BREAST CANCER
A   65-year-old woman   visits  the gynecologist    with    a   solid   2   cm  mass    in  the
upper   outer   quadrant    of  the left    breast. A   biopsy  of  the lesion  is  done,   which
is  consistent  with    “infiltrating   ductal  breast  cancer.”Breast  cancer  continues   to  be  the most    common cancer   diagnosed   in  women   of
western industrialized  countries.  In  2018,   an  estimated   266,00  new cases   of
invasive    breast  cancer  are expected    to  be  diagnosed   in  women   in  the United
States, along   with    64,000  new cases   of  non-invasive    (in situ)   breast  cancer.
Management. The preferred   treatment   for most    patients    with    stage   I   or  II  breast
cancer  is  considered  to  be  breast-conserving   therapy with    a   wide    excision,
axillary    lymph   node    dissection  or  sentinel    lymph   node    biopsy, and radiotherapy.
Lymphatic   mapping and sentinel    lymph   node    biopsy  are new procedures  that
offer   the ability to  avoid   axillary    lymph   node    dissection  and its associated
morbidity   in  patients    with    small   primary tumors  who are at  low risk    of  axillary
node    involvement,    while   still   offering    nodal   staging information.
Prognostic  Factors.    Some    of  the key decisions   in  the current management  of
primary breast  cancer  involve the need    for prognostication.    Prognostic  factors
serve   to  identify    those   patients    who might   benefit from    adjuvant    therapy.
Lymph   node    status. This    is  important   in  determining cancer  staging and
treatment   options.    Axillary    lymph   node    status  is  the most    important   factor  in
the prognosis   of  patients    with    breast  cancer. As  the number  of  positive
axillary    lymph   nodes   increases,  survival    rate    decreases   and relapse rate