The Breasts
The breasts sit
on the chest muscles that cover the ribs. Each breast is
made of 15 to 20 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. These vessels lead to small, round organs called lymph
nodes. Groups of lymph nodes are 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.
Understanding Cancer
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.
Tumors can be benign or malignant:
- Benign tumors are not cancer:
- Benign tumors are rarely life-threatening.
- Generally, benign tumors can be removed. They
usually do not grow back.
- Cells from benign tumors do not invade the tissues
around them.
- Cells from benign tumors do not spread to other
parts of the body.
- Malignant tumors are cancer:
- Malignant tumors are generally more serious than
benign tumors. They may be life-threatening.
- Malignant tumors often can be removed. But sometimes
they grow back.
- Cells from malignant tumors can invade and damage
nearby tissues and organs.
- Cells from malignant tumors can spread (metastasize)
to other parts of the body. Cancer cells spread
by breaking away from the original (primary)
tumor and entering the bloodstream or lymphatic
system. The cells invade other organs
and form new tumors that damage these organs. The
spread of cancer is called metastasis.
When breast cancer cells spread, the cancer cells
are often found in lymph nodes near the breast. Also,
breast cancer can spread to almost any other part of
the body. The most common are the bones, liver, lungs,
and brain. 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 bones, the cancer cells
in the bones are actually breast cancer cells. The
disease is metastatic breast cancer, not bone cancer.
For that reason, it is treated as breast cancer, not
bone cancer. Doctors call the new tumor "distant" or
metastatic disease.
Risk Factors
No one knows the exact causes of breast cancer. Doctors
often cannot explain why one woman develops breast cancer
and another does not. They do know that bumping, bruising,
or touching the breast does not cause cancer. And breast
cancer is not contagious. You cannot "catch" it from another
person.
Research has shown that women with certain risk
factors are more likely than others to develop
breast cancer. A risk factor is something that may increase
the 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. Most cases of breast cancer
occur in women over 60. This disease is not common before menopause.
- Personal history of breast cancer: A
woman who had breast cancer in one breast has an increased
risk of getting cancer in her other breast.
- Family history: A woman's risk of breast
cancer is higher if her mother, sister, or daughter had
breast cancer. The risk is higher if her family member
got breast cancer before age 40. Having other relatives
with breast cancer (in either her mother's or father's
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 and lobular
carcinoma in situ [LCIS]) increases the risk of
breast cancer.
- Gene changes: Changes
in certain genes increase the risk of breast cancer. These
genes include BRCA1, BRCA2,
and others. Tests can sometimes show the presence of specific
gene changes in families with many women who have had breast
cancer. 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. NCI offers publications on gene 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 had their first menstrual
period before age 12 are at an increased
risk of breast cancer.
- Women who went through menopause after age 55 are
at an increased risk of breast cancer.
- Women who never had children are at an increased
risk of breast cancer.
- Women who take menopausal
hormone therapy with estrogen plus progestin after
menopause also appear to have an increased risk
of breast cancer.
- Large, well-designed studies have shown no link
between abortion or miscarriage and breast cancer.
- Race: Breast cancer is diagnosed 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: Breast tissue may be
dense or fatty. Older women whose mammograms (breast x-rays)
show more dense tissue are at increased risk of breast
cancer.
- Taking DES (diethylstilbestrol): DES
was given to some pregnant women in the United States between
about 1940 and 1971. (It is no longer given to pregnant
women.) Women who took DES during pregnancy may have a
slightly increased risk of breast cancer. The possible
effects on their daughters are under study.
- Being overweight or obese after
menopause: The chance of getting breast cancer
after menopause is higher in women who are overweight
or obese.
- Lack of physical activity: Women who
are physically inactive throughout life may have an increased
risk of breast cancer. Being active may help reduce risk
by preventing weight gain and obesity.
- Drinking alcohol: Studies suggest that
the more alcohol a woman drinks, the greater her risk of
breast cancer.
Other possible risk factors are under study. Researchers
are studying the effect of diet, physical activity, and genetics
on breast cancer risk. They are also studying whether certain
substances in the environment can increase the risk of breast
cancer.
Many risk factors can be avoided. Others, such as family
history, cannot be avoided. Women can help protect themselves
by staying away from known risk factors whenever possible.
But it is also important to keep in mind that most women
who have known risk factors do not get breast cancer. Also,
most women with breast cancer do not have a family history
of the disease. In fact, except for growing older, most women
with breast cancer have no clear risk factors.
If you think you may be at risk, you should discuss this
concern with your doctor. Your doctor may be able to suggest
ways to reduce your risk and can plan a schedule for checkups.
To read the rest of this great article, including staging
and treatment information, from the National Cancer Institute,
please click here: http://www.cancer.gov/cancertopics/wyntk/breast/page1