Breast Cancer
The breasts sit on the chest
muscles that cover the ribs. Each breast is made
of 15 to 20 lobes. Lobes contain many smaller lobules. Lobules
contain groups of tiny glands that can produce milk. Milk
flows from the lobules through thin tubes called ducts to the
nipple. The nipple is in the center of a dark area of skin
called the areola. Fat fills the spaces between the lobules
and ducts.
The breasts also contain
lymph vessels. These vessels lead to small, round organs
called lymph nodes. Groups of lymph nodes are near the breast
in the axilla (underarm), above the collarbone, in the chest
behind the breastbone, and in many other parts of the body.
The lymph nodes trap bacteria, cancer cells, or other harmful
substances.

When breast
cancer cells spread, the cancer cells are often found in lymph
nodes near the breast. Also, breast cancer can spread to
almost any other part of the body. The most common are the
bones, liver, lungs, and brain. The new tumor has the same
kind of abnormal cells and the same name as the primary tumor.
For example, if breast cancer spreads to the bones, the cancer
cells in the bones are actually breast cancer cells. The
disease is metastatic breast cancer, not bone cancer. For that
reason, it is treated as breast cancer, not bone cancer.
Doctors call the new tumor "distant" or metastatic
disease.
Risk Factors
No one knows the exact
causes of breast cancer. Doctors often cannot explain why one
woman develops breast cancer and another does not. They do
know that bumping, bruising, or touching the breast does not
cause cancer. And breast cancer is not contagious. You cannot
"catch" it from another person.
Research has shown that
women with certain risk factors are more likely than others to
develop breast cancer. A risk factor is something that may
increase the chance of developing a disease.
Studies have found the
following risk factors for breast cancer:
- Age: The chance of
getting breast cancer goes up as a woman gets older. Most
cases of breast cancer occur in women over 60. This disease
is not common before menopause.
- Personal history of
breast cancer: A woman who had breast cancer in one breast
has an increased risk of getting cancer in her other breast.
- Family history: A
woman's risk of breast cancer is higher if her mother,
sister, or daughter had breast cancer. The risk is higher if
her family member got breast cancer before age 40. Having
other relatives with breast cancer (in either her mother's
or father's family) may also increase a woman's risk.
- Certain breast
changes: Some women have cells in the breast that look
abnormal under a microscope. Having certain types of
abnormal cells (atypical hyperplasia and lobular carcinoma
in situ [LCIS]) increases the risk of breast cancer.
- Gene changes: Changes
in certain genes increase the risk of breast cancer. These
genes include BRCA1, BRCA2, and others. Tests can sometimes
show the presence of specific gene changes in families with
many women who have had breast cancer. Health care providers
may suggest ways to try to reduce the risk of breast cancer,
or to improve the detection of this disease in women who
have these changes in their genes. NCI offers publications
on gene testing.
- Reproductive and
menstrual history:
- The older a woman is
when she has her first child, the greater her chance of
breast cancer.
- Women who had their
first menstrual period before age 12 are at an increased
risk of breast cancer.
- Women who went
through menopause after age 55 are at an increased risk of
breast cancer.
- Women who never had
children are at an increased risk of breast cancer.
- Women who take
menopausal hormone therapy with estrogen plus progestin
after menopause also appear to have an increased risk of
breast cancer.
- Large, well-designed
studies have shown no link between abortion or miscarriage
and breast cancer.
- Race: Breast cancer is
diagnosed more often in white women than Latina, Asian, or
African American women.
- Radiation therapy to
the chest: Women who had radiation therapy to the chest
(including breasts) before age 30 are at an increased risk
of breast cancer. This includes women treated with radiation
for Hodgkin's lymphoma. Studies show that the younger a
woman was when she received radiation treatment, the higher
her risk of breast cancer later in life.
- Breast density: Breast
tissue may be dense or fatty. Older women whose mammograms
(breast x-rays) show more dense tissue are at increased risk
of breast cancer.
- Taking DES
(diethylstilbestrol): DES was given to some pregnant women
in the United States between about 1940 and 1971. (It is no
longer given to pregnant women.) Women who took DES during
pregnancy may have a slightly increased risk of breast
cancer. The possible effects on their daughters are under
study.
- Being overweight or
obese after menopause: The chance of getting breast cancer
after menopause is higher in women who are overweight or
obese.
