Breast Cancer
Breast is the most common type of cancer among women in this
country (other than skin cancer). The number of new cases of breast
cancer in women was estimated to be about 212,600 in 2003.
This National Cancer Institute (NCI) booklet (NIH Publication
Number is 03-1556) has important information about breast cancer. It
discusses possible causes, screening, symptoms, diagnosis,
treatment, and recovery. It also has information to help women with
breast cancer cope with the disease.
Breast Cancer in Men
Each year, about 1,300 men in
this country learn they have breast cancer. Much of the
information in this booklet applies to men with breast cancer.
More information about breast cancer in men is available on
NCI's Web site at
http://www.cancer.gov/ and from NCI's Cancer Information
Service at 1-800-4-CANCER. |
Research continues to teach us about breast cancer. Scientists
are learning more about causes and new ways to prevent, find, and
treat this disease. Because of research, people with breast cancer
can look forward to a better quality of life and less chance of
dying from this disease. The NCI provides the most up-to-date
information over the telephone and on the Internet:
- Telephone: Information specialists at the NCI's Cancer
Information Service at 1-800-4-CANCER can answer questions about
cancer and can send materials published by NCI.
- Internet: People can ask questions online and get
immediate help through
LiveHelp on the Internet at
http://www.cancer.gov/. Many NCI booklets and fact
sheets can be viewed at
https://cissecure.nci.nih.gov/ncipubs/.
People in the United States and its territories may use this Web
site to order publications. This Web site also explains how people
outside the United States can mail or fax their requests for NCI
publications.
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The breasts are
glands that can make milk. Each breast sits on chest muscles that
cover the ribs.
Each breast is divided into 15 to 20 sections called
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,
which carry a clear fluid called lymph. The
lymph vessels lead to small, round organs
called lymph nodes. Groups of lymph nodes
are found 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 that may be
in the lymphatic system.
This picture show the part of the breast and lymph nodes and
lymph vessels near the breast
Cancer begins in cells, the building blocks that make up
tissues. Tissues make up the organs of the
body. Normally, cells grow and divide to form new cells as the body needs them.
When cells grow old, they die, and new cells take their place.
Sometimes this orderly process goes wrong. New cells form when the body does
not need them, and old cells do not die when they should. These extra cells can
form a mass of tissue called a growth or tumor.
Not all tumors are cancer. Tumors can be benign
or malignant:
- Benign tumors are not cancer:
- Benign tumors are rarely life-threatening.
- Usually, benign tumors can be removed, and they seldom grow back.
- Cells from benign tumors do not spread to tissues around them or to
other parts of the body.
- Malignant tumors are cancer:
- Malignant tumors generally are more serious than benign tumors. They may
be life-threatening.
- Malignant tumors often can be removed, but they can grow back.
- Cells from malignant tumors can invade and damage nearby tissues and
organs. Also, cancer cells can break away from a malignant tumor and enter
the bloodstream or lymphatic system. That is how cancer cells spread from
the original cancer (primary
tumor) to form new tumors in other organs. The spread of
cancer is called metastasis.
When breast cancer cells enter the lymphatic system, they may be found in
lymph nodes near the breast.
The cancer cells also may travel to other organs through the lymphatic system
or bloodstream. When cancer spreads (metastasizes),
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 bone, the cancer cells in the bone are breast cancer cells. The
disease is
metastatic breast cancer, not bone cancer.
It is treated as breast cancer, not as bone cancer. Doctors sometimes call the
new tumor "distant" or metastatic disease.
No one knows the exact causes of breast cancer. Doctors can seldom explain
why one woman gets breast cancer and another does not.
Doctors do know that bumping, bruising, or touching the breast does not cause
breast cancer. And breast cancer is not contagious. No one can "catch"
this disease from another person.
However, research has shown that women with certain
risk factors are more likely than others to develop breast cancer. A
risk factor is anything that increases a person's 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. A woman over age 60 is at greatest risk. This disease is very uncommon
before menopause.
- Personal history of breast cancer: A woman who has had breast
cancer in one breast has an increased risk of getting this disease in her
other breast.
- Family history: A woman's risk of breast cancer is higher if her
mother, sister, or daughter had breast cancer, especially at a young age
(before age 40). Having other relatives with breast cancer on either her
mother's or her father's side of the 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 or
lobular carcinoma in situ
[LCIS]) increases the risk of breast cancer.
