Want this question answered?
No it will not.
Every individual's chances for breast cancer are different. Diet, exercise, and genetics all play a role in the chances for getting breast cancer. On average, every woman born has a one in eight chance of getting breast cancer.
well i am not sure about what might increase the chances of getting cervical cancer, but 30 women in the U.S.A. find out that they have cervical cancer everyday.
Teenagers can get various forms of cancer including thyroid cancer, testicular cancer, cervical cancer, breast cancer, and many others.
i am 16 years old girl and doctor told me i have breast lumps. is there any chances of breast cancer?
no
breast cancer and ovarian cancer are common in women, however cervical cancer can also occur frequently.
Yes, smokers can get breast cancer. Smoking increases your chances, but not smoking or quitting does not make you impervious to it.
Yes.On the contrary, being pregnant and/or breastfeeding lowers the chances of getting breast cancer.
The most important preventative measure one can take in order to decrease their chances of cervical cancer is to remember to get an annual Pap smear test.
Abnormal cells from other organs don't usually present themselves in a PAP test. But they can. If patient has abnormal cells on PAP test and has history of breast cancer, a pathologist can determine if cells are cervical cells or breast cells. If breast cancer has migrated to cervix, this means the staging of breast cancer would increase. Most likely this isn't the case, and the abnormal cells are cervical related.
Almost all breast cancer cases are after age 30-35. The chance of getting breast cancer in a lifetime is 1/8, the chances before 35 is 1/400, the chance before 25 is like 1/20,000.