- Lack of physical
activity: Women who are physically inactive throughout life
may have an increased risk of breast cancer. Being active
may help reduce risk by preventing weight gain and obesity.
- Drinking alcohol:
Studies suggest that the more alcohol a woman drinks, the
greater her risk of breast cancer.
Other possible risk
factors are under study. Researchers are studying the effect
of diet, physical activity, and genetics on breast cancer
risk. They are also studying whether certain substances in the
environment can increase the risk of breast cancer.
Many risk factors can be
avoided. Others, such as family history, cannot be avoided.
Women can help protect themselves by staying away from known
risk factors whenever possible.
But it is also important
to keep in mind that most women who have known risk factors do
not get breast cancer. Also, most women with breast cancer do
not have a family history of the disease. In fact, except for
growing older, most women with breast cancer have no clear
risk factors.
If you think you may be
at risk, you should discuss this concern with your doctor.
Your doctor may be able to suggest ways to reduce your risk
and can plan a schedule for checkups.
Screening
Screening for breast
cancer before there are symptoms can be important. Screening
can help doctors find and treat cancer early. Treatment is
more likely to work well when cancer is found early.
Your doctor may suggest
the following screening tests for breast cancer:
- Screening mammogram
- Clinical breast exam
- Breast
self-exam
You should ask your
doctor about when to start and how often to check for breast
cancer.
To find breast cancer
early, NCI recommends that:
- Women in their 40s and
older should have mammograms every 1 to 2 years. A mammogram
is a picture of the breast made with x-rays.
- Women who are younger
than 40 and have risk factors for breast cancer should ask
their health care provider whether to have mammograms and
how often to have them.
Mammograms can often show
a breast lump before it can be felt. They also can show a
cluster of tiny specks of calcium. These specks are called
microcalcifications. Lumps or specks can be from cancer,
precancerous cells, or other conditions. Further tests are
needed to find out if abnormal cells are present.
If an abnormal area shows
up on your mammogram, you may need to have more x-rays. You
also may need a biopsy. A biopsy is the only way to tell for
sure if cancer is present. (The "Diagnosis" section has more
information on biopsy.)
Mammograms are the best
tool doctors have to find breast cancer early. However,
mammograms are not perfect:
- A mammogram may miss
some cancers. (The result is called a "false negative.")
- A mammogram may show
things that turn out not to be cancer. (The result is called
a "false positive.")
- Some fast-growing
tumors may grow large or spread to other parts of the body
before a mammogram detects them.
Mammograms (as well as
dental x-rays, and other routine x-rays) use very small doses
of radiation. The risk of any harm is very slight, but
repeated x-rays could cause problems. The benefits nearly
always outweigh the risk. You should talk with your health
care provider about the need for each x-ray. You should also
ask for shields to protect parts of your body that are not in
the picture.
During a clinical breast
exam, your health care provider checks your breasts. You may
be asked to raise your arms over your head, let them hang by
your sides, or press your hands against your hips.
Your health care provider
looks for differences in size or shape between your breasts.
The skin of your breasts is checked for a rash, dimpling, or
other abnormal signs. Your nipples may be squeezed to check
for fluid.
Using the pads of the
fingers to feel for lumps, your health care provider checks
your entire breast, underarm, and collarbone area. A lump is
generally the size of a pea before anyone can feel it. The
exam is done on one side, then the other. Your health care
provider checks the lymph nodes near the breast to see if they
are enlarged.
A thorough clinical
breast exam may take about 10 minutes.
You may perform monthly
breast self-exams to check for any changes in your breasts. It
is important to remember that changes can occur because of
aging, your menstrual cycle, pregnancy, menopause, or taking
birth control pills or other hormones. It is normal for
breasts to feel a little lumpy and uneven. Also, it is common
for your breasts to be swollen and tender right before or
during your menstrual period.
You should contact your
health care provider if you notice any unusual changes in your
breasts.
Breast self-exams cannot
replace regular screening mammograms and clinical breast
exams. Studies have not shown that breast self-exams alone
reduce the number of deaths from breast cancer.
Treatment
Many women with breast
cancer want to take an active part in making decisions about
their medical care. It is natural to want to learn all you can
about your disease and treatment choices. Knowing more about
breast cancer helps many women cope.
