. I can’t stop thinking about that bright white spot on my mammogram. What is it, and what does it mean for me? Will my next mammogram report reveal breast cancer?

The Follow Up Mammogram

On the day of my follow up mammogram and ultrasound, I try to remain calm. I find ways to distract myself. I try to think about anything other than this test or what a positive result might mean. But, no matter how hard I try, my mind starts to wander, and the anxiety builds.

Will they perform a breast biopsy? Will I find out if I have cancer right there on-site? How would I find an oncologist if I needed one? How quickly could I schedule an appointment to be seen?

My mind is racing, but I keep thinking back to that 93% number. The odds are definitely in my favor.

I’m perfectly fine until I go to get undressed. As I place that pink hospital gown around my bare chest, I feel the tears drop down my cheeks. I brush them away. I try to act brave.

My husband jokes about the urine colored walls and other fabulous decorating choices. Then I hear my name.

The technician shows me an image from my first mammogram. She points to that bright white spot of tissue that looks unlike the rest of my breast and explains that I’m being called back due to breast asymmetry. The appearance of that spot doesn’t look like the rest of my breast or my other breast.

She explains that she’ll take additional images and compare them to the images taken during my routine mammogram. If everything looks perfect, I won’t need to undergo an ultrasound. But if anything is wrong, I’ll need an ultrasound and possibly a biopsy. I start to cry. She tells me to try not to worry and lets me know I will receive my mammogram call back results that same day.

Then she places my breast on the imaging machine and presses a clear piece of plastic against it. She moves my body rolls my breast one way and then another, squeezing it each time between the plastic plate. She asks me to hold my breath while she takes the pictures and then says, “You’re all done. The doctor will look at your images now.”

Called Back for Ultrasound After Mammogram

I’m led back to the hallway. I return to my pea-green seat and quietly hope that everything looks okay. Here I am, waiting for mammogram results for the second time in two weeks. The terror begins to overtake my already shaky composure.

I try to console myself, at least I’ll receive same day results for this mammogram call back. At least I won’t have to go home to wait for the news.

The technician steps out a few minutes later. “They’ll need an ultrasound,” she says, and I feel the panic set in.

She just told me they wouldn’t call me in for an ultrasound unless they saw something on my latest mammogram. Clearly, they see something on the second mammogram.

This time my husband can come along. He jokes about the ambiance in the room, the dim lights, the fact that I’m taking my shirt off, and lying on a small bed. I’m thankful he’s with me that he’s able to take off work to sit beside me and crack jokes to ease my mind.

The ultrasound technician squirts gel onto my chest and then starts to move the wand across my skin. I can see the monitor as she moves it over me. A small, black, circular spot appears. She measures it once, twice, and then a third time.

She moves the wand further up and down my breast. Then she abruptly stops. “All I see is a lymph node,” she says, “nothing more. I’ll call the doctor in now.”

Within a minute or two, the doctor appears beside my bed. He shakes my hand, introduces himself, and says, “I don’t see any cancer. I didn’t see anything on your follow up mammogram, but I wanted to be 100% sure with the ultrasound.” 

At that moment, I realize I’ve been holding my breath. I slowly and calmly exhale.

Calming Mammogram Call Back Anxiety

If you receive a call back for a mammogram, you are probably feeling overwhelmed and terrified. I understand that anxiety all too well.

Mammogram call back anxiety can leave you feeling nervous and tense. The moment you receive that call, you may feel an impending sense of panic and doom. Please know that you are not alone.

I know how scary it is to wait for a repeat mammogram or additional testing and how alone you might feel. If you are experiencing mammogram callback anxiety, please talk to a friend or reach out below.

Mammogram Call Back Statistics

I wish you the best of luck as you undergo further testing and I hope that your future scans are all clear too.

Getting called back for a diagnostic mammogram is not that unusual. Over a ten year period 50% of women will receive a false positive result. There is good news though. While a lot of women are getting called back to check their breast health, less than 1% will receive a cancer diagnosis.

