When cells in the body grow out of control, it is called cancer. A growth of cancer cells is called a tumor. Breast cancer is metastatic when the cancer spreads beyond the tumor in the breast and the lymph nodes in the nearby armpit. This happens when cells shed by the tumor spread (or metastasize) to other parts of the body through the bloodstream and the lymph system.
After the cancer spreads, it can form new tumors in other parts of the body. These tumors are called metastases. As the cancer spreads through the blood, it most commonly travels to the bones of the pelvis, spine, upper arms and legs, ribs, and skull. Metastases are also commonly found in the liver, lungs, and brain.
Metastases happen most often within 3 years after initial treatment for breast cancer, but they can occur many years, even decades, later.
Cancers are uncontrolled growths of abnormal cells. It is not known why they occur. Any woman can get breast cancer, but some women are more likely to develop it than others. You have a greater risk of breast cancer if:
Also, some studies suggest that if you are a heavy drinker of alcohol, you have a greater risk of breast cancer.
The most common symptom of breast cancer is a painless lump in the breast. The symptoms of metastases depend on where the cancer has spread. Bone metastases usually cause bone pain. An enlarged liver found during a physical exam may indicate spread to the liver. Tumors in the lungs may cause a cough or shortness of breath. Tumors in the brain may cause headache, blurred vision, poor balance, and weakness on one side of the body.
A physical exam and tests may show tumors growing in other parts of your body. Tests may include:
The treatment for breast cancer depends on the size of the tumor and how much it has spread. Almost always surgery is done to remove the tumor or all or part of the breast. Some lymph nodes in the armpit area will also be removed.
For breast cancer that has spread, treatment may include radiation, chemotherapy, or hormone therapy. You may have just one type of treatment or a combination of treatments. These treatments are not expected to cure the metastatic cancer, but they do help to slow down growth of tumors or decrease their size so that symptoms lessen or go away.
Sometimes biologic therapy, such as the drug Herceptin, is used for treatment.
You will probably take medicine to relieve your pain. Even severe pain can be controlled with a combination of medicines that usually includes narcotics. People taking narcotics to control pain do not become drug addicts. As radiation or chemotherapy treatment relieves the pain, the need for pain medicine will lessen.
How long you will live after the discovery of metastatic breast cancer varies depending on how widespread the cancer is. Treatment of spread can sometimes give years of further control of the cancer.
American Cancer Society, Inc.
Phone: 800-ACS-2345 (800-227-2345)
Web site: http://www.cancer.org
AMC Cancer Research Center and Foundation
Phone: 800-525-3777
Web site: http://www.amc.org
National Cancer Institute
Phone: 800-4-CANCER (800-422-6237)
Web sites: http://cis.nci.nih.gov and
http://www.cancer.gov
Because the chance for cure and control depend on finding the cancer or its recurrence early and treating it before it spreads too far, it is important to: