Cancer Screening
Cardiovascular Prevention
Women's Health
Mental Health
Rapid Fire
100

Case:
A healthy 42-year-old woman presents for an annual preventive visit. She has no personal or family history of breast cancer and no breast symptoms.

Question: What preventive screening is recommended for this patient?

Answer:
Biennial screening mammography (Grade B).

Explanation:
USPSTF recommends biennial mammography for women aged 40–74 years.

100

Case:
A 69-year-old man smoked one pack per day for 25 years before quitting at age 60.

Question: What preventive screening is recommended?

Answer:
One-time abdominal aortic aneurysm ultrasound screening (Grade B).

Explanation:
Men aged 65–75 years who have ever smoked should receive one-time AAA screening.

100

Case:
A 27-year-old pregnant woman presents for her first prenatal visit and has no urinary symptoms.

Question: What preventive screening is recommended?

Answer:
Screen for asymptomatic bacteriuria with urine culture (Grade B).

Explanation:
Treatment reduces pyelonephritis and pregnancy-related complications.

100

Case:
A 17-year-old presents for a routine sports physical and reports no psychiatric symptoms.

Question: What preventive screening is recommended?

Answer:
Screen for major depressive disorder (Grade B).

Explanation:
USPSTF recommends depression screening for adolescents aged 12–18 years.

100

Clue

What counseling should we give to a fair skin person?

Answer:

Use sunscreen

200

Case:
A 55-year-old man is due for preventive care. He has no symptoms and no family history of colorectal cancer. He has never been screened.

Question: What preventive screening is recommended for this patient? What is the age range for this screening?

Answer:
Screen for colorectal cancer in adults aged 45–75 years (Grade A).

Explanation:
USPSTF recommends routine colorectal cancer screening beginning at age 45 and continuing through age 75.

200

Case:
A 46-year-old woman with hypertension, obesity, and dyslipidemia asks how to reduce her cardiovascular risk.

Question: What preventive intervention is recommended?

Answer:
Refer adults 18 years and older who have cardiovascular risk factors to intensive behavioral counseling interventions (Grade B).

Explanation:
Behavioral counseling focused on healthy diet and physical activity improves cardiovascular outcomes.

200

Case:
A healthy postpartum patient asks whether there are evidence-based interventions to improve breastfeeding success.

Question: What preventive intervention is recommended?

Answer:
Provide breastfeeding support interventions to pregnant and postpartum persons (Grade B).

Explanation:
Breastfeeding support provided. Observed feeding and corrected shallow latch. Reviewed feeding frequency, signs of adequate milk intake, and expected newborn feeding patterns. Discussed management of nipple discomfort and provided referral to lactation consultant. Follow-up arranged in 1 week to assess maternal concerns and infant weight gain. 

200

Case:
A 30-year-old woman presents for an annual preventive examination.

Question: What preventive screening is recommended?

Answer:
Screen all adults 18 years and older, including pregnant and postpartum persons, for depression (Grade B).

Explanation:
Routine screening improves identification and treatment of depression.

200

Case:
A 76-year-old man asks whether colorectal cancer screening should continue.

Question: What is the USPSTF recommendation?

Answer:
Individualized decision-making for colorectal cancer screening in adults aged 76–85 years (Grade C).

Explanation:
Decisions should consider overall health, life expectancy, and prior screening history.

300

Case:
A 72-year-old man has a 30-pack-year smoking history and quit smoking 10 years ago. He asks whether any cancer screening is recommended.

Question: What preventive screening is recommended for this patient? Mention specifics (2)

Answer:
Annual low-dose CT screening for lung cancer in adults aged 50–80 years with at least a 20-pack-year smoking history who currently smoke or quit within the past 15 years (Grade B).

Explanation:
This patient meets both the age and smoking-history criteria.

300

Case:
A pregnant woman with chronic hypertension and a history of preeclampsia presents at 14 weeks gestation.

Question: What preventive intervention is recommended?

Answer:
Initiate low-dose aspirin after 12 weeks gestation for pregnant persons at high risk for preeclampsia (Grade B).

Explanation:
The patient has multiple high-risk factors and is beyond the 12-week threshold.

300

Case:
A 41-year-old woman at increased risk for breast cancer, asks whether medication can reduce her future risk.