Shock and stress after
the diagnosis can make it hard to think of everything you want
to ask your doctor. It often helps to make a list of questions
before an appointment. To help remember what the doctor says,
you may take notes or ask whether you may use a tape recorder.
You may also want to have a family member or friend with you
when you talk to the doctor - to take part in the discussion,
to take notes, or just to listen. You do not need to ask all
your questions at once. You will have other chances to ask
your doctor or nurse to explain things that are not clear and
to ask for more details.
Your doctor may refer you
to a specialist, or you may ask for a referral. Specialists
who treat breast cancer include surgeons, medical oncologists, and radiation
oncologists. You also may be referred to a plastic surgeon.
Before
starting treatment, you might want a second opinion about your
diagnosis and treatment plan. Many insurance companies cover a
second opinion if you or your doctor requests it. It may take
some time and effort to gather medical records and arrange to
see another doctor. You may have to gather your mammogram
films, biopsy slides, pathology report, and proposed treatment
plan. Usually it is not a problem to take several weeks to get
a second opinion. In most cases, the delay in starting
treatment will not make treatment less effective. To make
sure, you should discuss this delay with your doctor. Some
women with breast cancer need treatment right away.
Women with
breast cancer have many treatment options. These include
surgery, radiation therapy, chemotherapy, hormone therapy, and
biological therapy. These options are described below. Many
women receive more than one type of treatment.
The choice
of treatment depends mainly on the stage of the disease.
Treatment options by stage are described below.
Your doctor
can describe your treatment choices and the expected results.
You may want to know how treatment may change your normal
activities. You may want to know how you will look during and
after treatment. You and your doctor can work together to
develop a treatment plan that reflects your medical needs and
personal values.
Cancer
treatment is either local therapy or systemic therapy
- Local
therapy: Surgery and radiation therapy are local treatments.
They remove or destroy cancer in the breast. When breast
cancer has spread to other parts of the body, local therapy
may be used to control the disease in those specific areas.
- Systemic
therapy: Chemotherapy, hormone therapy, and biological
therapy are systemic treatments. They enter the bloodstream
and destroy or control cancer throughout the body. Some
women with breast cancer have systemic therapy to shrink the
tumor before surgery or radiation. Others have systemic
therapy after surgery and/or radiation to prevent the cancer
from coming back. Systemic treatments also are used for
cancer that has spread.
Because
cancer treatments often damage healthy cells and tissues, side
effects are common. Side effects depend mainly on the type and
extent of the treatment. Side effects may not be the same for
each woman, and they may change from one treatment session to
the next.
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You may want to ask your
doctor these questions before your treatment
begins:
- What did the hormone
receptor test show? What did other lab tests show?
- Do any lymph nodes show
signs of cancer?
- What is the stage of
the disease? Has the cancer spread?
- What is the goal of
treatment? What are my treatment choices? Which do you
recommend for me? Why?
- What are the expected
benefits of each kind of treatment?
- What are the risks and
possible side effects of each treatment? How can side
effects be managed?
- What can I do to
prepare for treatment?
- Will I need to stay in
the hospital? If so, for how long?
- What is the treatment
likely to cost? Will my insurance cover the cost?
- How will treatment
affect my normal activities?
- Would a clinical trial
be appropriate for me?
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Surgery is
the most common treatment for breast cancer. There are several
types of surgery. Your doctor can explain each type, discuss
and compare the benefits and risks, and describe how each will
change the way you look:
- Breast-sparing surgery: An operation to
remove the cancer but not the breast is breast-sparing
surgery. It is also called breast-conserving surgery,
lumpectomy, segmental mastectomy, and partial
mastectomy. Sometimes an excisional biopsy serves as a
lumpectomy because the surgeon removes the whole lump.
The
surgeon often removes the underarm lymph nodes as well. A
separate incision is made. This procedure is called an
axillary lymph node dissection. It shows whether cancer
cells have entered the lymphatic system.
After
breast-sparing surgery, most women receive radiation therapy
to the breast. This treatment destroys cancer cells that may
remain in the breast.
- Mastectomy: An operation to remove the
breast (or as much of the breast tissue as possible) is a
mastectomy. In most cases, the surgeon also removes lymph
nodes under the arm. Some women have radiation therapy after
surgery.
Studies
have found equal survival rates for breast-sparing surgery
(with radiation therapy) and mastectomy for Stage I and Stage
II breast cancer.
