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Understanding Breast Cancer Stages and StagingUnderstanding breast cancer staging is a critical step of the diagnostic process and helps with prognosis and proper treatment.
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Breast Cancer Staging Using the TNM Staging System TNM stands for Tumor, Nodes, Metastases, a 1992 (updated in 2002) cancer staging classification of the American Joint Committee on Cancer and the International Union Against Cancer. This system may be applied to various organs and helps establish a basis for breast cancer prognosis.
The values ascribed to T, N and M are used to determine the stage of the cancer.
Stages of Breast CancerStage 0 describes the earliest of breast cancer stages. Typically, breast cancer begins as a carcinoma in situ meaning that it is localized in a duct or lobule (TisN0M0). Growth rate varies but the "wild" cells remain together. Stage 0 cancer is non-invasive. The prognosis for individuals with a carcinoma in situ is that all will be alive after five years, provided that the entire tumor is successfully removed.
If the carcinoma in situ is not identified and removed, it is liable to continue growing to Stage I. Stage I cancer is invasive but is confined to the breast and is less than two centimeters (4/5 inch) in diameter (T1N0M0). Approximately 98 percent of Stage I patients are alive five years after diagnosis and treatment. Stage II is characterized by a combination of tumor size and the distance the disease has spread. Stage II is divided into two stages: IIA and IIB
Stage III is divided into three stages: IIIA, IIIB and IIIC.
Stage IV is well advanced; regardless of the size of the tumor or number of lymph nodes affected the disease has metastasized to bones, lungs, liver, brain or other body organs (T0-4N0-3M1). Stage IV offers the lowest probability for survival of any of the stages. The five-year survival is 16 percent. Once it has spread to internal organs, the prognosis is poor.
Physicians may apply the concept of breast cancer prognosis to patients with tumors when they are first detected, or even to individuals who demonstrate certain risk factors. The type of tumor and location, for example, help doctors determine the likelihood of success for a specific treatment regimen and, therefore, the likelihood of a tumor recurring. Once a stage has been determined, the cancer is always referred to as in that stage, even if the disease progresses. Someone diagnosed with Stage IIIA breast cancer will always be a Stage IIIA patient, even if the cancer metastasizes to another organ. The cancer would then be called "Stage IIIA breast cancer with metastasis in the lungs" (or other organ affected). Resources American Cancer Society. (revised 2004, September). How is breast cancer staged? Imaginis Corporation. (updated 2004, September). Staging and survival rates of breast cancer. |
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