If you are feeling terrified and anxious reflect on that number for a moment. The majority of women who return for a follow up mammogram will be given the all clear!

Mammogram Call Back Stories

Not so long ago, I scoured the Internet in search of happy endings. Now readers stumble across these words and leave their mammogram call back stories in the comments below.

If you are feeling nervous about a mammogram callback please read the words of the brave women who kindly shared their stories below. I hope their stories reduce your fears and anxieties. 

If you receive good news after your call back mammogram please let me know. Each comment helps other anxious women who stumble across this post in search of good news.

** Part two of this story can be found here: Life is Fragile: Make the Most of Limited Time.

214 thoughts on “Mammogram Call Back Anxiety: Stories to Relieve Your Fears”

  1. Lindsey, I am exactly with you. Tomorrow is recall for my arch. distortion. I wasn’t that worried until I just did the googling and became terrified. I was comforted to find this blog. Will pray for us both as we are together in this tomorrow. I am 70. When I was 54 I had recall and needle biopsy and it was fine. Praying for us both! I was told I’d get results tomorrow.

    Reply
    • Hi Terri, Thank you for leaving a comment and for letting readers here know that a previous recall and biopsy turned out okay. I do hope that your test results don’t show anything abnormal and that you and Lindsey, (the commenter above), return tomorrow to let us know that everything was fine.

      Reply
      • Had all the tests today—the second round of mammograms and then needed an ultrasound. Anxiety through the roof of course. Then radiologist came in and was very kind and not concerned: she is thinking she sees something that’s not cancer, like what happened to me in 2005; but they need to do a needle biopsy to be sure. She really put me at ease, and I’m scheduled for the biopsy on Jan. 21. They do it at the breast lab where the tests were, so that will be easy to navigate. They were very kind, and I’m not worried about the biopsy since I had one before. Those results can take up to a week, but my anxiety level is much better now.

        Reply
        • Thank you for returning to comment Terri. I am glad the radiologist was able to ease your concerns. I was amazed by the compassion of the radiologist that I met during my experience. It’s nice to know they recognize our anxiety. Wishing you all the best!

          Reply
        • Terri, I’m happy they were able to ease your mind. I hope that your next results are good and that you get them as quickly as possible. Thank you very much for the kind words yesterday!

          Reply
          • Thank you Lindsey! And I’m so glad your results were good! I was thinking of you the whole time I went through my ordeal today.

            Reply
            • I finally got the results from my biopsy last week and all is good, benign, just fine! The needle biopsy was very quick and painless, but am I ever bruised! So after three weeks of anxiety, just like I went through in 2005, all is fine. Thank you for easing my mind after I went down the google hole:-)

              Reply
  2. Dear Jewels,
    I’m so happy to have found your blog. I am experiencing the same thing as you and many of your readers: architectural distortion. I’m terrified. Google searching only makes things worse. Your blog post is so comforting. I go tomorrow for more imaging. I will try to remember your words—only 1%. Still, it’s so scary. It’s hard to be calm.

    Reply
    • Hi Randy, I do hope your repeat mammogram turned out okay. You are right that 1% is still very scary, but the comments on this post have made me so hopeful for those who stumble upon it. I want more of the 99% to come back to say they were fine. I wish you all the best.

      Reply
  3. Hi Jewel,
    I wanted to tell you and your readers about my follow-up mammography after having an architectural distortion. As you have mentioned, the experience is scary. The entire waiting was full with social-distancing in place. I was called back for the diagnostic mammogram. An hour later I was called back for another mammogram. I was getting more stressed. About twenty minutes later, I was called back for an ultra-sound. Stress level is peaking. The tech told me that having 2 mammograms and ultra-sound is common. She reassured me that she saw nothing suspicious. She told me this two times. The radiologist also performed an ultra-sound and didn’t see anything suspicious. But, based on my family history, she wanted me to have a MRI because this test is very accurate. I’m relieved that nothing was seen on the ultra-sound other than I have dense tissue. Now, I only have to get through the MRI.

