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| Stage | Definition |
| Stage 0 | Cancer cells remain inside the breast duct, without invasion into normal adjacent breast tissue |
| Stage I | Cancer is 2 centimeters or less and is confined to the breast (lymph nodes are clear) |
| Stage II | The tumor is over 2 centimeters but no larger than 5 centimeters Or There is spread to the lymph nodes under the arm |
| Stage III (includes substages IIIA & IIIB) | Also called locally advanced cancer. The tumor is more than 5 centimeters across Or The cancer is extensive in the underarm lymph nodes Or It has spread to other lymph nodes or tissues near the breast |
| Stage IV | The cancer has spread—or metastasized—to other parts of the body. |
| Treatment | Description |
| Lumpectomy | The malignant tumor and a rim of normal tissue are removed |
| Quadrantectomy | The malignant tumor and a larger rim of normal tissue are removed |
| Total or Simple Mastectomy | The whole breast is removed |
| Modified Radical Mastectomy | The whole breast is removed, along with underarm lymph nodes |
| Radical Mastectomy | The whole breast, chest muscles, all of the lymph nodes under the arm, and some additional fat and skin are removed |
| Axillary Dissection | Underarm lymph nodes are removed to determine if cancer has spread |
| Sentinel Lymph Node Dissection | Only a few underarm lymph nodes are removed. These are the nodes that filter fluid from the affected area of the breast. These nodes are identified using a radioactive substance or blue dye injected near the tumor site within the breast |
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ktb690 |
Latest page update: made by ktb690
, May 29 2007, 2:56 PM EDT
(about this update
About This Update
516 words added view changes - complete history) |
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