Surgical Conditions
Breast Cancer Screening
The goal of screening exams for early breast cancer detection is to
find cancers before they start to cause symptoms. Screening refers to
tests and examinations used to detect a disease, such as cancer, in
people who do not have any symptoms. Early detection means applying a
strategy that results in an earlier diagnosis of breast cancer than
otherwise might have occurred.
Breast cancers that are detected (found) because they are causing
symptoms tend to be relatively larger and are more likely to have
spread beyond the breast. In contrast, breast cancers found during
screening exams are more likely to be small and still confined to the
breast.
The size of a breast cancer and how far it has spread are the most
important factors in predicting the prognosis (the outlook for chances
of survival) of a woman with this disease. Finding a breast cancer as
early as possible greatly improves the likelihood that treatment will
be successful. There is no question that early detection tests for
breast cancer save many thousands of lives each year, and that many
more lives could be saved if even more women and their health care
providers took advantage of these tests.
Breast Cancer screening includes a Breast Self
Examination, Breast X-ray (mammogram) and professional physical
examination.

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