The widespread adoption of screening mammography over the past decade has led to an epidemic of diagnoses of ductal carcinoma in situ (DCIS) of the breast. Because it is rarely clinically palpable or symptomatic, DCIS was rarely diagnosed before the advent of modern mammography (1). DCIS now accounts for about 20%-25% of all newly diagnosed cases of breast cancer in the United States and from 17% to 34% of mammography-detected cases (2-4). Approximately one in every 1300 mammography examinations performed will lead to a diagnosis of DCIS, and it is estimated that 62 280 cases of DCIS will be diagnosed in 2009 (2,5).Data from the Surveillance, Epidemiology, and End Results program depict about a 500% increase in DCIS among women aged 50 years and older from 1983 to 2003 with incidence of DCIS starting to decline in 2003 (6-8) (Figure 1), possibly because of the decline in use of postmenopausal hormone therapy (9). Among women younger than 50 years, there has been a 290% increase in DCIS since 1983 and incidence continues to rise (Figure 1) (6). Incidence of non-comedo DCIS, a type of DCIS not associated with subsequent DCIS or invasive cancer, has generally increased across all age groups, whereas rates of comedo DCIS, a type of DCIS associated with subsequent DCIS or invasive cancer, has held constant or decreased (8). Notably, despite 20 years of detecting DCIS on mammography, a decline in invasive cancer in the United States had not been observed until after the recent large decline in postmenopausal hormone therapy (9).Other than undergoing mammography, older age is one of the strongest risk factors for being diagnosed with DCIS. The rate of DCIS increases with age from 0.6 per 1000 screening examinations in women aged 40-49 years to 1.3 per 1000 screening examinations in women aged 70-84 years (2,10). Population-based incidence and screening rates of DCIS have been found to be similar among white, African American, and Asian/Pacific Islanders (6,11,12). That the rate of DCIS is comparable among women of different ethnicities with a range of invasive cancer rates suggests the incidence of invasive cancer is not directly related to the incidence of DCIS.Risk factors for DCIS and invasive breast cancer are similar suggesting a common etiology for both diseases. However, in many instances, the association of a given characteristic is more strongly associated with invasive cancer than DCIS. Family history of a first-degree relative with breast cancer, nulliparity or late age at first birth, history of biopsy, late age at menopause, long-term use of postmenopausal estrogen and a progestin therapy, and elevated body mass index in postmenopausal women not taking hormone therapy increase the risk of DCIS and invasive cancer (13)(14)(15)(16)(17)(18)(19)(20). High mammographic breast density, one of the strongest risk factors for invasive breast cancer, also has been associated with an increased risk of DCIS (15,16,21). Smoking, lactation, early menarche, increased alcohol consumption, and oral contraceptive use eith...