• Working Hours: 05.00PM - 09.00PM

BREAST CANCER TREATMENT

About Breast Cancer Treatment

Breast cancer treatment involves a combination of surgery, chemotherapy, radiation therapy, targeted therapy, or hormonal therapy depending on the cancer type and stage. Surgery removes tumors or affected breast tissue, while chemotherapy and radiation destroy cancer cells. Targeted and hormonal therapies focus on specific cancer growth mechanisms. Early detection ensures better treatment outcomes, improved survival rates, and enhanced quality of life. Treatment is personalized to patient needs, promoting recovery, confidence, and long-term health management.

Types of Breast Cancer Treatment

Breast cancer treatment includes surgery, chemotherapy, radiation therapy, hormonal therapy, targeted therapy, and immunotherapy. Surgery removes tumors or affected tissue, while chemotherapy and radiation kill cancer cells. Hormonal and targeted therapies address specific cancer mechanisms, and immunotherapy boosts natural defense. Treatments are often combined to maximize effectiveness, improve survival, and support long-term recovery.

Causes Requiring Breast Cancer Treatment

Breast cancer treatment is required due to uncontrolled cell growth, genetic mutations, hormonal influences, or family history. It also addresses advanced symptoms like lumps, pain, nipple discharge, and spreading tumors. Timely treatment prevents progression, improves survival chances, and helps restore overall health and quality of life.

Genetic mutations increasing cancer risk

Family history of breast cancer

FAQS:

Breast cancer treatment is often required to remove tumors, prevent spread, relieve symptoms, and improve survival.

Breast cancer treatments include surgery, chemotherapy, radiation, hormonal, targeted, and immunotherapy, chosen based on cancer type, stage, and patient’s condition.

Not always. Surgery is common, but some early or advanced cases may rely on chemotherapy, radiation, or targeted therapy instead of immediate surgical intervention.

Effectiveness depends on cancer stage, type, and treatment approach. Early detection significantly increases survival rates and improves quality of life outcomes.

Side effects may include fatigue, hair loss, nausea, hormonal changes, infections, or lymphedema, varying depending on treatment type and patient’s overall health condition.

Yes. Recurrence is possible, but regular follow-ups, lifestyle changes, and maintenance therapies reduce risks and help detect any return at earlier stages.