What Is Breast Cancer?
Breast cancer is when the cells under one or both breasts grow out of control. Those cells may spread beyond your breasts. When that happens, the cancer is called metastatic.
Breast cancer usually begins either in your glands that make milk (called lobular carcinoma) or the ducts that carry it to the nipple (called ductal carcinoma). It can grow larger in your breast and spread to nearby lymph nodes or through your bloodstream to other organs. The cancer may grow and invade tissue around your breast, such as your skin or chest wall.
Different types of breast cancer grow and spread at different rates. Some take years to spread beyond your breast, while others grow and spread quickly.
Breast Cancer Symptoms
A lump under the breast, which you may or may not feel, is usually the first sign of breast cancer. When you get a mammogram, your doctor may notice this lump. You also may not notice any signs in the early stages.
- A lump or thickened area in or near your breast or underarm that lasts through your period
- A mass or lump, even if it feels as small as a pea
- A change in your breast’s size, shape, or curve
- Nipple discharge that can be bloody or clear
- Changes in the skin of your breast or your nipple. It could be dimpled, puckered, scaly, or inflamed.
- Red skin on your breast or nipple
- Changes in the shape or position of your nipple
- An area that’s different from any other area on either breast
- A hard, marble-sized spot under your skin
Types of Breast Cancer
Some of the most common types of breast cancer include:
In situ cancers. These types haven’t spread past the duct or lobule where they started.
- Ductal carcinoma in situ (DCIS). This is ductal carcinoma in its earliest stage (stage 0). In this case, the disease is still in the milk ducts. But if you don’t treat this type, it can become invasive. It’s often curable.
- Lobular carcinoma in situ (LCIS). This is found only in the lobules, which produce breast milk. It isn’t a true cancer, but it means you’re more likely to get breast cancer later. If you have it, get regular breast exams and mammograms.
- Invasive or infiltrating ductal carcinoma (IDC). This cancer starts in the milk ducts. It breaks through the wall of the duct and invades the fatty tissue of the breast. It’s the most common form, accounting for 80% of invasive cases.
- Invasive lobular carcinoma (ILC). This cancer starts in the lobules but spreads to surrounding tissues or other body parts. It accounts for about 10% of invasive breast cancers. Subtypes of this invasive breast cancer include:
- Adenoid cystic (or adenocystic) carcinoma. These are similar to cells found in your salivary glands and saliva.
- Low-grade adenosquamous carcinoma (a type of metaplastic carcinoma). This rare tumor is usually slow-growing and often mistaken for other types.
- Medullary carcinoma. The tumors in this rare type are a soft, squishy mass that looks like part of your brain called the medulla.
- Mucinous carcinoma. Tumors in this rare type float in a pool of mucin, part of the slippery, slimy stuff that makes up mucus.
- Papillary carcinoma. Fingerlike projections set these tumors apart. This rare type usually affects women who’ve been through menopause.
- Triple-negative breast cancer. This type happens when the cancer cells don’t have the right hormonal receptors. It makes up almost 15% of all breast cancers. It can happen at any age, but generally in women under 40.
- Tubular carcinoma. The tumors are slow-growing and tube-shaped.
- Inflammatory breast cancer. This rare type is caused by inflammatory cells in lymph vessels in your skin.
- Paget’s disease of the nipple. This type affects the areola, the thin skin around your nipple.
- Phyllodes tumors of the breast. These rare tumors grow in a leaflike pattern. They grow quickly but rarely spread outside the breast.
- Angiosarcoma. This rare cancer begins in blood or lymph vessels in the breast tissue or in the skin of the breast. It can occur after radiation therapy to an area.
- Metastatic breast cancer. This is cancer that has spread to another body part, like your brain, bones, or lungs.
Breast cancer epidemiology
- Among women, breast cancer is the second most common cancer diagnosed, after skin cancer. It is the second leading cause of cancer deaths, after lung cancer.
- White women get breast cancer at higher rates than women of any other race.
- About two-thirds of women with breast cancer are 55 or older. Most of the rest are between 35 and 54.
- Breast cancer will affect 1 in 8 women in their lifetimes.
- Men can get breast cancer, too, but they only account for less than 1% of all cases.
- About 300,000 cases of breast cancer are reported annually in the U.S.
- More than 40,000 Americans die of breast cancer each year, accounting for around 7% of all cancer-related deaths.
Causes and Risk Factors
Experts don’t know what causes breast cancer, but certain things make you more likely to get it. Your age, genes, personal health history, and diet play a role. Some you can control. Others you can’t.
Breast Cancer Risk Factors You Can’t Control
- Age. Women over 50 are more likely to get breast cancer than younger women.
- Race: Black women are more likely than White women to get breast cancer before menopause.
- Dense breasts. If your breasts have more connective tissue than fatty tissue, it can be hard to see tumors on a mammogram.
- Personal history of cancer. Your odds go up slightly if you have certain benign breast conditions. They go up more sharply if you’ve had breast cancer before.
