Breast Cancer Statistics

The rates of breast cancer vary widely in different parts of the country and the world, and can vary among patients of different ages and races as well. There is also a huge difference in breast cancer rates between genders, with women being one hundred times more likely to get breast cancer than men. As for 2011, estimates of more than 225,000 new cases of invasive breast cancer will be diagnosed. There will be more than 57,000 cases of in situ breast cancer, which is both ductal carcinoma in situ breast cancer and lobular carcinoma in situ. Out of those cancer cases, there will be almost 40,000 deaths this year from the disease.

As stated, breast cancer is much more rare in men than it is in women. However, the statistics for men are still up there, with more than 2000 cases of breast cancer diagnosed in men, with 450 of them resulting in death. The rates of breast cancer among men are much lower than with women, including cases of primary breast cancer, and a new cancer found in men that have already had it. Neither of the statistics that are listed here include an emergence of the same breast cancer that was already present. The mortality rate in men is lower as well.

Breast Cancer Statistics

 

Breast Cancer Rates by State

According to statistics taken from the years 2003 to 2007 from women, breast cancer varies a little bit by state, but with no real stand outs. The USA state with the highest rate of breast cancer in women from these years was the District of Columbia, with 139 cases per 100,000 women. Continue reading Breast Cancer Statistics

Metastatic Breast Cancer

One of the scariest forms of breast cancer is Metastatic Breast Cancer, which is a form of cancer that is aggressive in expanding to other parts of the body. It is not so much a form of breast cancer, as it is a complication of breast cancer. Metastatic breast cancer is more serious than the other forms of cancer, and treatment is usually more to slow the spread of the cancer than to cure, as the prognosis is usually poor on cancer that has metastasized. This type of cancer will spread to areas like the liver, brain, lungs and nearby lymph nodes. The most common part of the body that it attacks is the bone.

Symptoms of Metastatic Breast Cancer

The symptoms that someone with this type of cancer experience depend a lot upon where the cancer has spread. For example, if the cancer has spread to the bone, the patient will have severe pain and sometimes bone fractures, as well as swelling and erythema. If the cancer has spread to the brain, the sufferer will begin to get progressively worse headaches, as well as seizures, vomiting and changes of behavior and personality as the brain is changed by the cancer. Continue reading Metastatic Breast Cancer