Skip to main content
  • Breast Cancer
    Breast cancer is the most common cancer among women. Globally, breast cancer accounts for 23-24 per cent of all cancers in women. Most women develop breast cancer over the age of 40. In all new breast cancer cases, 5-7 per cent are young women between the ages of 20-39. It can occur in men, but these cases are very rare.   
Submitted by PatientsEngage on 26 September 2015

What tests do you need to have done

Early diagnosis of breast cancer significantly improves survival rates. Ninety per cent of women survive if the cancer is diagnosed early.

Self-examination
Women should examine their breasts once a month. If you are familiar with the feel of your breast, you can notify the doctor promptly about any changes in appearance or feel. According to the Johns Hopkins Medical Center, 40 per cent of diagnosed breast cancers are detected by women who feel a lump.

The best time to examine breasts is one week after the start of menstruation. Breast tissue is least swollen or tender at this time. If you no longer have your period due to menopause or the removal of your uterus, do your breast self-exam on a certain day of every month. Do not change the date from month to month.

How to perform a breast self-exam

  • Remove your clothes above the waist and stand in front of the mirror.
  • Look in the mirror for any visible change in your breasts, be it size, shape, swelling, redness, dimpling of the breast or inverted nipple.
  • Raise your arms above the head or keep them on the hips and look again.
  • Palpate breasts with the pads of your fingers to feel for a lump. Move fingers in a circular pattern, starting from the nipple and moving outwards. Palpate the entire breast including the tail of the breast (armpit).
  • Lie down and palpate the breast again in the same way.
  • Squeeze the nipple for any discharge.

Screening and diagnostic mammography

Mammogram is an X-ray of the breast. A screening mammogram is used to check for breast cancer in women with no symptoms. If there is anything suspicious, the doctor may recommend a diagnostic mammogram. This mammogram is more detailed and takes longer to undergo.

Breast ultrasound
Sound waves are used to provide a deeper picture of the breast. Ultrasound can distinguish between solid mass and fluid-filled cyst.

Breast Magnetic Resonance Imaging (MRI)
This uses powerful magnetic and radio waves to produce detailed images of the breast and the surrounding tissue. The MRI scan is useful in finding out the size of the breast cancer.

Invasive test
This includes biopsy. A small sample of breast tissue or cells is surgically removed and is tested for breast cancer. Biopsy is the only diagnostic method that can conclusively determine that the suspected area is a cancer. Tumour cells are examined under the microscope to determine whether the cancer in invasive or in situ, ductal or lobular, has already spread to the lymph node, and the stage of the cancer. There are several different types of breast biopsies.

  • Fine needle aspiration (FNA): A very fine needle is used to remove the tissue or fluid from the breast. Doctors will choose FNA if the lump is easily accessible or fluid-filled.
  • Core needle biopsy: A hollow needle is used to withdraw abnormal breast tissue. This is done under local anaesthesia. This offers clearer results than FNA as more tissue is withdrawn from the breast.
  • Surgical biopsy or open biopsy: A part of the tumour or the entire tumour is removed. This is carried out under local anesthesia.

Molecular tests for tumour
Doctors may recommend certain laboratory tests on a tumour sample for specific gene or protein related to the tumour. This can help in planning the treatment.

  • Estrogen receptor (ER) and progesterone receptor (PR) test
  • Genetic testing of tumour
  • Human epidermal growth factor receptor 2 (HER 2)

Additional tests
Depending on the patient’s medical history, symptoms, extent or spread of the tumour in the breast and lymph node, doctors may recommend some additional tests to evaluate the stage of the cancer.

  • Chest x-rays to check if the cancer has spread from the breast to the lungs
  • A bone scan to check if it has spread to the bone
  • A computed tomography (CT) scan may be used to look for tumours in organs such as lungs, liver, bone and lymph nodes
  • Positron emission tomography (PET) scan to check whether the cancer has spread to other parts of the body. This can be useful in finding out the stage of the cancer.
Community
Condition

