New Ways to Beat Breast Cancer

Trials of less invasive, relatively painless treatments to beat this disease are showing excellent results.

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Trials of less invasive, relatively painless treatments to beat this disease are showing excellent results.

On a pleasant August evening in 2015, Ruhaila Jalal Khan, 53, was enjoying the view of the valley when she first felt a lump in her left breast. A resident of Anantnag, in Jammu and Kashmir, Ruhaila performed a breast self-exam every week. She visited her doctor the very next day, who reassured her but suggested a mammogram. "The mammogram did not reveal anything but I wasn't convinced. Four doctors and many tests later, a biopsy confirmed my worst fears," she says. And suddenly Ruhaila, a mother of two, found herself thrust into a vast club she would much rather not be a part of: women with breast cancer.

An estimated one in every eight women around the world will develop the disease in their lifetime, with the latest statistics indicating that 1.7 million globally were diagnosed in 2012 alone. According to the Indian Council of Medical Research, breast cancer was the most common cancer among women in India last year, with 1.5 lakh new cases in 2016 alone, affecting 1.45 lakh females (and 0.05 lakh males).

Considering Ruhaila's profile, doctors recommended the standard medical approach: Remove the whole breast or at least a part of it, use radiation and then, if the tumour is really aggressive, use chemotherapy, making the overall treatment a trifecta for side effects such as nausea, hair loss and brain fog. Luckily for Ruhaila, her cancer was detected early. This gave her another critical option: a genomic test of the tumour to assess the risk of it reappearing and plan the treatment accordingly.

"Self awareness and a yearly mammography after 40 years of age is the gold standard for the early detection of breast cancer worldwide. The treatment has three components -- surgery, drugs and radiation. Today, the focus is no longer on removing the entire breast and the lymph nodes but a more personalized and targeted treatment, depending on the type of breast cancer," says Dr Sidharth Sahni, senior consultant breast surgeon, institutes of canc...

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