- Genetic alterations: Changes in certain
genes (BRCA1,
BRCA2, and others) increase the risk of
breast cancer. In families in which many women have had the disease, genetic
testing can sometimes show the presence of specific genetic changes. 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. The Cancer Information Service can provide printed material about
genetic 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 began menstruation (had
their first menstrual period) at an early age (before age 12), went through
menopause late (after age 55), or never had children also are at an
increased risk.
- Women who take menopausal hormone therapy
(either estrogen alone or estrogen plus
progestin) for 5 or more years after
menopause also appear to have an increased chance of developing breast
cancer.
- Much research has been done to learn whether having an abortion or a
miscarriage affects a woman's chance of developing breast cancer later on.
Large, well-designed studies have consistently shown no link between
abortion or miscarriage and the development of breast cancer.
- Race: Breast cancer occurs 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: Older women who have mostly dense (not fatty)
tissue on a mammogram (x-ray
of the breast) are at increased risk of breast cancer.
- Taking DES (diethylstilbestrol):
DES is a synthetic form of estrogen that was given to some pregnant women
in the United States between about 1940 and 1971. (DES is no longer given to
pregnant women.) Women who took DES during pregnancy have a slightly increased
risk of breast cancer. This does not yet appear to be the case for their
daughters who were exposed to DES before birth. However, as these daughters
grow older, more studies of their breast cancer risk are needed.
- Being obese after menopause:
After menopause, women who are obese have an increased risk of developing
breast cancer. Being obese means that the woman has an abnormally high
proportion of body fat. Because the body makes some of its estrogen (a
hormone) in fatty tissue, obese women are
more likely than thin women to have higher levels of estrogen in their bodies.
High levels of estrogen may be the reason that obese women have an increased
risk of breast cancer. Also, some studies show that gaining weight after
menopause increases the risk of breast cancer.
- Physical inactivity: Women who are physically inactive throughout
life appear to have an increased risk of breast cancer. Being physically
active may help to reduce risk by preventing weight gain and obesity.
- Alcoholic beverages: Some studies suggest that the more alcoholic
beverages a woman drinks, the greater her risk of breast cancer.
Other possible risk factors are under study. (These studies are described in
the section
Research on Causes.)
Many risk factors can be avoided. Others, such as family history, cannot be
avoided. It is helpful to be aware of risk factors. But it is also important to
keep in mind that most women who have these risk factors do not get breast
cancer.
Also, most women who develop breast cancer have no history of the disease in
their family. In fact, except for growing older, most women with breast cancer
have no strong risk factors.
Still, a woman who thinks she may be at risk of breast cancer should discuss
this concern with her health care provider. The health care provider may suggest
ways to reduce the risk and can plan an appropriate schedule for checkups.
Influenza Symptoms/The Flu
Liposuction
HIV
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Prostate Cancer
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Breast Cancer
Breast is the most common type of cancer among women in this
country (other than skin cancer). The number of new cases of breast
cancer in women was estimated to be about 212,600 in 2003.
This National Cancer Institute (NCI) booklet (NIH Publication
Number is 03-1556) has important information about breast cancer. It
discusses possible causes, screening, symptoms, diagnosis,
treatment, and recovery. It also has information to help women with
breast cancer cope with the disease.
Breast Cancer in Men
Each year, about 1,300 men in
this country learn they have breast cancer. Much of the
information in this booklet applies to men with breast cancer.
More information about breast cancer in men is available on
NCI's Web site at
http://www.cancer.gov/
and from NCI's Cancer Information Service at
1-800-4-CANCER
The breasts are
glands that can make milk. Each breast sits on chest muscles that
cover the ribs.
Each breast is divided into 15 to 20 sections called
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.
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METHICILLIN-RESISTANT
STAPHYLOCOCCUS
AUREUS
(MRSA)
SUPER BUG
What Is Mesothelioma
Heart Disease
Heart disease is the leading cause of death in the United States
and is a major cause of disability. Almost 700,000 people die of
heart disease in the U.S. each year. That is about 29% of all U.S.
deaths. Heart disease is a term that includes several more specific
heart conditions. The most common heart disease in the United States
is coronary heart disease, which can lead to heart attack.
The risk of coronary heart disease can be reduced by taking steps
to prevent and control those adverse factors that put people at
greater risk for heart disease and heart attack. Additionally,
knowing the signs and symptoms of heart attack, calling 911 right
away, and getting to a hospital are crucial to the most positive
outcomes after having a heart attack. People who have had a heart
attack can also work to reduce their risk of future events.
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