Sentinel lymph node biopsy is a new method of
checking for cancer cells in the lymph nodes. A surgeon
removes fewer lymph nodes, which causes fewer side effects.
(If the doctor finds cancer cells in the axillary lymph nodes,
an axillary lymph node dissection usually is done.)
Information about ongoing studies of sentinel lymph node
biopsy is in the section on "The Promise of Cancer Research."
These studies will learn the lasting effects of removing fewer
lymph nodes.
You may
choose to have breast reconstruction. This is plastic surgery
to rebuild the shape of the breast. It may be done at the same
time as a mastectomy or later. If you are considering
reconstruction, you may wish to talk with a plastic surgeon
before having a mastectomy. More information is in the "Breast
Reconstruction" section.
The time it
takes to heal after surgery is different for each woman.
Surgery causes pain and tenderness. Medicine can help control
the pain. Before surgery, you should discuss the plan for pain
relief with your doctor or nurse. After surgery, your doctor
can adjust the plan if you need more relief. Any kind of
surgery also carries a risk of infection, bleeding, or other
problems. You should tell your health care provider right away
if you develop any problems.
You may
feel off balance if you've had one or both breasts removed.
You may feel more off balance if you have large breasts. This
imbalance can cause discomfort in your neck and back. Also,
the skin where your breast was removed may feel tight. Your
arm and shoulder muscles may feel stiff and weak. These
problems usually go away. The doctor, nurse, or physical
therapist can suggest exercises to help you regain movement
and strength in your arm and shoulder. Exercise can also
reduce stiffness and pain. You may be able to begin gentle
exercises within days of surgery.
Because
nerves may be injured or cut during surgery, you may have
numbness and tingling in your chest, underarm, shoulder, and
upper arm. These feelings usually go away within a few weeks
or months. But for some women, numbness does not go away.
Removing
the lymph nodes under the arm slows the flow of lymph fluid.
The fluid may build up in your arm and hand and cause
swelling. This swelling is lymphedema. Lymphedema can develop
right after surgery or months to years later.
You will
need to protect your arm and hand on the treated side for the
rest of your life:
- Avoid
wearing tight clothing or jewelry on your affected arm
- Carry
your purse or luggage with the other arm
- Use an
electric razor to avoid cuts when shaving under your arm
- Have
shots, blood tests, and blood pressure measurements on the
other arm
- Wear
gloves to protect your hands when gardening and when using
strong detergents
- Have
careful manicures and avoid cutting your cuticles
- Avoid
burns or sunburns to your affected arm and hand
You should
ask your doctor how to handle any cuts, insect bites, sunburn,
or other injuries to your arm or hand. Also, you should
contact the doctor if your arm or hand is injured, swells, or
becomes red and warm.
If
lymphedema occurs, the doctor may suggest raising your arm
above your heart whenever you can. The doctor may show you
hand and arm exercises. Some women with lymphedema wear an
elastic sleeve to improve lymph circulation. Medication,
manual lymph drainage (massage), or use of a machine that
gently compresses the arm may also help. You may be referred
to a physical therapist or another specialist.
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You may want to ask your
doctor these questions before having
surgery:
- What kinds of surgery
can I consider? Is breast-sparing surgery an option
for me? Which operation do you recommend for me? Why?
- Will my lymph nodes be
removed? How many? Why?
- How will I feel after
the operation? Will I have to stay in the hospital?
- Will I need to learn
how to take care of myself or my incision when I get
home?
- Where will the scars
be? What will they look like?
- If I decide to have
plastic surgery to rebuild my breast, how and when can
that be done? Can you suggest a plastic surgeon for me
to contact?
- Will I have to do
special exercises to help regain motion and strength
in my arm and shoulder? Will a physical therapist or
nurse show me how to do the exercises?
- Is there someone I can
talk with who has had the same surgery I'll be having?
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Radiation
therapy (also called radiotherapy) uses high-energy rays to
kill cancer cells. Most women receive radiation therapy after
breast-sparing surgery. Some women receive radiation therapy
after a mastectomy. Treatment depends on the size of the tumor
and other factors. The radiation destroys breast cancer cells
that may remain in the area.
Some women
have radiation therapy before surgery to destroy cancer cells
and shrink the tumor. Doctors use this approach when the tumor
is large or may be hard to remove. Some women also have
chemotherapy or hormone therapy before surgery.