Stories

  • I can honestly say cancer changed my life
    By Geetha Paniker, a survivor of triple negative cancer with double mastectomy reflects on and celebrates her 5 year Cancer Anniversary. A believer of being positive against all odds who pens, all that the mind can reason with the heart.  A teacher, turned home maker, she loves reading, writing and handicrafts.  Cancer-Anniversary. An anniversary is a day to celebrate an occasion or an event or something significant in life. It is a milestone of something very precious…
  • Life after cancer
    By Geetha Paniker, a survivor of triple negative cancer with double mastectomy. A believer of being positive against all odds who pens, all that the mind can reason with the heart. A teacher, turned home maker, she loves reading, writing and handicrafts.  Life after cancer teaches us to look at how we want to live in the future. Some may want to do things they’ve often thought about but never got a chance to do in the rat race of life, perhaps visit places they’ve…
  • My Love Story With the Creeping Crab
    By Geetha Paniker, a survivor of triple negative cancer with double mastectomy. A  believer of being positive against all odds who pens, all that the mind can reason with the heart. A teacher, turned home maker, she loves reading, writing and handicrafts.  As I look back on my journey of life, I realise that in May 2014, I celebrate my cancer anniversary (Cancerversary). It marks my survival despite the pain, pokes, discomforts, transformations and transmutations.…
  • I fought breast cancer and won
    Says Shachi Marathe, 30, eight years after their unnerving encounter. Her experience.  Age 22, File Number BX9059- Breast Cancer Carcinoma Grade 3… this was my identity for a while.  It was during that time, lying on my hospital bed, I often used to say to myself, “This is it… I’ve become accustomed (used) to fear.” Four sessions of chemo, one surgery, two more chemo sessions around the corner… But at the same time, I have to admit, I also enjoyed those eight…
  • CANCER: A friend who warns or a foe with thorns!
    A poem by Rita Banik, Founder, RACE to rein-in-cancer The never uttered word CANCER  The word that fills our heart with grief  Turns our feet cold with fear The word that haunts and shatters … How long shall we go on fearing? How long shall we keep running away? The more we run, the faster it chases  The faster you erase the quicker it re-appears! Now cancer invokes anger in me The anger that returns  Every time someone is diagnosed   Every time cancer takes a life…
  • Breast reconstruction – all your questions answered
    By Dr Raghuvirsinh Solanki, Consultant plastic and Oncoreconstructive Microsurgeon. Are all breast cancer patients, who have had their breast removed, eligible for reconstruction? All patients wishing to undergo breast reconstructive surgery are eligible for reconstruction provided medical fitness and stage of cancer allows it. We do not offer reconstruction in advanced stages usually as it delays adjuvant treatment. What are the different types of reconstruction…
  • Breast cancer - urban, educated, affluent, employed women most at risk
    Says Dr Subhojit Dey, cancer researcher at the Indian Institute of Public Health. He tells us why, and how to protect yourself. 70% of Indian women with breast cancer seek medical help at the late stage. 5-year survival rate is around only 60%. In Developed Countries, for example in the USA 60-80% women reach the doctor at an early stage and 5 year survival is almost 90%. Awareness is key and saves lives. Breast cancer incidence is increasing. What are the factors…
  • Breast cancer at 31 and getting through Chemotherapy
    Rajita, now 42, looks back on her ‘shock’ diagnosis and treatment, and how she kept going through rough chemo sessions.  Please tell us a bit about your condition and your history.  I was diagnosed with breast cancer at the age of 31.  After I noticed a lump, I went to my gynaecologist as there’s a history of breast cancer in my family. I lost my mother to it at age 56. She suggested needle biopsy. The report of FNAC (fine-needle aspiration cytology) came out…
  • Connected by the thread of pain and love
    Breast cancer survivor and founder of RACE to rein-in-cancer, Rita Banik talks about how cancer changed her life and why she is passionate about helping others. Here, her thoughts on getting a second opinion, staying active, yoga… and more.  Please tell us a bit about your condition.  I am a breast cancer survivor.  I had a relapse of cancer in 2013, in the sternum bone.  So, I am also a cancer patient presently. When were you first diagnosed? March 2006 What…
  • Cancer was just a part of my story
    “On paper, I am better: I no longer have cancer… But off paper, I feel far from being a healthy 26-year-old woman,” said Suleika Jaouad in a New York Times article Lost in transition after cancer, documenting her battered and traumatised state after cancer treatment. Minakshi Ray, who battled breast cancer, responds to that article and offers her take on life after cancer.   That I have got a second chance to live is good enough reason for me to live life more…