- Family history. If a first-degree female relative (mother, sister, or daughter) had breast cancer, you’re two times more likely to get the disease. Having two or more first-degree relatives with a history of breast cancer increases your risk at least three times. This is especially true if they got cancer before menopause or if it affected both breasts. The risk can also rise if your father or brother is diagnosed with breast cancer.
- Genes. Changes to two genes, BRCA1 and BRCA2, are responsible for some cases of breast cancer in families. About 1 in 200 women have one of these genes. While they make you more likely to get cancer, they don’t mean you definitely will. If you have a BRCA1 or BRCA2 mutation, you have a 7 in 10 chance of being diagnosed with breast cancer by age 80. These genes also raise your odds of ovarian cancer, and they’re linked to pancreatic cancer and male breast cancer. Other gene mutations linked to breast cancer risk include mutations of the PTEN gene, the ATM gene, the TP53 gene, the CHEK2 gene, the CDH1 gene, the STK11 gene, and the PALB2 gene. These carry a lower risk for breast cancer development than the BRCA genes.
- Menstrual history. Your breast cancer odds go up if:
- Your periods start before age 12.
- Your periods don’t stop until after you’re 55.
- Radiation. If you had treatment for cancers like Hodgkin’s lymphoma before age 40, you have an increased risk of breast cancer.
- Diethylstilbestrol (DES). Doctors used this drug between 1940 and 1971 to prevent miscarriage. If you or your mother took it, your breast cancer odds go up.
Breast Cancer Risk Factors You Can Control
- Physical activity. The less you move, the higher your chances.
- Weight and diet. Being overweight after menopause raises your odds.
- Alcohol. Regular drinking – especially more than one drink a day – increases the risk of breast cancer.
- Reproductive history.
- You have your first child after age 30.
- You don’t breastfeed.
- You don’t have a full-term pregnancy.
- Taking hormones. Your chances can go up if you:
- Use hormone replacement therapy that includes both estrogen and progesterone during menopause for more than 5 years. This increase in breast cancer risk returns to normal 5 years after you stop treatment.
- Use certain birth control methods, including birth control pills, shots, implants, IUDS, skin patches, or vaginal rings that contain hormones
Still, most women who are at high risk for breast cancer don’t get it. On the other hand, 75% of women who develop breast cancer have no known risk factors.
Breast Cancer Diagnosis
If you feel a lump or if something shows up on a mammogram, your doctor will begin the breast cancer diagnosis process.
They’ll ask about your personal and family health history. Then, they’ll do a breast exam and order tests that include:
Imaging tests. Your doctor will use these to learn more about your breast.
- Ultrasound. This test uses sound waves to make a picture of your breast.
- Mammogram. This detailed X-ray gives doctors a better view of lumps and other problems.
- Magnetic resonance imaging (MRI). This body scan uses a magnet linked to a computer to create detailed images of the insides of your breasts.
- Biopsy. For this test, the doctor removes tissue or fluid from your breast. They look at it under a microscope to check for cancer cells and, if they’re there, learn which type they are. Common procedures include:
- Fine-needle aspiration. This is for easy-to-reach lumps or those that might be filled with fluid.
- Core-needle biopsy. This type uses a bigger needle to remove a piece of tissue.
- Surgical (open) biopsy. A surgeon removes the entire lump along with nearby breast tissue.
- Lymph node biopsy. The doctor removes a part of the lymph nodes under your arm to see if the cancer has spread.
- Image-guided biopsy. The doctor uses imaging to guide the needle.
- Tumor features. Is it invasive or in situ, ductal, or lobular? Has it spread to your lymph nodes? The doctor also measures the margins or edges of the tumor and their distance from the edge of the biopsy tissue, which is called margin width.
- Estrogen receptors (ER) and progesterone receptors (PR). This tells the doctor if the hormones estrogen or progesterone make your cancer grow. This affects how likely it is that your cancer will come back and what type of treatment is most likely to prevent that.
- HER2. This test looks for the gene human epidermal growth factor receptor 2. It can help cancer grow more quickly. If your cancer is HER2-positive, targeted therapy could be a treatment option for you.
- Grade. This tells the doctor how different the cancer cells look from healthy cells and whether they seem to be slower-growing or faster-growing.
- Oncotype Dx. This test evaluates 16 cancer-related genes and five reference genes to estimate the risk of the cancer coming back within 10 years of diagnosis.
- Breast Cancer Index. This test can help your doctor decide how you need endocrine therapy.
- MammaPrint. This test uses information from 70 genes to predict the risk of the cancer coming back.
- PAM50 (Prosigna). This test uses information from 50 genes to predict if the cancer will spread.
- Complete blood count (CBC). This measures the number of different types of cells, like red and white blood cells, in your blood. It lets your doctor know if your bone marrow is working the way it should.
- Blood chemistry. This shows how well your liver and kidneys are working.
- Hepatitis tests. Doctors sometimes do these to check for hepatitis B and hepatitis C. If you have an active hepatitis B infection, you may need medication to fight the virus before you get chemotherapy. Without it, chemo can cause the virus to grow and damage your liver.
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