Doctors use
two types of radiation therapy to treat breast cancer. Some
women receive both types:
- External radiation: The radiation comes
from a large machine outside the body. Most women go to a
hospital or clinic for treatment. Treatments are usually 5
days a week for several weeks.
- Internal radiation (implant radiation):
Thin plastic tubes (implants) that hold a radioactive
substance are put directly in the breast. The implants stay
in place for several days. A woman stays in the hospital
while she has implants. Doctors remove the implants before
she goes home.
Side
effects depend mainly on the dose and type of radiation and
the part of your body that is treated.
It is
common for the skin in the treated area to become red, dry,
tender, and itchy. Your breast may feel heavy and tight. These
problems will go away over time. Toward the end of treatment,
your skin may become moist and "weepy." Exposing this area to
air as much as possible can help the skin heal.
Bras and
some other types of clothing may rub your skin and cause
soreness. You may want to wear loose-fitting cotton clothes
during this time. Gentle skin care also is important. You
should check with your doctor before using any deodorants,
lotions, or creams on the treated area. These effects of
radiation therapy on the skin will go away. The area gradually
heals once treatment is over. However, there may be a lasting
change in the color of your skin.
You are
likely to become very tired during radiation therapy,
especially in the later weeks of treatment. Resting is
important, but doctors usually advise patients to try to stay
as active as they can.
Although
the side effects of radiation therapy can be distressing, your
doctor can usually relieve them.
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You may want to ask your
doctor these questions before having radiation
therapy:
- How will radiation be
given?
- When will treatment
start? When will it end? How often will I have
treatments?
- How will I feel during
treatment? Will I be able to drive myself to and from
treatment?
- How will we know the
treatment is working?
- What can I do to take
care of myself before, during, and after treatment?
- Will treatment affect
my skin?
- How will my chest look
afterward?
- Are there any long-term
effects?
- What is the chance that
the cancer will come back in my breast?
- How often will I need
checkups?
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Chemotherapy uses anticancer drugs to kill
cancer cells. Chemotherapy for breast cancer is usually a
combination of drugs. The drugs may be given as a pill or by
injection into a vein (IV). Either way, the drugs enter the
bloodstream and travel throughout the body.
Women with
breast cancer can have chemotherapy in an outpatient part of
the hospital, at the doctor's office, or at home. Some women
need to stay in the hospital during treatment.
Side
effects depend mainly on the specific drugs and the dose. The
drugs affect cancer cells and other cells that divide rapidly:
- Blood
cells: These cells fight infection, help your blood to clot,
and carry oxygen to all parts of the body. When drugs affect
your blood cells, you are more likely to get infections,
bruise or bleed easily, and feel very weak and tired. Years
after chemotherapy, some women have developed leukemia
(cancer of the blood cells).
- Cells in
hair roots: Chemotherapy can cause hair loss. Your hair will
grow back, but it may be somewhat different in color and
texture.
- Cells
that line the digestive tract: Chemotherapy can cause poor
appetite, nausea and vomiting, diarrhea, or mouth and lip
sores.
Your doctor
can suggest ways to control many of these side effects.
Some drugs
used for breast cancer can cause tingling or numbness in the
hands or feet. This problem usually goes away after treatment
is over. Other problems may not go away. In some women, the
drugs used for breast cancer may weaken the heart.
Some
anticancer drugs can damage the ovaries. The ovaries may stop
making hormones. You may have symptoms of menopause. The
symptoms include hot flashes and vaginal dryness. Your
menstrual periods may no longer be regular or may stop. Some
women become infertile (unable to become pregnant). For women
over the age of 35, infertility is likely to be permanent.
On the
other hand, you may remain fertile during chemotherapy and be
able to become pregnant. The effects of chemotherapy on an
unborn child are not known. You should talk to your doctor
about birth control before treatment begins.
Some breast
tumors need hormones to grow. Hormone therapy keeps cancer
cells from getting or using the natural hormones they need.
These hormones are estrogen and progesterone. Lab tests can
show if a breast tumor has hormone receptors. If you have this
kind of tumor, you may have hormone therapy.
This
treatment uses drugs or surgery:
- Drugs:
Your doctor may suggest a drug that can block the natural
hormone. One drug is tamoxifen, which blocks estrogen.
