Breast Cancer (cont.)
What are the symptoms of breast cancer?
Common symptoms of breast cancer include:
- A change in how the breast or nipple feels
- A change in how the breast or nipple looks
- A change in the size or shape of the breast
- A nipple turned inward into the breast
- The skin of the breast, areola, or nipple may be scaly, red, or swollen. It may have ridges or pitting so that it looks like the skin of an orange.
- Nipple discharge (fluid)
Early breast cancer usually does not cause pain. Still, a woman should see her
health care provider about breast pain or any other symptom that does not go
away. Most often, these symptoms are not due to cancer. Other health problems
may also cause them. Any woman with these symptoms should tell her doctor so
that problems can be diagnosed and treated as early as possible.
How is breast cancer diagnosed?
If you have a symptom or screening test result that suggests cancer, your
doctor must find out whether it is due to cancer or to some other cause. Your
doctor may ask about your personal and family medical history. You may have a
physical exam. Your doctor also may order a mammogram or other imaging
procedure. These tests make pictures of tissues inside the breast. After the
tests, your doctor may decide no other exams are needed. Your doctor may suggest
that you have a follow-up exam later on. Or you may need to have a biopsy to
look for cancer cells.
Clinical breast exam
Your health care provider feels each breast for lumps and looks for other
problems. If you have a lump, your doctor will feel its size, shape, and
texture. Your doctor will also check to see if it moves easily. Benign lumps
often feel different from cancerous ones. Lumps that are soft, smooth, round,
and movable are likely to be benign. A hard, oddly shaped lump that feels firmly
attached within the breast is more likely to be cancer.
Diagnostic mammogram
Diagnostic mammograms are x-ray pictures of the breast. They take clearer, more
detailed images of areas that look abnormal on a screening mammogram. Doctors
use them to learn more about unusual breast changes, such as a lump, pain,
thickening, nipple discharge, or change in breast size or shape. Diagnostic
mammograms may focus on a specific area of the breast. They may involve special
techniques and more views than screening mammograms.
Ultrasound
An ultrasound device sends out
sound waves that people cannot hear. The waves bounce off tissues. A computer
uses the echoes to create a picture. Your doctor can view these pictures on a
monitor. The pictures may show whether a lump is solid or filled with fluid. A
cyst is a fluid-filled sac. Cysts are not cancer. But a solid mass may be
cancer. After the test, your doctor can store the pictures on video or print
them out. This exam may be used along with a mammogram.
Magnetic resonance imaging
Magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) uses a powerful magnet linked to a computer. MRI makes detailed pictures of breast tissue. Your doctor can view these pictures on a monitor or print them on film. MRI may be used along with a mammogram.
Biopsy
Your doctor may refer you to a surgeon or breast disease specialist for a biopsy. Fluid or tissue is removed from your breast to help find out if there is cancer.
Some suspicious areas can be seen on a mammogram but cannot be felt during a clinical breast exam. Doctors can use imaging procedures to help see the area and remove tissue. Such procedures include ultrasound-guided, needle-localized, or stereotactic biopsy.
Doctors can remove tissue from the breast in different ways:
- Fine-needle aspiration: Your doctor uses a thin needle to remove fluid from a breast lump. If the fluid appears to contain cells, a pathologist at a lab checks them for cancer with a microscope. If the fluid is clear, it may not need to be checked by a lab.
- Core biopsy: Your doctor uses a thick needle to remove breast tissue. A pathologist checks for cancer cells. This procedure is also called a needle biopsy.
- Surgical biopsy: Your surgeon removes a sample of tissue. A pathologist checks the tissue for cancer cells.
- An incisional biopsy takes a sample of a lump or abnormal area.
- An excisional biopsy takes the entire lump or area.
If cancer cells are found, the pathologist can tell what kind of cancer it is. The most common type of breast cancer is ductal carcinoma. Abnormal cells are found in the lining of the ducts. Lobular carcinoma is another type. Abnormal cells are found in the lobules.
You may want to ask your doctor the following questions before having a biopsy:
- What kind of biopsy will I have? Why?
- How long will it take? Will I be awake? Will it hurt? Will I have anesthesia? What kind?
- Are there any risks? What are the chances of infection or bleeding after the biopsy?
- How soon will I know the results?
- If I do have cancer, who will talk with me about the next steps? When?
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Additional tests
If you are diagnosed with cancer, your doctor may order special lab tests on the breast tissue that was removed. These tests help your doctor learn more about the cancer and plan treatment:
- Hormone receptor test: This test shows whether the tissue has certain hormone receptors. Tissue with these receptors needs hormones (estrogen or progesterone) to grow.
- HER2 test: This test shows whether the tissue has a protein called human epidermal growth factor receptor-2 (HER2) or the HER2/neu gene. Having too much protein or too many copies of the gene in the tissue may increase the chance that the breast cancer will come back after treatment.
Next: How is breast cancer staging determined? »
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