Surgery
Most people with
breast cancer have surgery to remove the cancer. In
most cases, a few of the lymph nodes under the arm are also removed and
examined under the microscope to see whether cancer cells are present. This is
called
sentinel lymph node biopsy. When nearly all lymph
nodes under the arm are removed, it is called
axillary lymph node dissection. You are less likely to
have arm swelling (lymphedema) after
a sentinel node biopsy than an axillary dissection.
Even if your
doctor removes all the cancer that can be seen at the time of your surgery, you
may be given treatment with radiation therapy, chemotherapy, or hormone therapy
after surgery to try to destroy any cancer cells that may be left. This is
called adjuvant therapy.
Breast cancer: Should I have breast-conserving surgery or a mastectomy for early-stage breast cancer?
Surgery that allows you to keep your breast
Procedures include:
- Breast-conserving surgery (lumpectomy), which is the
removal of the lump in the breast along with some of the tissue around it. This
is sometimes called excisional biopsy or wide excision. It is usually followed
by radiation therapy to the remaining breast tissue.
- Partial or segmental mastectomy, which is the removal of the
area of the breast that contains cancer as well as some of the breast tissue
around the tumor and the lining over the chest muscles below the tumor. Some of
the lymph nodes under the arm are also removed and examined under the
microscope (axillary lymph node dissection or sentinel lymph node biopsy). In
most cases, radiation therapy follows.
For stages I and II breast cancer,
breast-conserving surgery (lumpectomy) with radiation therapy has
the same survival rate as
mastectomy and some of the same
side effects.28
If you plan to have a
lumpectomy, talk to your doctor about what your breast might look like after
the surgery.
Removal of the breast (mastectomy)
Mastectomy procedures include:
- Total or simple mastectomy, which is the removal of the whole breast.
- Modified radical mastectomy, which is the removal of the
breast, some of the lymph nodes under the arm, and sometimes part of the chest
wall muscles.
- Skin-sparing mastectomy, which leaves most of the skin that
was over the breast, except for the nipple and the areola. This type of
mastectomy removes about as much breast tissue as a modified radical
mastectomy, but leaves less scar tissue and a reconstructed breast that seems
more natural.
- Radical mastectomy (Halsted
radical mastectomy), which is the removal of the breast, chest muscles, and all
of the lymph nodes under the arm (axillary lymph node dissection). For many years, radical
mastectomy was the most common operation for breast cancer.
This surgery is rarely used now because it does not
improve survival or risk for recurrence when compared with other surgical
treatments.
Breast reconstruction
You may wish to talk to your
doctor about
breast reconstruction before you make a decision about
which type of surgery to have for breast cancer. If you choose to have a
mastectomy, a different surgeon with special expertise in reconstructive
surgery may perform this operation at the same time as the mastectomy or after
the mastectomy.
Your choice will depend on the size of the
cancer, the size and shape of your breasts, the size and shape of your body,
how active you are, and other details, such as whether you have chemotherapy or
radiation. If you choose to have a mastectomy, discuss reconstructive surgery
and the use of a breast prosthesis with your doctor. For more information about
reconstructive surgery, see the topic
Cosmetic Surgery and Procedures.
Breast cancer: Should I have breast reconstruction after a mastectomy?