Breast cancer Health Article

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Understanding the Stages of Breast Cancer
The Pros and Cons of Breast Cancer Adjuvant Therapy
Using Aromatase Inhibitors in Early Stage Breast Cancer
Breast Cancer Genetics
Hormonal Therapy for Breast Cancer: Assessing Benefits and Side Effects
Breast Cancer: What is Your Risk?
How to Succeed With Breast Cancer Adjuvant Therapy
A Good Doctor-Patient Relationship in Breast Cancer
Anthracyclines in Adjuvant Breast Cancer Therapy: Survival Benefits
Hormonal Therapy for Breast Cancer: New Options
New Technologies in Breast Cancer: Breast Ultrasound
What is Hormone Receptor Positive Breast Cancer?
Anthracyclines for Breast Cancer: Does Stage Matter?
Bone Complications in Breast Cancer
Interpreting Mammograms
Which Adjuvant Therapy is Right for Your Breast Cancer?
Preventing Breast Cancer Recurrence: What's Right for Me?
Technologies in Breast Cancer: Breast MRI
Breast Cancer Trials: How Have They Changed Breast Cancer Therapy?
Advice To Women Newly Diagnosed With Breast Cancer
Technologies in Breast Cancer: Digital Mammography
A New Voice in Breast Cancer Activism: Soraya's Story
Breast Cancer Detection
Better Breast Cancer Therapy: Making Anthracyclines More Effective
Hormone Replacement Therapy vs. Hormonal Treatment: What's the Difference?
Living with Breast Cancer Treatments: Personal Stories
Preparing For Side Effects: What to Expect From Breast Cancer Therapies
Technologies in Breast Cancer: Positron Emission Tomography
Understanding Hormonal Therapy for Early Stage Breast Cancer
Hormonal Therapy for Breast Cancer: Current Issues
Talking to Your Doctor About Early-Stage Breast Cancer
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Symptoms

Early breast cancer usually does not cause symptoms. This is why regular breast exams are important. As the cancer grows, symptoms may include:

  • Breast lump or lump in the armpit that is hard, has uneven edges, and usually does not hurt
  • Change in the size, shape, or feel of the breast or nipple -- for example, you may have redness, dimpling, or puckering that looks like the skin of an orange
  • Fluid coming from the nipple -- may be bloody, clear-to-yellow, or green, and look like pus

Men get breast cancer, too. Symptoms include breast lump and breast pain and tenderness.

Symptoms of advanced breast cancer may include:

  • Bone pain
  • Breast pain or discomfort
  • Skin ulcers
  • Swelling of one arm (next to breast with cancer)
  • Weight loss

Signs and tests

The doctor will ask you about your symptoms and risk factors, and then perform a physical exam, which includes both breasts, armpits, and the neck and chest area. Additional tests may include:

  • Mammography to help identify the breast lump
  • Breast MRI to help better identify the breast lump
  • Breast ultrasound to show whether the lump is solid or fluid-filled
  • Breast biopsy, needle aspiration, or breast lump removal to remove all or part of the breast lump for closer examination by a laboratory specialist

If your doctor learns that you do have breast cancer, additional tests will be done to see if the cancer has spread. This is called staging. Staging helps guide future treatment and follow-up and gives you some idea of what to expect in the future.

Breast cancer stages range from 0 to IV. In general, breast cancer that stays where it has started is called in situ or noninvasive breast cancer. If it spreads, it is called invasive breast cancer. The higher the number, the more advanced the cancer.

Treatment

Treatment is based on many factors, including type and stage of the cancer, whether the cancer is sensitive to certain hormones, and whether or not the cancer overproduces (overexpresses) a gene called HER2/neu.

In general, cancer treatments may include:

Other treatments:

  • Hormonal therapy to block certain hormones that fuel cancer growth
  • Targeted therapy to interfere with cancer cell grow and function

An example of hormonal therapy is the drug tamoxifen. This drug blocks the effects of estrogen, which can help breast cancer cells survive and grow. Most women with estrogen sensitive breast cancer benefit from this drug. A newer class of medicines called aromatase inhibitors, such as exemestane (Aromasin), have been shown to work just as well or even better than tamoxifen in post-menopausal women with breast cancer.

Targeted therapy, also called biologic therapy, is a newer type of cancer treatment. This therapy uses special anti-cancer drugs that identify certain changes in a cell that can lead to cancer. One such drug is trastuzumab (Herceptin). For women with stage IV HER2-positive breast cancer, Herceptin plus chemotherapy has been shown to be work better than chemotherapy alone. Studies have also shown that in women with early stage HER2-positive breast cancer, this medicine plus chemotherapy cuts the risk of the cancer coming back by 50%.

Cancer treatment may be local or systemic.

  • Local treatments involve only the area of disease. Radiation and surgery are forms of local treatment.
  • Systemic treatments affect the entire body. Chemotherapy is a type of systemic treatment.

Most women receive a combination of treatments. For women with stage I, II, or III breast cancer, the main goal is to treat the cancer and prevent it from returning. For women with stage IV cancer, the goal is to improve symptoms and help them live longer. In most cases, stage IV breast cancer cannot be cured.

Stage 0 -- Lumpectomy plus radiation or mastectomy is the standard treatment. There is some controversy on how best to treat DCIS.

Stage I and II -- Lumpectomy plus radiation or mastectomy with some sort of lymph node removal is standard treatment. Hormone therapy, chemotherapy, and biologic therapy may also be recommended following surgery.

Stage III -- Treatment involves surgery possibly followed by chemotherapy, hormone therapy, and biologic therapy.

Stage IV -- Treatment may involve surgery, radiation, chemotherapy, hormonal therapy, or a combination of such treatments.

Support Groups

Talking about your disease and treatment with others who share common experiences and problems can be helpful. See: Cancer support group

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Reviewer Info: Rita Nanda, M.D., Department of Medicine, Section of Hematology/Oncology, University of Chicago Medical Center, Chicago, IL. Review provided byVeriMed Healthcare Network.; ADAM Health Illustrated Encyclopedia, 04/03/2007
 
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