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Breast Imaging FAQ

I Was Called Back After My Mammogram. Should I Be Worried?

A callback is stressful, but it is also common. Here is what it usually means and what may happen next.

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Quick Answer: Being called back after a screening mammogram does not mean you have breast cancer. Most callbacks happen because the radiologist needs a closer look at an area that was not clear enough on the screening images. In many cases, the area turns out to be normal overlapping tissue, a cyst, benign calcifications, or another non-cancerous finding.

First, Take a Breath

If you were told you need to come back for more mammogram pictures or an ultrasound, I know that can feel scary.

Many people immediately think: “They must have found cancer.”

But that is not what a callback means. A callback means the screening mammogram showed something the radiologist wants to evaluate more carefully before giving a final answer.

What a Callback Usually Means

A screening mammogram is designed to look for possible abnormalities in women who usually do not have symptoms. It is a broad screening test. Sometimes, the images show an area that is difficult to interpret on the first set of pictures.

That can happen because breast tissue overlaps, the breast is dense, the area is seen on only one view, or there is a finding that needs magnified or targeted pictures.

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A closer look

Extra mammogram views can spread tissue out and show whether an area is real or just overlapping normal tissue.

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Often benign

Many callbacks are due to cysts, benign calcifications, lymph nodes, or normal breast tissue.

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Next-step focused

The goal is to decide whether you can return to screening, need follow-up, or need a biopsy.

Common Reasons People Are Called Back

Asymmetry
One area looks different from the rest of the breast or from the other breast. Often this is overlapping normal tissue, but extra views help clarify it.
Mass
A rounded or oval area may need ultrasound to determine whether it is a cyst, fibroadenoma, lymph node, or something else.
Calcifications
Tiny calcium deposits are common. Magnification views help determine whether the pattern looks benign or needs biopsy.
Distortion
The normal tissue pattern looks pulled or distorted. Sometimes this is positioning or prior surgery, but it may need more careful evaluation.
Technical issue
Occasionally the images are incomplete, blurry, or do not include enough tissue, so repeat or additional pictures are needed.

The Honest Truth

A callback is not a diagnosis

A callback means the radiologist saw something that needs more information. It does not mean cancer has been found.

Most callbacks are resolved with additional mammogram views and/or ultrasound. Some patients are asked to return to routine screening. Some are given short-term follow-up. A smaller group may be recommended for biopsy.

If biopsy is recommended, that still does not mean you have cancer. It means the finding needs tissue confirmation so a pathologist can give a definite answer.

What Happens at the Callback Appointment?

1
Diagnostic mammogram views

You may have extra views focused on the area in question. These pictures can compress or magnify a specific area so the radiologist can see it more clearly.

2
Possible ultrasound

If the area looks like a mass or needs further evaluation, ultrasound may be used to see whether it is solid, fluid-filled, or normal tissue.

3
Radiologist review

The radiologist reviews the new images and compares them with prior mammograms if available.

4
A recommendation

You should receive a next step, such as routine screening, short-term follow-up, additional imaging, or biopsy.

Possible Results After the Callback

Normal / benign
The area turns out to be normal tissue or a clearly benign finding. You return to routine screening.
Probably benign
The finding has a very low chance of cancer, but the radiologist wants to confirm stability with short-term follow-up imaging.
Biopsy advised
The finding cannot be confidently called benign on imaging, so a small tissue sample is recommended for a definite diagnosis.
More imaging
Occasionally MRI or another exam is recommended, depending on the finding and your personal risk factors.

What I Would Tell You If We Were Talking

Being called back is common and does not mean you have cancer.
The purpose of the callback is to get a clearer answer, not to scare you.
Try to focus on the final recommendation after the diagnostic imaging, not just the fact that you were called back.
If you have prior mammograms from another facility, make sure the breast center can compare them.
If biopsy is recommended, remember that a biopsy is how doctors get certainty - it is not the same as a cancer diagnosis.

Questions to Ask at Your Callback

What finding caused the callback - asymmetry, mass, calcifications, distortion, or something else?
What is my BI-RADS category after the diagnostic imaging?
Do I return to routine screening, need short-term follow-up, or need a biopsy?
Were my prior mammograms available for comparison?

Frequently Asked Questions

Does a callback mean the radiologist thinks I have cancer?

No. It means the screening mammogram did not provide enough information to confidently dismiss or classify an area. Most callbacks do not end up being cancer.

Why do I need ultrasound after a mammogram?

Ultrasound can help determine whether an area is a cyst, solid mass, lymph node, or normal tissue. It gives different information than a mammogram.

Should I panic if the report says “diagnostic mammogram”?

No. “Diagnostic” means the exam is focused on answering a specific question. It does not mean cancer has been diagnosed.

Related Topics

Were you called back after a mammogram? I can help explain the wording in your report, what the callback is for, and what the recommendation means in plain English.

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This content is for educational purposes only and is not a substitute for professional medical advice. I cannot diagnose breast cancer online. Always consult your radiologist, referring clinician, or qualified healthcare provider about your specific results and next steps.