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Surgery is usually the first choice of treatment for breast cancer. At one time, most women were treated by a radical mastectomy -- the removal of the entire breast and the muscles of the chest wall. Surgical techniques have been refined over the years, and it is now possible to remove less of the normal breast tissue. Memorial Sloan-Kettering surgeons can offer a patient the best possible chance of saving her breast (if this is an appropriate treatment for her). Here, some 70 percent of women undergo breast-conserving treatments like lumpectomy, rather than mastectomy -- far more than the national rate.
Standard Treatment
Lumpectomy or partial mastectomy involves the surgical removal of the lump, a margin of normal tissue surrounding the lump, and the underarm lymph nodes (followed by treatment with radiation). The amount of breast tissue removed depends on the size and location of the tumor. If 20 percent to 25 percent of the breast is removed, the procedure is called a quadrectomy.
Women who are not candidates for lumpectomy may be treated by mastectomy -- the removal of the breast tissue. It is uncommon for women to be treated by a radical mastectomy. Some women may be treated by simple mastectomy. Unlike a radical mastectomy, this procedure does not involve the removal of the axillary lymph nodes. This procedure is commonly used to treat ductal carcinoma in situ.
Advanced-Stage Treatment
When cancer spreads, or metastasizes, from the initial site in the breast, it often does so through the lymph system. If a woman's lymph nodes contain cancer, she may need more aggressive treatment, such as chemotherapy.
To prevent cancer cells from establishing themselves elsewhere in the body, the lymph nodes that drain the breast area are often removed during surgery. Most of the lymph nodes are located in the armpit. The nodes are not arranged in a trail leading away from the breast, but in more of a web or network. It is difficult for surgeons to look at the nodes and determine whether or not they contain cancerous cells. Generally, about 75 to 80 percent of the women diagnosed with breast cancer will need to have 12 to 15 under-arm lymph nodes near the affected breast surgically removed and examined for cancer cells. Until now, such "axillary node dissection" has been the only way doctors could reliably tell if cancer had spread beyond the breast to nearby lymph nodes. But it may leave women with a disorder called lymphedema -- a painful swelling of the arm due to fluid accumulation -- or put them at increased risk for infection.