Breast cancer
The breast is made up of glands called
lobules that can make milk and thin tubes called ducts that carry the milk from
the lobules to the nipple. Breast tissue also contains fat and connective
tissue, lymph nodes, and blood vessels.
The most common type of breast cancer is ductal carcinoma, which begins
in the cells of the ducts. Breast cancer can also begin in the cells of the
lobules and in other tissues in the breast. Invasive breast cancer is breast
cancer that has spread from where it began in the ducts or lobules to
surrounding tissue.
In the U.S., breast cancer is the second most common cancer in women
after skin cancer. It can occur in both men and women, but it is very rare in
men. Each year there are about 2,300 new cases of breast cancer in men and
about 230,000 new cases in women.
—Joanna
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