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Stage 0: The 2 types of stage 0 breast cancer, ductal carcinoma in situ (DCIS)
and lobular carcinoma in situ (LCIS), are treated quite differently.
No immediate or active treatment is recommended for most women with LCIS
because this condition is not a true cancer. But because having LCIS increases
your risk of developing invasive cancer later on, close follow-up is essential.
This usually includes a yearly mammogram and a clinical breast exam twice a
year. Close follow-up of both breasts is important because women with LCIS in
one breast have an equal risk of developing breast cancer on the same or
opposite side.
These women may wish to consider taking tamoxifen or participating in a
clinical trial for breast cancer prevention (with tamoxifen or raloxifene, for
example). They may also wish to discuss other possible prevention strategies
(such as changes in diet, an exercise program, or preventive surgery) with their
doctor.
Some medical centers have clinical trials to test the value of magnetic
resonance imaging (MRI) for patients with LCIS. Some women with LCIS may choose
to have a bilateral simple mastectomy (removal of both breasts but not axillary
lymph nodes), especially if they have other risk factors such as strong family
history, in an attempt to prevent invasive cancer from developing. Depending on
the woman's preference, she may consider immediate or delayed breast
reconstruction.
Treatment of DCIS depends on mammogram and biopsy results. In most cases, a
woman can choose between breast-conserving therapy (lumpectomy, usually followed
by radiation therapy) and simple mastectomy. Lymph node removal (axillary
dissection) is usually not necessary. Lumpectomy without radiation therapy is
usually considered an option only for women with small areas of low-grade DCIS.
Mastectomy may be necessary if the area of DCIS is very large, if the breast has
several areas of DCIS, or if lumpectomy cannot completely remove the DCIS (that
is, the lumpectomy specimen and re-excision specimens have positive margins).
After a lumpectomy, a mammogram should be done to ensure that the disease has
been removed. Another way is to x-ray the surgical specimen to make sure it
contains all the abnormalities, such as calcifications seen on the original
mammogram.
Women having mastectomy for DCIS may have immediate or delayed
reconstruction. Recent research suggests that 5 years of treatment with
tamoxifen can lower the risk of invasive cancer developing after treatment of
DCIS with lumpectomy and radiation therapy.
Stage I: This can be treated with either breast conservation therapy with
lumpectomy (removal of the cancer and a narrow margin of surrounding normal
breast tissue) or mastectomy and dissection of the lymph nodes under the arm.
Radiation therapy should be given after lumpectomy. Breast reconstruction can be
done after a mastectomy, either at the time of surgery or later.
Sentinel lymph node sampling may be used instead of standard axillary lymph
node dissection. If the tumor is less than 1 cm (nearly 1/2 inch) in diameter, adjuvant systemic therapy is not
usually required. Some doctors suggest adjuvant therapy if a cancer smaller than
1 cm has any features that indicate an unfavorable prognosis (microscopic study
shows high grade, flow cytometry shows high S-phase fraction, Ki-67 index is
high, or estrogen-receptor assay is negative). If the tumor is larger, depending
on the features mentioned above, adjuvant chemotherapy or hormone therapy, or
both, may be recommended.
Stage II: Surgery and radiation therapy options for stage I and stage II
tumors are similar, except that in stage II, radiation therapy may be considered
even after mastectomy if the tumor is large (over 5 cm) or has spread to many
lymph nodes (4 or more). Adjuvant systemic therapy is usually recommended.
Adjuvant therapy may involve hormone therapy, chemotherapy, or both, depending
on the patient's age and estrogen-receptor assay results.
An option for some women who would like to have breast-conserving therapy for
tumors larger than 2 cm (4/5 inch -- T2 or T3) is to have neoadjuvant (before
surgery) chemotherapy to shrink the tumor. The size of these tumors relative to
some women's breasts may make lumpectomy difficult or impossible.
If the neoadjuvant chemotherapy shrinks their tumors enough, women may then
be able to have lumpectomy, which is followed by additional chemotherapy,
radiation therapy, and hormone therapy if the hormone receptor is positive. If
the tumor does not shrink enough to permit lumpectomy, then mastectomy followed
by different chemotherapy, radiation therapy, and hormone therapy is the usual
treatment.
Adjuvant Therapy for Stage I - III Breast Cancer: Adjuvant drug therapy
may be recommended, based on the tumor's size, spread to lymph nodes, and/or
prognostic features. If it is, you may receive chemotherapy and/or hormone
therapy.
