Breast cancer
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What is breast cancer?
Overview
Breast cancer is when cells in the breast multiply in an abnormal way and grow out of control. This is the most common cancer type in women. But it can affect anyone, including men and transgender people.
Statistics
About 55,000 women are diagnosed with breast cancer each year in the UK. It is most common in women over 50, but can also affect younger women.
Invasive breast cancer
Breast cancer can be invasive or non-invasive. Invasive breast cancer means cancer cells have spread beyond the milk ducts or lobules in the breasts into surrounding tissue.
DCIS
Ductal carcinoma in situ (DCIS) is the earliest form of breast cancer. It is not life-threatening. But treatment is usually recommended to stop it developing into breast cancer.
Understanding breast cancer
Breast cancer explained
Breast Cancer Explained: Symptoms, Stages and Treatment
Dr. Aziza Sesay, General Practioner
In this Cancer Explained video, Dr Aziza Sesay is joined by Dr Hayley McKenzie to take an in-depth look at breast cancer, covering how it's diagnosed, tested, and treated.
description Transcript open_in_newWatch on YouTubeSigns and symptoms
Causes and risks
The importance of checking your breasts
Diagnosis
Breast cancer types
There are different types of breast cancer, and knowing your type helps doctors choose the most appropriate treatment.
Getting a diagnosis
Planning your treatment
Your treatment plan
Staging and grading
Receptors for breast cancer
Treatment
Treatment options
Breast Conserving Surgery
‐Talking about cancer, it's really important. The old Vicky is no more. My life has taken a different part. I need to recognise that this is my new normal. I need to fit into a new life."
Post treatment
After breast cancer treatment
“The stories Macmillan shares help those diagnosed with cancer to understand they are not alone, and the information about treatments and cancer is easy to understand, accurate, supportive and helpful.”
Other languages and formats
Other ways to access our content
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We have information about breast cancer in over 16 languages.
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What you can do next
Further reading
Visit the Online Community forums
About this information
Our cancer information meets the PIF TICK quality mark. This means it is easy to use, up-to-date and based on the latest evidence. Learn more about how we produce our information.
How we can help
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