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breast cancer |
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breast cancerIn medicine, cancer of the breast. It is usually diagnosed following the detection of a painless lump in the breast (either through self-examination or mammography). Other, less common symptoms, include changes in the shape or texture of the breast and discharge from the nipple. It is the commonest cancer amongst women: there are 28,000 new cases of breast cancer in Britain each year and 185,700 in the USA. TreatmentIf the tumour is caught early, only it and the immediate surrounding tissue needs removing, in a process called lumpectomy, usually accompanied by radiotherapy. In more advanced cases a mastectomy is performed. Chemotherapy or hormone-blocking drugs (such as tamoxifen) may also accompany either procedure. The average survival rate after 5 years was 83.2% in 1996. According to UK epidemiologists in May 2000, deaths from breast cancer had fallen by 25% since the late 1980s. The decline was attributed to early detection and surgery and the use of the drug tamoxifen.Risk factorsPossible risk factors include a family history of breast cancer (mutations in the genes BRCA1 and BRCA2 were found to cause more than 50% of inherited breast cancer cases, in the 1990s); childlessness or late childbearing; early onset of menstruation and late menopause.
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| Women with many breast cancer risk factors don't always get the disease, while some women who have none of the known risk factors do. Because the breast is particularly susceptible to carcinogen exposure up until the first full-term pregnancy, there may be an interaction between risk associated with age at first pregnancy, an established breast cancer risk factor, and risk associated with chemical exposure. The omission was especially glaring in a listing of breast cancer risk factors published last summer in the Chicago Tribune (11 Aug 1991). |
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