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  • 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

Can breast cancer be prevented?

The chance of developing breast cancer depends on genes, environment and lifestyle. Factors that increase one's chances are called risk factors, while those that decrease one's chances are termed protective factors. Here are some dos to improve your protective factors and don’ts to avoid risk factors:

  • Risk factors
    • Being overweight or obese
    • Smoking
    • Excessive alcohol intake
    • Aging
    • Peronal history of benign or malignant breat cancer
    • Family history of breast cancer
    • Dense breast tissue
    • Continual and prolonged estrogen production by the body
    • Taking hormone therapy for menopause
    • Radiation exposure
  • Protective factors
    • Less exposure to estrogen by ensuring early pregnancy and breast-feeding longer.
    • Maintaining a healthy weight and active lifestyle
    • Using estrogen hormone therapy post-hysterectomy, and taking selective estrogen receptor modulators or aromatase inhibitors.
    • Going for regular breast cancer screening mammograms. An annual mammogram is recommended for women over 40. For women aged 20-39, screening mammograms are not really helpful because of dense breast tissue. For this group of women, clinical breast examination by a doctor every two to three years is advised.
    • Women at high risk (family history, inherited abnormal genes) should get more frequent mammograms and be screened earlier.
    • Prophylactic mastectomy and ovarian ablation for high risk women
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05/Jan/2019
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Stories

  • Geetha Paniker
    My Love Story With the Creeping Crab
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  • I fought breast cancer and won
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  • Cancer poem
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  • Mind over body
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  • Dr Subhojit Dey optmised
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    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…
  • Rita Banik
    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…
  • 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…
  • 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…
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    Breast Cancer
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  • Management of Breast Cancer
    There are several treatment options for breast cancer.  Food and nutrition Eating right is a key part of cancer treatment. You need to keep your body as strong as possible before, during and after treatment, so you need to take in enough nutrients. Eating a diet rich in  proteins and calories will help your body deal with the treatment, recover faster and ward off infections. This may be easier said than done as some treatments play havoc with taste buds and the digestive system…