    Reply
    • Hi Randi, Thanks for returning with an update. I’m glad that the radiologist and technician didn’t see anything on your ultrasound or mammogram. If they didn’t see anything I can’t imagine the MRI will turn anything up either. That’s great news!

      Reply
  4. Hi. Yesterday i found some sort of relief reading this blog as i was terrified one day before my tests. So i just want to contribute now to ease the anxiety to all the women that are in the situation i was yesterday.
    Some months ago i did my annual mammogram and results came back as abnormal. They saw architectural distorsion on my left breast. As you can imagine I panicked. They asked me to do a MRI to find out more about it.
    Since I am extremely claustrophobic i knew i could not do an MRI. I chatted to my gynecologist and she was very rude. Telling me things like you dread an MRI? Wait till you have to fight cancer and see what it is. All those comments left me devastated and more anxious than before. I decided to go with public system ( i live in Spain where we have an excellent free public health system for everyone) instead of continuing with my private dr. I had to wait almost 2 months for the additional tests due to Covid situation here in Spain and the saturation of hospitals what was really a nightmare. Finally the day of my appointment arrived and They decided to do a 3D mammogram ( tomosynthesis) and depending on results an ultrasounds they told me. Last night i thought i was about to have a panic attack due to all the stress. Finally today i went to do my tests. They did the 3D mamo and after waiting one hour while dr revised the results ( it was a nightmare waiting for so long) they called me for an ultrasound. At that point my anxiety was extremely high.
    The result: ALL FINE!!!!! :-).
    Dr told me she didn’t see the architectual distorsion in the new mammo and explained that mammogram is like a picture where images are sometimes disorted like in a picture where sometimes you see a shadow, or a blurred part. So for those waiting in anxiety like i was till today, let me tell you to be optimistic . I suffered so much in anticipation for something that at the end was perfectly fine and normal. Do not panic as i did. I wish everyone reading this to have the same favorable result as i did.

    Reply
  5. Hi all
    First a little disclaimer. I’m not judging.
    I’ve been battling mysterious health problems for many years and many doctors and zero diagnoses. Last Oct while suffering one of these episodes (wake up vomiting at wretching, choking, abdominal pain, back pain, nausea, dizzy, and even pass out on the regular, I was seeing my PCP when she said I was overdue for my mammogram…by idk about 6 yrs. So we scheduled it and I went in and did it. Next day I get the call. The dr. wants a core-needle biopsy.
    Ok. I go in and get it done. They even leave a marker. I go home and 4 days later, I get the call. Just lumpy see ya in a year. What a relief!! Side note: I was also referred to another doctor for my other symptoms. Well come Dec. I get a letter the day after the 2nd dr had cancelled and rescheduled my appointment. I thought the letter was that confirmation and I pitched it. I mean my biopsy was normal, right? Well come January I receive a certified return receipt letter from the doctor telling me I failed to follow-up on their directive to follow-up with a surgeon for a mass that could be cancer. So I call with my apologies and several phone calls later, I speaking with a surgeon. I tell them what my situation is and they say, csn you be here tomorrow at 8:15am? I did that and now I’m scheduled to have an architectural distortion removed thats about the size of a golfball in 9 days. While working through this the other doctor called. Meet with them. Now they have me scheduled for an esophageal biopsy of a carcinoid not followed up on from 2017, 4 days later. I didn’t even know it was there.

    I’m a train wreck playing the waiting game. Bp yesterday was 180/100. Scared….almost to death right now. ;(

    Reply
    • Oh Joan, I’m sorry you are going through this. Thank you for sharing your story. It speaks to the importance of annual or bi-annual mammograms.