Hormone therapy is not likely to be effective for women with hormone
receptor-negative tumors. These women usually receive chemotherapy only as
adjuvant therapy.
Women older than 50 years who are no longer having menstrual periods and have
hormone receptor-positive tumors often receive hormone therapy with tamoxifen as
adjuvant therapy. A new alternative is treatment with an aromatase inhibitor.
Chemotherapy may also be recommended. This is particularly important if their
cancer has spread to lymph nodes.
Women younger than 50 who are still having menstrual periods will usually
receive adjuvant chemotherapy. Tamoxifen will also be recommended if the cancer
was hormone receptor positive. Other alternatives are surgical removal of the
ovaries or chemical suppression of ovarian hormone production.
The typical chemotherapy regimens are most often a combination of
cyclophosphamide with doxorubicin or epirubicin with or without fluorouracil.
These are usually given for 4 to 6 months. Another regimen is cyclophosphamide,
fluorouracil, and methotrexate. Recently, doctors have been using paclitaxel in
addition to doxorubicin and cyclophosphamide.
Most doctors recommend that hormone therapy be started after the chemotherapy
is completed.
For help in deciding if adjuvant therapy is right for you, you might want to
visit the Mayo Clinic Web site at: http://mayoclinic.com/takecharge/healthdecisionguides/avt/pg21.cfm.
Stage III: Smaller stage IIIA breast cancers may be removed by
lumpectomy. Modified radical mastectomy (with or without reconstruction) is
another option. Surgery is usually followed by adjuvant systemic therapy and
radiation therapy. Tamoxifen will be given for hormone receptor-positive tumors.
Larger stage IIIA as well as stage IIIB and IIIC cancers may be treated with
neoadjuvant (before surgery) chemotherapy. Then a modified radical mastectomy is
done, with or without reconstruction. A lumpectomy may be an option. In any
case, surgery is followed by more chemotherapy and then radiation therapy even
if a total mastectomy was done. Tamoxifen will be given for hormone
receptor-positive tumors.
Stage IV: Systemic therapy is the primary treatment, using chemotherapy,
hormone therapy, or both. Immunotherapy with trastuzumab (Herceptin) alone or in
combination with chemotherapy is an option for women whose cancer cells have
high levels of the HER2/neu protein. Trastuzumab is generally not the initial
treatment for these women, however, and is usually started after standard
hormone therapy and/or chemotherapy is no longer effective.
Radiation and/or surgery may also be used to provide relief of certain
symptoms. Treatment to relieve symptoms depends on where the cancer has spread.
For example, pain due to bone metastases may be treated with external beam
radiation therapy and/or bisphosphonates such as pamidronate (Aredia).
Bisphosphonates are drugs that can help prevent bone damage caused by metastatic
breast cancer. (For more information about treatment of bone metastases, see our
document "Bone Metastasis.")
Patients in otherwise good health are encouraged to take part in clinical
trials of other promising treatments being studied.
Recurrent breast cancer: Breast cancer can come back locally (in the
breast or near the mastectomy scar) or in a distant area.
Treatment of women whose breast cancer has recurred locally depends on their
initial treatment. If the woman had breast conservation therapy, local
recurrence in the breast is usually treated with mastectomy. If the initial
treatment was mastectomy, recurrence near the mastectomy site is treated by
removing the tumor whenever possible, usually followed by radiation therapy. In
either case, hormone therapy and/or chemotherapy may be used after surgery
and/or radiation therapy.
Women who have a distant recurrence involving organs such as the bones,
lungs, brain, etc., are treated the same as those found to have stage IV breast
cancer involving these organs at the time of initial diagnosis.
Treatment of breast cancer during pregnancy: Breast cancer is diagnosed
in about 1 pregnant woman out of 3,000. Between 3% and 7% of breast cancers are
diagnosed in women who are pregnant or breast feeding. Radiation therapy during
pregnancy is known to increase the risk of birth defects, so it is not
recommended for pregnant women with breast cancer.
For this reason, breast conservation therapy (lumpectomy and radiation
therapy) is not considered an option if treatment cannot be delayed until it is
safe to deliver the baby. However, breast biopsy procedures and even modified
radical mastectomy are safe for the mother and fetus.
Until recently, it was assumed that chemotherapy was dangerous to the fetus.
Several recent studies noted that chemotherapy during the second and third
trimesters (the fourth to ninth months) does not increase the risk of birth
defects or stillbirths. Because of concern about the potential damage to the
fetus, the safety of chemotherapy during the first trimester (the first 3
months) of pregnancy has not been studied.
Revised 10-3-03
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