How to prevent breast cancer with chemoprevention
Posted: October 9, 2023
Getting a mammogram is the most common way to catch breast cancer. However if you have increased risk for the disease, chemoprevention is a relatively new process that actually works to prevent breast cancer in the first place. [caption id="attachment_13097" align="alignright" width="450"]
Chemoprevention is a relatively new process that works to prevent breast cancer.[/caption]
Chemoprevention involves taking a medication that binds estrogen receptors to reduce estrogen for five years. This reduces your chance of developing breast cancer during that time by up to 50 percent.
"For patients who have a higher risk than the general population to develop breast cancer, we try to prevent it. One way of preventing it is to give a medication to reduce the future development of cancer," said Dr. Patcharin Tanawattanacharoen, an oncologist/hematologist with Marshfield Clinic Health System.
Despite the name, chemoprevention is not actually chemotherapy. It does not cause hair loss or other common side effects of receiving chemotherapy.
Increased risk needed for chemoprevention
To take chemoprevention medications, you need to have more than a 1.7 percent chance of developing breast cancer in the next five years. Your primary care provider uses a special formula to determine if you have risks that make you eligible. Risk factors include:- Family history
- Personal history of breast biopsy
- Personal history of atypical breast pathology
Specifics about chemoprevention
Chemoprevention uses two different types of medications:- Tamoxifen: For pre- and post-menopausal women
- Aromatase inhibitors: For post-menopausal women
For questions regarding your risk for breast cancer, talk to a Marshfield Clinic Health System provider.
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