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We hope that people will find help by reading and sharing. We look forward to reading your emails and tweets with questions for Dr. Craig.
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Dear Dr. Craig,
I am a 27 year old lady and I have had
two breast operations after finding lumps. The first was in 2005 when I
was nineteen and the other one was last year, and this time in both
breasts. Biopsy results in the two instances showed that the lumps were
fibroadenomas.
Do I stand a higher risk of getting breast cancer in future as a result of these lumps?
The doctor I saw advised me to get married as soon as possible. Is there any link between fibroadenomas and being single?
Also, in the last few months I have been
having severe pains in my right breast. What can this possibly mean? I
am so scared of going to the hospital again.
Single-girl. Ikeja, Lagos.
Dear Single-girl,
First of all, to answer your last
question, allow me point you to a series I ran here on Bella Naija a few
months ago on breast health. A lot of the questions about lumps, how to
do a self breast examination and what causes breast pain are thoroughly
discussed here. {Insert link to Pink October please}
Breast pain can be a pointer to any one of a long list of conditions and it is important that you please see a physician.
Breast pain can be a pointer to any one of a long list of conditions and it is important that you please see a physician.
So do women who have had a fibroadenoma
stand a higher risk of developing cancer later on in life? The answer is
‘not really’. To understand whether there is a link between
fibroadenomas and breast cancer, we must first understand how either
condition comes about.
Breasts are made up of lobules
(milk-producing glands) and ducts (tubes that carry milk to the nipple),
which are surrounded by glandular, fibrous supporting tissue and fatty
tissue. Fibroadenomas are formed when the supporting structure of the
breast (connective tissue) and ducts grow over the lobule and form a
solid lump.
It is believed that this tendency for the supporting tissue to form lumps is caused by the fluctuating levels of hormones in a woman’s body during her monthly cycle. Early in the cycle the female sex hormones are at a resting level and the breasts are also at their resting size. As the cycle progresses the body produces more and more sex hormones and these cause the breast to remodel and change in shape and size. As the cycle ends the hormonal levels drop off to normal and the breast also returns to its normal size. This increase and decrease and increase and decrease happens over and over again over many months and years and in some women who are particularly susceptible, this consistent modelling and remodelling of the breast tissue is what leads to the lump formation.
There are two broad categories of fibroadenomas. Simple Fibroadenomas are mainly just connective tissue cells that clump together to form a lump in the breast while in Complex Fibroadenomas certain factors may cause the lump to become calcified or have other different kinds of cells in them apart from connective tissue and may have cysts in their centre.
It is believed that this tendency for the supporting tissue to form lumps is caused by the fluctuating levels of hormones in a woman’s body during her monthly cycle. Early in the cycle the female sex hormones are at a resting level and the breasts are also at their resting size. As the cycle progresses the body produces more and more sex hormones and these cause the breast to remodel and change in shape and size. As the cycle ends the hormonal levels drop off to normal and the breast also returns to its normal size. This increase and decrease and increase and decrease happens over and over again over many months and years and in some women who are particularly susceptible, this consistent modelling and remodelling of the breast tissue is what leads to the lump formation.
There are two broad categories of fibroadenomas. Simple Fibroadenomas are mainly just connective tissue cells that clump together to form a lump in the breast while in Complex Fibroadenomas certain factors may cause the lump to become calcified or have other different kinds of cells in them apart from connective tissue and may have cysts in their centre.
On the other hand, for breast cancer to
develop in any woman there must be cell damage and DNA mutation. This
cell damage can be as a result of radiation, or foods or chemicals or
even hormones. Every cell has a life span. It stays alive for a
specified period of time after which it must die. Before it dies it will
divide into daughter cells who will take over its function. So for
example, before a cell in your eye dies, it would have made daughter
cells who will continue its ‘seeing’ function after it is gone. When a
cell gets damaged it can no longer carry out its intended function and
so it is removed by the body’s ‘police’ so as to keep the whole tissue
healthy and working at optimal level. Sometimes however a damaged cell
may evade the body’s police and can go undetected, especially in tissues
where there is a very rapid turnover of cells. These damaged cells can
then go ahead and form daughter cells who go ahead and form other
daughter cells. The resulting mass of abnormal cells is called a cancer.
(Please note that cancer formation is a complex multi-layered process. I
have over simplified here for the purpose of comparison only)
From the above it is easy to see that by
and large, there is NO connection between a fibroadenoma and breast
cancer per sė and almost all women with a simple fibroadenoma will NOT
progress to have breast cancer.
That said however, researchers have
found that even though the processes that cause a fibroadenoma to form
is significantly different from those that cause cancer, there may be a
very small increase in the chance of developing cancer in women who have
had complex fibroadenoma. This is because the conditions that may allow
a simple fibroadenoma progress to a complex one are similar to those
that can encourage damaged cell proliferation. It is important to
reiterate that the process of cancer formation is complex and
multifactorial and this similarity is only one of many steps that can
lead to possible cancer formation.
As to getting married as soon as you
can, I do not see how this would make any difference. Fibroadenomas are
hormone dependent and the only realistic way to reduce the likelihood of
them occurring is to reduce the hormonal levels. This is why as a woman
gets older and as her hormonal levels begin to drop, the number of
fibroadenomas also reduce in equal proportion. Studies have shown that
the peak age of patients who have fibroadenomas is 30 after which the
numbers begin a steady decline. So if you are not in a serious and
committed relationship, please don’t rush out to marry the next guy that
says hello. Doctors Orders!
all the best with everything
Warm regards,
Dr. Craig
Dr. Craig
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