If you mean; can it be "Malignant", then the answer would be yes!
There is no pathogen it is more on undifferentiated or cancerous cells.
It would be extremely rare for an 11 year old girl to develop breast cancer. Plus, in in mature women, breast cancer has no symptoms until she or a doctor feels a lump in the breast. But, not all breast lumps are cancerous.
Typically you don't see a breast cancer lump, but notice it when touching, washing, or scratching your breast.
Breast cancer wasn't created.Cancer is a whole variety of diseases that all share the common traits of damaged DNA, which causes the cancerous cells to divide uncontrolled.
She found a lump and feared that she had breast cancer but the lump turned out to be non cancerous.
The significance of enlarged lymph nodes connected to breast cancer is that when these lymph nodes get enlarged by either cancerous cells or other problems, it may be felt at breast examination.
mastectomy is the complete removal of a breast and some surrounding tissue to insure that all the cancer has been removed.Lumpectomy is the removal of cancerous tissue and some additional tissue around it.
she got breast cancer in 2005
It is estimated that 75-80% of all breast biopsies resulted in benign (no cancer present) findings.
True. While breast cancer is more commonly associated with women, men can also develop breast cancer. Though rare, it's estimated that around 1 in 833 men will develop breast cancer in their lifetime. Men have breast tissue, though typically less developed than women's, and this tissue can still be susceptible to cancerous growth.
You pretty much have a 50/50 chance of it being cancerous, and the best thing to do is to go get it checked out and removed immediately. If breast cancer is common in your family history, definitely take precautions.
The different stages of breast cancer refer to how far the cancerous tumor has spread in the body. In Stage 2, the cancer is still relatively small and contained in the breast. It may or may not have reached the lymph nodes.