When you frequently experience breast pain,
you might wonder if it raises your risk for breast cancer. Breast
pain, or mastalgia, is very common and is often related to benign
causes. Having hormonal breast pain or discomfort related to
fibrocystic tissue or breast infections does not raise your breast cancer risk.
Hormones And Breast Pain:
Between
puberty and menopause, most women have some cyclical breast pain and
tenderness as hormone levels change. At menopause, when your menstrual
periods end, most breast pain also ceases. Your ovaries will produce
lower levels of estrogen during menopause, which results in less swelling and tenderness in your breasts and tummy. Menopausal breast pain is noncyclical and usually hurts in only one breast. Noncyclical breast pain is not hormonal and can be caused by illness, injury, weight gain or certain medications.
Breast Pain Doesn't Always Mean Breast Cancer:
At
the Breast Care Center of University Hospital, Syracuse, New York,
researchers did a study with 5463 women who visited their clinic. There
were 861 of these women who were diagnosed with breast cancer, and of
that group, only 14% of those women reported any breast pain. The
majority of women who complained of breast pain did not have breast cancer. Having breast pain is uncomfortable and upsetting, but it is rarely a sign of breast cancer, and seldom increases cancer risk.
Painful Benign Breast Conditions And Cancer Risk:
Certain benign breast conditions can cause breast pain, but these have a very small impact
on your risk for developing breast cancer. These breast conditions are
made of non-proliferative cells, which grow and divide at a normal
rate.
• Benign Breast Conditions With Low Risk:
Causes pain and affects breast cancer risk over normal: Very Slight Increase
Non-proliferative cells - normal rate of cell growth and division
Non-proliferative cells - normal rate of cell growth and division
- Abscess beneath areola or within breast tissue
- Ductal ectasia - blocked milk duct, sometimes with nipple discharge
- Fat necrosis - fatty tissue that has died and become thick or hard
- Fibrocystic changes - cyclical symmetrical swelling and tenderness
- Mastitis - breast infection
- Sebaceous cyst with infection - bump below skin containing keratin
- Simple fibroadenoma - lump made of fibrous and lobular tissue
• Benign Breast Conditions With Moderate Risk:
Causes pain and raises risk over normal: 150 - 200% Increase
Proliferative cells without atypia - faster than normal rate of cell growth with no abnormal cells
Proliferative cells without atypia - faster than normal rate of cell growth with no abnormal cells
- Complex fibroadenoma - lump made of mixed fibrous and lobular tissue, cysts, lobes, etc.
- Multiple fibroadenomas - two or more simple fibroadenomas
- Radial scar - a star-shaped dense mass within breast (rare)
• Benign Breast Conditions With Heightened Risk:
Causes pain and raises risk greatly: 4 to 5 Times Normal
Proliferative with atypia - faster than normal rate of cell growth and having abnormal cells
Proliferative with atypia - faster than normal rate of cell growth and having abnormal cells
- Atypical ductal hyperplasia (ADH)
- Atypical lobular hyperplasia (ALH)
• Benign Sources of Breast Pain:
Other sources of breast pain that do not increase cancer risk:
- Breast injury
- Healing from breast surgery
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