Quick answer
What is breast cancer?
Breast cancer is the most common cancer in UK women — often detected on screening mammograms before symptoms appear. Warning signs include new lump, nipple change, skin dimpling, or discharge. Most lumps are benign but always need GP assessment within 2 weeks. Treatment combines surgery, radiotherapy, hormone therapy, chemotherapy, and targeted drugs depending on type. Men can get breast cancer too though rare.
Breast cancer — detection and treatment overview
Breast cancer is the most common cancer in UK women — ~55,000 cases yearly — 1 in 7 lifetime risk. Survival has doubled since 1970s through screening, specialist surgery, and targeted systemic therapy.
Men: ~400 cases yearly — 0.5% of breast cancers — often later stage at diagnosis.
See also breast lump symptom guide.
Symptoms — when to worry
See GP (2-week wait referral if suspected cancer):
- new lump or thickening — breast or axilla
- change size/shape
- skin dimpling — peau d’orange
- nipple inversion — new
- ** nipple discharge** — blood-stained especially
- eczema-like rash on nipple — Paget’s disease
- persistent focal pain — less common presenting feature
Painless lump — does not exclude cancer.
Screening
NHS Breast Screening (mammography):
- every 3 years
- women 50–71 England (extensions in progress)
- detects ~30% of cancers in screened population — not perfect
Between screens: self-know normal — no formal self-exam required — report change.
High risk:
- BRCA mutations — MRI + mammography from ~30
- strong family history — genetics clinic
Diagnosis — triple assessment
One-stop breast clinic:
- Clinical examination
- Imaging — mammogram ± ultrasound (younger denser breasts ultrasound-first)
- Core biopsy — histology
Staging if cancer confirmed:
- CT/bone scan selective
- sentinel node biopsy
Types and biology
Invasive ductal carcinoma — commonest
Hormone receptors:
- ER/PR positive — endocrine therapy — tamoxifen or aromatase inhibitors postmenopausal
HER2 positive — trastuzumab, pertuzumab — improved outcomes
Triple negative — chemotherapy main systemic — no hormone/HER2 targets
Grade, stage, lymph node status — prognosis
Treatment overview
Local:
- breast-conserving surgery (lumpectomy) + radiotherapy
- mastectomy ± reconstruction
- axillary surgery — sentinel node
Systemic:
- chemotherapy — anthracycline, taxane regimens
- endocrine therapy — 5 to 10 years
- CDK4/6 inhibitors — advanced ER+
- ** immunotherapy** — selected triple negative
Radiotherapy — post-lumpectomy standard; post-mastectomy selected.
Multidisciplinary team (MDT) — individual plan.
Living during and after treatment
- fertility preservation — discuss pre-chemotherapy if relevant age
- menopausal symptoms from treatment — see menopause
- ** lymphoedema** risk post-surgery — physiotherapy
- Breast Cancer Now — support
Prevention and risk reduction
- alcohol reduction — dose-dependent risk
- weight management postmenopausal
- physical activity
- breastfeeding — modest protection
- risk-reducing surgery — BRCA carriers — specialist
HRT — small increased breast cancer risk — individual discussion
Breast cancer terrifies — most lumps are not cancer — but 2-week clinic assessment is fast, standard, and life-saving when needed.
Common questions
- What are the symptoms of breast cancer?
- New lump or thickening in breast or armpit, change in breast size or shape, skin dimpling or puckering, nipple inversion, rash or crusting on nipple, discharge (blood-stained), persistent pain in breast or armpit. Many cancers found on screening before symptoms.
- What age does breast cancer screening start?
- NHS Breast Screening Programme invites women aged 50 to 71 every 3 years in England — ages vary slightly in Scotland, Wales, NI. Not foolproof — report symptoms between screens. Higher-risk women (BRCA, strong family history) may start MRI/mammography earlier via genetics clinic.
- Are all breast lumps cancer?
- No — most lumps are benign (cysts, fibroadenomas). Cannot tell by feel alone — GP refers to breast clinic for triple assessment. Never ignore a lump because it is painless — cancer often painless.
- How is breast cancer treated?
- Depends on stage and biology — surgery (lumpectomy or mastectomy), radiotherapy, chemotherapy, hormone therapy (tamoxifen, aromatase inhibitors for oestrogen receptor positive), trastuzumab (Herceptin) for HER2 positive. Multidisciplinary team plans individual treatment.
- Can men get breast cancer?
- Yes — about 400 men yearly in UK — usually presents as lump behind nipple. Same referral pathway — often delayed diagnosis due to low awareness.
- Does family history mean I will get breast cancer?
- Increases risk — especially first-degree relative young onset or multiple relatives. Most breast cancer is sporadic without family history. BRCA1/BRCA2 mutations significantly increase risk — genetic counselling if strong pattern.