Surgical Treatment Offers
New Options to Women With Breast Cancer
Surgical treatments have changed dramatically
in the past 30 years when radical mastectomy was the treatment of
choice for women with breast cancer. Today's treatment options include
breast-conserving surgery, mastectomy, or mastectomy with reconstruction.
Even in breast conservation, or tissue
sparing, surgery, women can have either a lumpectomy or a partial
(segmental) mastectomy. In a lumpectomy, the breast cancer and a portion
of normal tissue around the breast cancer lump are removed, whereas
in partial mastectomy, a larger portion of the normal breast tissue
around the lump is removed. The surgeon may also remove the lining
over the chest muscles below the tumor and some of the lymph nodes
under the arm. After breast-conserving surgery, most women receive
radiation therapy to destroy cancer cells that remain in the area.
When non-conserving breast surgery is
performed, women have either a total (or simple) mastectomy, modified
radical mastectomy, or radical mastectomy. Physicians generally recommend
a mastectomy when the cancer has spread to other parts of the breast
tissue or has spread to the lymph nodes under the arm, or if the breast
is very small and a lumpectomy would require removing additional breast
tissue, resulting in a deformed breast.
Breast reconstruction is often an option
at the same time as the mastectomy, or at a later time. It is recommended
that women considering reconstruction discuss this with a plastic
surgeon prior to undergoing mastectomy.
National
Cancer Institute Recommendations for Seeking Second Opinion
While some insurance companies require
a second opinion, a woman may want to seek a second opinion even if
one is not required. While this may result in a slight delay in treatment,
the National Cancer Institute (NCI) stresses that this does
not make the treatment less effective.
The NCI recommends that a woman
wanting a second opinion: