Dense breasts and lumps

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Sheenamarie88
Sheenamarie88 Member Posts: 2

 I am 21 almost 22 and my grandmother has breast cancer. A couple months ago I noticed a lump in my breast and went to have it checked out. My ob-gyn sent me to have a mammogram and an u/s. After the radiologist reviewed the results, she told me that i have very very dense breasts for a 21 year old but when I asked her what that meant she did not give me much information. Now I have learned that dense breasts put you at a higher risk for BC. Plus I am already at high risk. I have an appointment next week to go see a surgeon and I am really nervous. I am a mother of three and I am starting college in August. Has anyone else been through this and if so please tell me how you dealt with it.

                                                   Sheena

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  • flash
    flash Member Posts: 1,685
    edited July 2010

    deep breath.  Most lumps do turn out to be B9.  Yes, it is unusual to have BC at your age but not impossible just extremely, extremely, rare.  More important for you,  is to probably work with a geneticist and see what is your risk, not the risk you perceive.  Generally, you are considered high risk if it's first degree relative, not second.  Usually you start monitoring 10 years earlier than the relative found their BC.  You are young and 80 % are B9.  Watch with "lumpy breasts" that you faithfully do your self exams so you learn your own normal.  Push for ultra sounds any time you are not sure of the mamm results.  good luck.

  • Anonymous
    Anonymous Member Posts: 1,376
    edited July 2010

    Be sure to have an MRI.  Ultrasounds and mammograms don't work with dense breast tissue. 

  • Medigal
    Medigal Member Posts: 1,412
    edited July 2010

    Well, I would love to be able to tell you it is great having dense breasts but from my experience it was not.  You might want to ask your doctor if what you have is fibrocystic disease (now called "dense" breasts).  I have that and the problem is that it makes one's breasts very lumpy and even with the Mammos etc. they could never tell if the "lump" they saw was benign until they did a biopsy.  So the doctor has to watch you carefully and make sure they are not mistaking a benign fibro lump for the other.  I had "years" of biopsies until one day I screamed at my doctor and he said he was only trying to protect me from cancer.   Well he did for years and years but then menopause came and affected me very badly so I was put on HRT.  Then I ended up with estrogen positive cancer. It was NOT my dense breasts which caused the cancer!  They just can hide it easier.  

    The gist of this is that you will have to be watched more carefully than a normal 21 year old and may have to have more biopsies but having dense breasts does not mean cancer for every one.  You have been given good advice by the other posters.  My Mammo at the end was negative, my gyn manually found the lump but then it was seen on the Ultrasound.  I think ALL insurance should allow both Ultrasounds and Mammograms and even MRIs for women with dense or fibro breasts!  The doctor has to show medical necessity now.

    Best of luck to you on your journey!

  • Beesie
    Beesie Member Posts: 12,240
    edited July 2010

    Fibrocystic breasts are not the same as dense breasts.  

    Approximately 60% of women have fibrocystic breasts.  Fibrocystic breasts are a hormonal condition that is most severe when women are young and usually eases at menopause.  Although fibrocystic breasts often feel thick & lumpy and can appear dense on a mammogram, having fibrocystic breasts does not means that you have the type of density that increases your risk of getting breast cancer.  The type of density that is a real concern with regard to breast cancer risk only affects about 10% - 20% of women.  Women who have truly "dense" breasts tend to have more density than most when they are young and continue to have dense breasts after menopause.   You need the radiologist who performs your mammograms, or your doctor who reviews the mammo report, to tell you if you have these "extremely dense" breasts that put you at risk. You cannot tell if you have dense breasts just by how your breasts feel.

    I thought that it was important to clarify this because we don't want the 60% of pre-menopausal women out there with fibrocystic breasts to all think that they are at high risk to get breast cancer. They are not. 

    Sheena, in your case, since the radiologist told you that you have "very very dense breasts for a 21 year old", unfortunately that does suggest that you may be in the high density group, which would increase your breast cancer risk.  In general mammograms are not recommended for younger women because their natural breast density makes it difficult to read the mammogram; in your case, this problem would be even greater.  So I would agree that getting an MRI is a good idea.  And I would agree that going forward you should be very diligent in your screening, with annual ultrasounds and, if possible, annual MRIs.

    As for your current lump, the fact is that approx. 95% of lumps are benign.  Of those that can't be clearly identified on a mammo, ultrasound or MRI film and that therefore require a biopsy, 80% turn out to be benign.  Those percentages are for all women of all ages and all risk levels.  For someone as young as you, the odds would be even more greatly in your favor.  In younger women, the most common lump is a fibroadenoma.  I had one when I was 16 and another at 20.  They are harmless.  And they are driven by hormones. Since you mention that you have 3 kids, if you've recently been pregnant, that could easily explain the development of a fibroadenoma.  The next most common type of lump in someone your age is a cyst.  I've had more cysts than I can remember.  They are almost always harmless too. 

    So try to take a deep breath and relax.  The odds are extremely highly in your favor that this lump will turn out to be nothing serious.  As for being high risk, if in fact you are, the good news is that you've learned this at such a young age, which allows you to start screening now.  Although I admit that sometimes it was a pain in the butt to always have to go for my screening tests and I would get frustrated that I'd so often have call-backs and biopsies, I decided to view it as a positive thing.  The way I looked at it, if I was to get breast cancer, at least the odds were really good that it would be caught early.  As it turns out, I did get BC (33 years after my first lump) and it was caught early.  So the way I see it, it's a whole lot worse to be high risk and not know, or even just to be average risk but never go for your screenings.

    Good luck with your appointment with the surgeon.  Please let us know how it goes.

  • Sheenamarie88
    Sheenamarie88 Member Posts: 2
    edited July 2010

    Well, I just want to say thanks to all of you. You all have helped me take some deep breaths and just relax. I will be sure to keep all of you updated. Thank you so much for your help.

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