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Breast
Cancer
Breast cancer is the most common malignancy in women and the second
leading cause of cancer death. Breast cancer is three times more
common than all gynecologic malignancies put together. The incidence
of breast cancer has been increasing steadily from an incidence
of 1:20 in 1960 to 1:7 women today. The American Cancer Society
estimates that 211,000 new cases of invasive breast cancer will
be diagnosed this year and 43,300 patients will die from the disease.
The
incidence of breast cancer is very low in the twenties (age) gradually
increases and plateaus at the age of forty-five and increases dramatically
after fifty. Fifty percent of breast cancer is diagnosed in women
over sixty-five indicating the ongoing necessity of yearly screening
throughout a woman's life.
Breast cancer is considered a heterogeneous disease, meaning that
it is a different disease in different women, a different disease
in different age groups and has different cell populations within
the tumor itself. Generally, breast cancer is a much more aggressive
disease in younger women. Older women typically have much less aggressive
disease than younger women.
Breast Cancer Stages and Treatment Options :-
There are many different varieties of breast cancer. Some are fast
growing and unpredictable. Some are slow and steady. You and your
doctors will plan your treatment based on the special characteristics
of your breast cancer. To help you understand the traits of your
cancer, and your treatment options, here's information from 4WomenSexualhealth.com.
Overview: When Cancer Is Found
The most common type of breast cancer is ductal carcinoma. It begins
in the lining of the ducts. Another type, called lobular carcinoma,
arises in the lobules. When cancer is found, the pathologist can
tell what kind of cancer it is (whether it began in a duct or a
lobule) and whether it is invasive (has invaded nearby tissues in
the breast). In most cases, the most important factor is the stage
of the disease. The stage is based on the size of the tumor and
whether the cancer has spread. The following are brief descriptions
of the stages of breast cancer and the treatments most often used
for each stage. (Other treatments may sometimes be appropriate.)
Stage 0 :-
Stage 0 is sometimes called noninvasive carcinoma or carcinoma in
situ. Lobular carcinoma in situ (LCIS) refers to abnormal cells
in the lining of a lobule. These abnormal cells seldom become invasive
cancer. However, their presence is a sign that a woman has an increased
risk of developing breast cancer. This risk of cancer is increased
for both breasts. Some women with LCIS may take a drug called tamoxifen,
which can reduce the risk of developing breast cancer. Others may
take part in studies of other promising new preventive treatments.
Some women may choose not to have treatment, but to return to the
doctor regularly for checkups. And, occasionally, women with LCIS
may decide to have surgery to remove both breasts to try to prevent
cancer from developing. (In most cases, removal of underarm lymph
nodes is not necessary.) Ductal carcinoma in situ (DCIS) refers
to abnormal cells in the lining of a duct. DCIS is also called inarticulate
carcinoma. The abnormal cells have not spread beyond the duct to
invade the surrounding breast tissue. However, women with DCIS are
at an increased risk of getting invasive breast cancer. Some women
with DCIS have breast-sparing surgery followed by radiation therapy.
Or they may choose to have a mastectomy, with or without breast
reconstruction (plastic surgery) to rebuild the breast. Underarm
lymph nodes are not usually removed. Also, women with DCIS may want
to talk with their doctor about tamoxifen to reduce the risk
of developing invasive breast cancer.
Stage I and II :-
Stage I and stage II are early stages of breast cancer in which
the cancer has spread beyond the lobe or duct and invaded nearby
tissue. Stage I means that the tumor is no more than about an inch
across and cancer cells have not spread beyond the breast. Stage
II means one of the following: the tumor in the breast is less than
1 inch across and the cancer has spread to the lymph nodes under
the arm; or the tumor is between 1 and 2 inches (with or without
spread to the lymph nodes under the arm); or the tumor is larger
than 2 inches but has not spread to the lymph nodes under the arm.
Women with early stage breast cancer may have breast-sparing surgery
followed by radiation therapy to the breast, or they may have a
mastectomy, with or without breast reconstruction to rebuild the
breast. These approaches are equally effective in treating early
stage breast cancer. Many women with stage I and most with stage
II breast cancer have chemotherapy and/or hormonal therapy after
primary treatment with surgery or surgery and radiation therapy.
This added treatment is called adjuvant therapy. If the systemic
therapy is given to shrink the tumor before surgery, this is called
neoadjuvant therapy. Systemic treatment is given to try to
destroy any remaining cancer cells and prevent the cancer from recurring,
or coming back, in the breast or elsewhere.
Stage III :-
Stage III is also called locally advanced cancer. In this stage,
the tumor in the breast is large (more than 2 inches across) and
the cancer has spread to the underarm lymph nodes; or the cancer
is extensive in the underarm lymph nodes; or the cancer has spread
to lymph nodes near the breastbone or to other tissues near the
breast. Patients with stage III breast cancer usually have both
local treatment to remove or destroy the cancer in the breast and
systemic treatment to stop the disease from spreading. The local
treatment may be surgery and/or radiation therapy to the breast
and underarm. The systemic treatment may be chemotherapy, hormonal
therapy, or both. Systemic therapy may be given before local therapy
to shrink the tumor or afterward to prevent the disease from recurring
in the breast or elsewhere.
Stage
IV :-
Stage IV is metastatic cancer. The cancer has spread beyond the
breast and underarm lymph nodes to other parts of the body. Women
who have stage IV breast cancer receive chemotherapy and/or hormonal
therapy to destroy cancer cells and control the disease. They
may have surgery or radiation therapy to control the cancer in the
breast. Radiation may also be useful to control tumors in other
parts of the body. Recurrent cancer means the disease has come back
in spite of the initial treatment. Even when a tumor in the breast
seems to have been completely removed or destroyed, the disease
sometimes returns because undetected cancer cells remained somewhere
in the body after treatment. Most recurrences appear within the
first 2 or 3 years after treatment, but breast cancer can recur
many years later.
Cancer that returns only in the area of the surgery is called a
local recurrence breast cancer. If the disease returns in another
part of the body, the distant recurrence is called metastatic
breast cancer. The patient may have one type of treatment or
a combination of treatments for recurrent cancer.
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