      I recently wrote an article about the importance of maintaining medical records. From this point forward make sure to gather all of your medical documentation and take it with you to all of your appointments. You must advocate for yourself and make sure you understand what the doctors are saying.

      I do hope that your test results are okay.

      Reply
  6. Me too. On Jan 26 I got engaged and within 30 minutes, got a callback. When I spoke to the doctor she shared that it was in inconclusive report and showed focal asymmetry with questionable architectural distortion. I have dense breast tissue. My conversation with her lasted less than two minutes. I am mediately started worrying. My follow up appointment was not for another 3 1/2 weeks. That was the first available. Meanwhile I researched everything on Google and scared myself to death. Today at my follow up I was fully convinced that they were going to deliver the news. After they mammogram the tech came back and gave me the all clear. She said that the diagnostic compression which is a more concentrated area spread the tissue out in such a way that the architectural distortion disappeared. They canceled the ultrasound. I’ve cried from relief. I am a single mother with a 15-year-old and a 20-year-old daughter. My fiancé and I are going through the process of adopting a seven and eight-year-old whose parents are Adickes. There were so many people counting on me to be here and I was literally feeling that it was going to be all over before I could really get started. She said it was simply that I have very dense breast tissue and that it often shows up as architectural distortion on mammograms. During those weeks of worry and fear, I can across your blog. This was the only thing on the whole Internet that gave me comfort and let me sleep at night. Barely. I just wanted to share that I am another case of dense breast tissue causing architectural distortion to show up. All my best to anyone who is out there waiting. I happen to be on the board of directors at the local hospital and today suggested an idea to them that we are going to pursue. Since 10 to 20% receive a callback, we are looking into saving 1 to 2 appointments per day for callbacks. That way someone would only have to wait one or two days and not 3 1/2 weeks of torture. I’m also asking the hospital to prepare an information sheet with calming information that can be shared with anyone who receives a call back. Tammy

    Reply
  7. Oh Tammy, thank you so much for leaving this heartfelt comment. I’m glad you stumbled across this blog post and that it brought you comfort while you waited for your second test. It’s amazing how many people have been helped by the words I wrote and all of the amazing commenters, like yourself, who have returned to tell your story.

    I am so excited to know that you may be able to make changes at your hospital. How amazing would it be for patients to get an answer in a couple of days rather than waiting for weeks! If you are successful I hope that you will spread the word to other hospitals. I love that you are taking actions based on your own situation to better the world around you! It’s an amazing idea that should be implemented in other medical centers as well!

    Reply
  8. Hi,
    I`m going for an MRI tomorrow for archit Distortion, I read your blog every day but today i decided to Google IT and now I`m convinced I have breast cancer because of an article I found with many cases of women having the archit distort that turned out to be malignant. I`ve been crying every day. I had 2 biopsies on my right breast 1 year ago, a follow up in August, benign fibroadenoma, so when I went for the screening mammogram in February I was convinced I was going to have a normal results. The distortion is on the same site as the biopsied fibroadenomas. I can`t catch a brake. Pray for me

    Reply
    • Alessandra, I hope your test went well and that your mammogram showed normal results. I think about everyone who leaves a comment here and I wish you the best of luck!

      Reply
  9. Hi,
    I just received the results of my MRI and It`s fine. I had to wait 1 month start to finish, I read your blog many times a day and It helped me tremendously. You are amazing, thank you so much.

    Reply
  10. I to have read the blog from start to finish while waiting to go for my Diagnostic Mammogram. It comforted me to know that it is quite common to get a call back. I went for my screening mammogram the day before Easter and received an email on Monday saying that a new deep density was noted in my left breast that was not there before. I was given a follow-up appointment for Friday and I was fearing the worst the whole week. I googled non stop and came across this blog and reading the stories in the comments I felt calmer. I am happy to say that the density turned out to be an ordinary blood vessel and I am fine. Best wishes to all!!!!!!!!!!!!

    Reply

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