Breast Cancer - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Breast Cancer

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Title: Breast Cancer


1
Breast Cancer
2
What is this Disease?
  • Second leading cause of cancer death in women
  • Malignant (cancerous) tumor
  • Develops from cells in the breast that are
    growing abnormally out of control
  • Some cells may break away and travel to other
    parts of the body (metastasis)
  • When cancer comes back after successful treatment
    it is called a recurrence.

3
Breast Cancer Starts Where?
  • Ductal Carcinoma
  • Breast milk ducts
  • Most frequent location
  • Lobular Carcinoma
  • Breast milk lobes
  • Other breast tissues
  • Fatty connective tissues
  • Lymph vessels

4
U.S. Statistics - 2002
  • New cases
  • 203,500 (women)
  • 1,500 (men)
  • Deaths per year
  • 39,600 (women)
  • 400 (men)
  • 5-year localized survival rate - 96
  • 5-year overall survival rate - 86

5
2006
  • 212,920 women will be diagnosed this year
  • 40,970 will die from breast cancer this year
  • Over 2,000,000 women who have been treated for
    breast cancer
  • 1 in 8 women will be diagnosed in their lifetime
  • 1 in 33 will die from breast cancer

6
Am I At Risk?
  • Gender
  • 100 times more common in women that men
  • Age
  • Risk increases with age
  • 77 of women diagnosed are
  • gt50 years of age.
  • Race
  • White African American higher risk
  • Family history
  • 1st degree relative double the risk
  • Most women diagnosed do not have a family history

7
  • Additional risk factors
  • History of non-cancerous breast disease
  • Starting monthly periods before age 12
  • Starting menopause after age 55
  • gt 5 years post menopausal estrogen replacement
    therapy
  • Never having children
  • Having first child after age 30
  • Use of alcohol
  • Obesity, especially weight gain after menopause
  • Physical inactivity

8
How Do I Know If I Have It?
  • Detection of a new lump or mass
  • Generalized swelling of part of a breast
  • Skin irritation or dimpling
  • Nipple pain or retraction
  • Redness or scaliness of the nipple or breast skin
  • Discharge other than breast milk
  • All of these symptoms require
  • follow up

9
What Can And Should I Do?
  • Prevention
  • Many risk factors are not modifiable
  • Those related to age and hormones
  • Lifestyle changes are modifiable
  • Maintaining a healthy diet and weight
  • Routine physical activity
  • Reduce the use of alcohol
  • Knowledge and awareness
  • Being aware of your risk factors
  • Knowing your body
  • Early detection

10
Early Detection Best Outcome
  • Mammograms
  • Over age 40 every year
  • Clinical Breast Exam (CBE)
  • Age 20 39 every 3 years
  • Over age 40 every year
  • Breast Self Exam (BSE)
  • Know how your breasts normally feel
  • Over age 20 every month
  • Talk to your doctor
  • If family history present

11
Are There Successful Treatments?
  • Most successful when treated early
  • Treatment depends on many factors
  • Progression of the disease
  • Patient choices
  • Surgical interventions
  • Breast conservation surgery lumpectomy
  • mastectomy
  • Medical intervention
  • Chemotherapy
  • Hormone therapy
  • Radiation therapy

12
What Does The Future Hold?
  • Risk factors
  • Further investigation re lifestyle
    environmental factors
  • Genetics
  • How to use gene testing
  • Screening
  • New technology
  • Hormone Therapy
  • Investigating use in prevention
  • Chemotherapy
  • New drugs and drug combinations

13
How Does Diagnosis Impact Lifestyle?
  • Social
  • Changes in appearance and activity tolerance
  • Physical
  • Pain, fatigue, sleep difficulties
  • Psychological
  • Fear of recurrence, guilt, depression
  • Impact on loved ones
  • Financial concerns
  • Spiritual

14
Who Can Help?
  • Support from family friends
  • American Cancer Society
  • Cancer Survivors Network
  • www.acscsn.org
  • 1-877-333-HOPE
  • Links for Life
  • Support group
  • www.linksforlife.org
  • 661-322-5601

15
Who is Links For Life?
  • Local Breast Cancer Organization
  • 2 Full 1 Part time employees
  • Many, many volunteers
  • Provides an organization to benefit person
    affected by breast cancer
  • Challenges each women in Kern County to be aware
    of her breast health
  • Educated the general public, teaching that
    optimum health and early detection saves lives

16
Links For Life Lives are being Saved
  • Raise funds for local programs
  • Pro-Am Golf Tournament Gala
  • Paint the Town Pink (October
  • Over 100,000 raised in 2005
  • Field over 4,000 phone calls from the public
  • Provide 240 wigs from our wig shop
  • Provide 20 Bras/Prosthesis
  • Arrange for needed tests for women under 40 who
    are uninsured or underinsured
  • 440 mammograms
  • 240 ultrasounds
  • 45 needle biopsies
  • Results of these tests
  • 4 positive cancers detected
  • 3 women under 40
  • 1 man

17
  • Other services
  • Support group
  • Encouragement, support, friendship, information
  • Seminars
  • Community education
  • Library
  • Current reference books videos
  • Scholarships
  • Support our local nursing students
  • Health fairs

18
Where Can I Receive More Info?
  • American Cancer Society
  • 1-800-ACS-2345 www.cancer.org
  • Links for Life
  • 661-322-5601 www.linksforlife.org
  • National Cancer Institute
  • 1-800-4-cancer www.nci.nih.gov
  • Susan G. Komen Foundation
  • 1-800-IM AWARE www.komen.org
  • National Allicance of Breast Cancer Organizations
    (NABCO)
  • 212-719-0154 www.nabco.org
  • Y-Me National Breast Cancer Organization
  • 1-800-221-2141 www.y-me.org
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