Another type of drug prevents the body from making the
female hormone estradiol. Estradiol is a form of estrogen.
This type of drug is an aromatase inhibitor. If you have not
gone through menopause, your doctor may give you a drug that
stops the ovaries from making estrogen.
- Surgery:
If you have not gone through menopause, you may have surgery
to remove your ovaries. The ovaries are the main source of
the body's estrogen. A woman who has gone through menopause
does not need surgery. (The ovaries produce less estrogen
after menopause.)
The side
effects of hormone therapy depend largely on the specific drug
or type of treatment. Tamoxifen is the most common hormone
treatment. In general, the side effects of tamoxifen are
similar to some of the symptoms of menopause. The most common
are hot flashes and vaginal discharge. Other side effects are
irregular menstrual periods, headaches, fatigue, nausea,
vomiting, vaginal dryness or itching, irritation of the skin
around the vagina, and skin rash. Not all women who take
tamoxifen have side effects.
It is
possible to become pregnant when taking tamoxifen. Tamoxifen
may harm the unborn baby. If you are still menstruating, you
should discuss birth control methods with your doctor.
Serious
side effects of tamoxifen are rare. However, it can cause
blood clots in the veins. Blood clots form most often in the
legs and in the lungs. Women have a slight increase in their
risk of stroke.
Tamoxifen
can cause cancer of the uterus. Your doctor should perform
regular pelvic exams. You should tell your doctor about any
unusual vaginal bleeding between exams.
When the
ovaries are removed, menopause occurs at once. The side
effects are often more severe than those caused by natural
menopause. Your health care provider can suggest ways to cope
with these side effects.
Biological
therapy helps the immune system fight cancer. The immune
system is the body's natural defense against disease.
Some women
with breast cancer that has spread receive a biological
therapy called Herceptin® (trastuzumab). It is a monoclonal
antibody. It is made in the laboratory and binds to cancer
cells.
Herceptin
is given to women whose lab tests show that a breast tumor has
too much of a specific protein known as HER2. By blocking
HER2, it can slow or stop the growth of the cancer cells.
Herceptin
is given by vein. It may be given alone or with chemotherapy.
The first
time a woman receives Herceptin, the most common side effects
are fever and chills. Some women also have pain, weakness,
nausea, vomiting, diarrhea, headaches, difficulty breathing,
or rashes. Side effects usually become milder after the first
treatment.
Herceptin
also may cause heart damage. This may lead to heart failure.
Herceptin can also affect the lungs. It can cause breathing
problems that require a doctor at once. Before you receive
Herceptin, your doctor will check for your heart and lungs.
During treatment, your doctor will watch for signs of lung
problems.
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You may want to ask your
doctor these questions before having chemotherapy,
hormone therapy, or biological
therapy:
- What drugs will I be
taking? What will they do?
- If I need hormone
treatment, would you recommend drugs or surgery to
remove my ovaries?
- When will treatment
start? When will it end? How often will I have
treatments?
- Where will I go for
treatment? Will I be able to drive home afterward?
- What can I do to take
care of myself during treatment?
- How will we know the
treatment is working?
- Which side effects
should I tell you about?
- Will there be long-term
effects?
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Your
treatment options depend on the stage of your disease and
these factors:
- The size
of the tumor in relation to the size of your breast
- The
results of lab tests (such as whether the breast cancer
cells need hormones to grow)
- Whether
you have gone through menopause
- Your
general health
Below are
brief descriptions of common treatments for each stage. Other
treatments may be appropriate for some women. Clinical trials
can be an option at all stages of breast cancer. "The Promise
of Cancer Research" section has information about clinical
trials.
Stage 0
Stage 0
breast cancer refers to lobular carcinoma in situ (LCIS) or
ductal carcinoma in situ (DCIS):
- LCIS:
Most women with LCIS do not have treatment. Instead, the
doctor may suggest regular checkups to watch for signs of
breast cancer.
Some
women take tamoxifen to reduce the risk of developing breast
cancer. Others may take part in studies of promising new
preventive treatments.
Having
LCIS in one breast increases the risk of cancer for both
breasts. A very small number of women with LCIS try to
prevent cancer with surgery to remove both breasts. This is
a bilateral prophylactic mastectomy. The surgeon usually
does not remove the underarm lymph nodes.
