Types of Breast Cancer
Breast Cancer: Types list
The list of types of Breast Cancer mentioned in various sources includes:
- Breast carcinoma
- Breast sarcoma
- Paget's Disease
- Lobular carcinoma in situ (LCIS) - a benign tumor; often called "Stage 0 breast cancer".
- Ductal carcinoma in situ (DCIS) - also called "intraductal carcinoma"; also sometimes called "Stage 0 breast cancer".
- Ductal carcinoma - starts in the lining of the ducts.
- Lobular carcinoma - starts in the lobules.
- Estrogen receptor-positive breast cancer - tumors that react to estrogen.
- Stages of breast cancer:
- Stage 0 breast cancer - also called "noninvasive carcinoma" or "carcinoma in situ"; may also refer to LCIS or DCIS.
- Stage I breast cancer - early-stage small tumor that has spread beyond the lobule but is less than an inch across; has not spread beyond the breast (i.e. not to underarm lymph nodes)
- Stage II breast cancer - early-stage tumor that has spread to underarm lymph nodes, or is more than 2 inches without spreading to lymph nodes, or is too large for Stage I.
- Stage III breast cancer - also "locally advanced cancer"; either the tumor is more than 2 inches, or the underarm lymph involvement is extensive, or the cancer has spread further (e.g. around the chest area).
- Stage IV breast cancer - metastatic breast cancer that has spread to other parts of the body.
- Inflammatory breast cancer - a type of Stage III locally advanced breast cancer.
- Recurrent breast cancer - a recurrence of a previous breast cancer; can be a " local recurrence" in the breast or a "distant recurrence" (metastatic).
Curable Types of Breast Cancer:
Rare Types of Breast Cancer:
Types discussion:
Early Stage Breast Cancer: NWHIC (Excerpt)
A "tumor" is an abnormal growth that can be "benign" or "malignant."
Benign breast tumors do not threaten life and do not spread to other parts
of the body. Malignant breast tumors are cancers that may threaten life
and may spread to other parts of the body. A malignant tumor that grows
into surrounding tissues is called "invasive." Invasive tumors are more
likely to spread to other parts of the body than non-invasive tumors. (Source: excerpt from Early Stage Breast Cancer: NWHIC)
Early Stage Breast Cancer: NWHIC (Excerpt)
Invasive breast cancer is categorized as Stage I, II, III, or IV.
Stages I and II are considered "early stage" invasive breast cancer and
generally refer to smaller tumors that have not yet spread to distant
parts of the body. (Source: excerpt from Early Stage Breast Cancer: NWHIC)
What You Need To Know About Breast Cancer: NCI (Excerpt)
Tumors can be benign
or malignant .
-
Benign tumors are not cancer. They can usually be
removed, and in most cases, they do not come back. Cells
from benign tumors do not spread to other parts of the body.
Most important, benign breast tumors are not a threat to
life.
-
Malignant tumors are cancer. Cells in these tumors
are abnormal. They divide without control or order, and they
can invade and damage nearby tissues and organs. Also,
cancer cells can break away from a malignant tumor and enter
the bloodstream or the lymphatic
system . That is how cancer spreads from the original
(primary) cancer site to form new tumors in other organs.
The spread of cancer is called metastasis .
When cancer arises in breast tissue and spreads
(metastasizes) outside the breast, cancer cells are often
found in the lymph nodes under the arm (axillary
lymph nodes). If the cancer has reached these nodes, it means
that cancer cells may have spread to other parts of the body
-- other lymph nodes and other organs, such as the bones,
liver, or lungs. When cancer spreads from its original
location to another part of the body, 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 brain, the
cancer cells in the brain are actually breast cancer cells.
The disease is called metastatic breast cancer. (It is not
brain cancer.) Doctors sometimes call this "distant"
disease. (Source: excerpt from What You Need To Know About Breast Cancer: NCI)
What You Need To Know About Breast Cancer: NCI (Excerpt)
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). (Source: excerpt from What You Need To Know About Breast Cancer: NCI)
What You Need To Know About Breast Cancer: NCI (Excerpt)
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 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
intraductal 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 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. (Sometimes radiation therapy is also given
after mastectomy.)
The choice of breast-sparing surgery or mastectomy
depends mostly on the size and location of the tumor, the
size of the woman's breast, certain features of the cancer,
and how the woman feels about preserving her breast. With
either approach, lymph nodes under the arm usually are
removed.
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 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.
Inflammatory
breast cancer is a type of locally advanced breast
cancer. In this type of cancer the breast looks red and
swollen (or inflamed) because cancer cells block the lymph
vessels in the skin of 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 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. 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.
(Source: excerpt from
What You Need To Know About Breast Cancer: NCI)
Breast Cancer: Rare Types
Rare types of medical conditions and diseases in related medical categories:
Breast Cancer: Related Disease Topics
More general medical disease topics related to Breast Cancer include:
Research More About Breast Cancer
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