Question: What preventive intervention is recommended?

Answer:
Offer risk-reducing medications to women aged 35 years and older who are at increased risk for breast cancer and at low risk for adverse effects (Grade B).

Explanation:
Tamoxifen, raloxifene, and aromatase inhibitors are appropriate options for selected patients.

300

Case:
A 8-year-old child presents for a wellness visit with no mental health concerns.

Question: What preventive screening is recommended?

Answer:
Screen children and adolescents aged 8–18 years for anxiety disorders (Grade B).

Explanation:
Early identification can improve long-term mental health outcomes.

300

Case:
A healthy adolescent asks whether monthly testicular self-exams are recommended.

Question: What is the USPSTF recommendation?

Answer:
Do not screen for testicular cancer in asymptomatic adolescent or adult males (Grade D).

Explanation:
Testicular cancer is rare, highly treatable, and screening has not shown benefit.

400

Case:
A 38-year-old woman has two first-degree relatives with breast cancer diagnosed before age 50 and one relative with ovarian cancer.

Question: What preventive service is recommended?

Answer:
Perform BRCA-related risk assessment and refer for genetic counseling if indicated (Grade B).

Explanation:
Women with family histories suggestive of BRCA mutations should undergo risk assessment and possible genetic evaluation.

400

Case:
A healthy 52-year-old man with low cardiovascular risk asks whether a treadmill stress test should be part of his annual physical.

Question: What is the USPSTF recommendation?

Answer:
Do not screen with exercise ECG (Grade D).

Explanation:
Routine ECG screening in low-risk adults provides little benefit and may lead to unnecessary testing.

400

Case:
A 45-year-old woman asks whether screening for ovarian cancer should be part of her routine preventive care.

Question: What is the USPSTF recommendation?

Answer:
Do not screen for ovarian cancer (Grade D).

Explanation:
The harms of screening outweigh the benefits in asymptomatic women without high-risk hereditary syndromes.

400

Case:
A primary care clinic is considering implementing routine screening for unhealthy drug use among adults.

Question: What is the USPSTF recommendation?

Answer:
Screen adults age 18 years and older for unhealthy drug use when accurate diagnosis and treatment services are available (Grade B).

Explanation:
Early identification can improve outcomes when treatment resources are accessible.

400

Clue

Routine PSA screening is not recommended beginning at this age.

Answer:

Age 70 y/o

Explanation:

Evidence demonstrates little benefit and substantial potential harms after age 70.

500

Case:
A 68-year-old woman has had regular negative Pap smears throughout her life and no history of CIN2+ lesions. She asks whether she should continue cervical cancer screening.

Question: What is the USPSTF recommendation?

Answer:
Do not continue routine cervical cancer screening (Grade D).

Explanation:
Women older than 65 years with adequate prior screening and no high-risk factors should discontinue screening.

500

Case:
A 63-year-old woman with no history of cardiovascular disease asks whether she should start aspirin to prevent a first heart attack or stroke.

Question: What is the USPSTF recommendation?

Answer:
Do not initiate aspirin for primary prevention in adults aged 60 years and older (Grade D).

Explanation:
Bleeding risks outweigh cardiovascular benefits in this age group.

500

Case:
A 68-year-old postmenopausal woman without a history of fractures or CAD asks whether she should start estrogen-progestin therapy to prevent future heart disease, fractures, and dementia.

Question: What is the USPSTF recommendation?

Answer:
Do not use hormone therapy for primary prevention of chronic conditions (Grade D).

Explanation:
Potential harms outweigh benefits when hormone therapy is used solely for prevention.

500

Case:
A clinic asks whether all asymptomatic adults should undergo routine suicide risk screening during annual wellness visits.

Question: What is the USPSTF recommendation?

Answer:
Evidence is insufficient to recommend for or against routine suicide risk screening (I Statement).

Explanation:
Current evidence does not clearly demonstrate benefit or harm from universal screening.

500

Case:
A healthy postmenopausal woman asks whether she should take vitamin D and calcium supplements solely to prevent fractures.

Question: What is the USPSTF recommendation?

Answer:
Do not recommend low-dose vitamin D and calcium supplementation for primary fracture prevention (Grade D).

Explanation:
Evidence does not support benefit for fracture prevention and may expose patients to unnecessary risks.