- DCIS:
Most women with DCIS have breast-sparing surgery followed by
radiation therapy. Some women choose to have a total
mastectomy. Underarm lymph nodes are not usually removed.
Women with DCIS may receive tamoxifen to reduce the risk of
developing invasive breast cancer.
Stages I,
II, IIIA, and Operable IIIC
Women with
Stage I, II, IIIA, and operable (can treat with surgery) IIIC
breast cancer may have a combination of treatments. Some may
have breast-sparing surgery followed by radiation therapy to
the breast. This choice is common for women with Stage I or II
breast cancer. Others decide to have a mastectomy.
With either
approach, women (especially those with Stage II or IIIA breast
cancer) often have lymph nodes under the arm removed. The
doctor may suggest radiation therapy after mastectomy if
cancer cells are found in 1 to 3 lymph nodes under the arm, or
if the tumor in the breast is large. If cancer cells are found
in more than 3 lymph nodes under the arm, the doctor usually
will suggest radiation therapy after mastectomy.
The choice
between breast-sparing surgery (followed by radiation therapy)
and mastectomy depends on many factors:
- The
size, location, and stage of the tumor
- The size
of the woman's breast
- Certain
features of the cancer
- How the
woman feels about saving her breast
- How the
woman feels about radiation therapy
- The
woman's ability to travel to a radiation treatment center
Some women
have chemotherapy before surgery. This is neoadjuvant therapy
(treatment before the main treatment). Chemotherapy before
surgery may shrink a large tumor so that breast-sparing
surgery is possible. Women with large Stage II or IIIA breast
tumors often choose this treatment.
After
surgery, many women receive adjuvant therapy. Adjuvant therapy
is treatment given after the main treatment to increase the
chances of a cure. Radiation treatment can kill cancer cells
in and near the breast. Women also may have systemic treatment
such as chemotherapy, hormone therapy, or both. This treatment
can destroy cancer cells that remain anywhere in the body. It
can prevent the cancer from coming back in the breast or
elsewhere.
Stages IIIB
and Inoperable IIIC
Women with
Stage IIIB (including inflammatory breast cancer) or
inoperable Stage IIIC breast cancer usually have chemotherapy.
(Inoperable cancer means it cannot be treated with surgery.)
If the
chemotherapy shrinks the tumor, the doctor then may suggest
further treatment:
- Mastectomy: The surgeon removes the breast.
In most cases, the lymph nodes under the arm are removed.
After surgery, a woman may receive radiation therapy to the
chest and underarm area.
- Breast-sparing surgery: The surgeon removes
the cancer but not the breast. In most cases, the lymph
nodes under the arm are removed. After surgery, a woman may
receive radiation therapy to the breast and underarm area.
- Radiation therapy instead of surgery: Some
women have radiation therapy but no surgery. The doctor also
may recommend more chemotherapy, hormone therapy, or both.
This therapy may help prevent the disease from coming back
in the breast or elsewhere.
Stage
IV
In most
cases, women with Stage IV breast cancer have hormone therapy,
chemotherapy, or both. Some also may have biological therapy.
Radiation may be used to control tumors in certain parts of
the body. These treatments are not likely to cure the disease,
but they may help a woman live longer.
Many women
have supportive care along with anticancer treatments.
Anticancer treatments are given to slow the progress of the
disease. Supportive care helps manage pain, other symptoms, or
side effects (such as nausea). It does not aim to extend a
woman's life. Supportive care can help a woman feel better
physically and emotionally. Some women with advanced cancer
decide to have only supportive care.
Recurrent
Breast Cancer
Recurrent
cancer is cancer that has come back after it could not be
detected. Treatment for the recurrent disease depends mainly
on the location and extent of the cancer. Another main factor
is the type of treatment the woman had before.
If breast
cancer comes back only in the breast after breast-sparing
surgery, the woman may have a mastectomy. Chances are good
that the disease will not come back again.
If breast
cancer recurs in other parts of the body, treatment may
involve chemotherapy, hormone therapy, or biological therapy.
Radiation therapy may help control cancer that recurs in the
chest muscles or in certain other areas of the body.
Treatment can seldom cure cancer that recurs outside
the breast. Supportive care is often an important part of the
treatment plan. Many patients have supportive care to ease
their symptoms and anticancer treatments to slow the progress
of the disease. Some receive only supportive care to improve
their quality of life.