Life saving early detection is the key to breast caner survival. Survival of Stage 4 breast cancer is significantly lower than if it is detected at earlier
stages.
Breast cancer when it has advanced can spread to other tissue through out the body. This can include lung tissue, the liver, the brain and bone
tissue. When breast cancer is first identified at Stage 4 it has inundated the body's own ability to fight off the disease in order for it to have spread this far. According
to the American Cancer Society when the disease is diagnosed this far advanced the 5 year survival rate may drop as much as sixteen to twenty
percent.
The median survival for women who are diagnosed with Stage 4 breast cancer is about eighteen months after the time it is first diagnosed.
According to the American Cancer Society women who survive five years after their diagnosis of advanced breast cancer can live an additional three and a half
years beyond the median survival rate.
Probably due to lack of health insurance and poverty almost five percent of caucasian women in the United States
have advanced breast cancer that has spread to other tissue at the time they are first diagnosed. For black women this number is nearly doubles to nine percent that
are diagnosed with Stage 4 breast cancer.
It is important when women are diagnosed with this disease to get second and third opinions. New methods of
treatment are being developed continually. Patients need to gain as much information as possible about new treatments for this disease. Stage 4 breast cancer is the
most deadly class of the disease. Patients need to work closely with their health care providers for success in their treatments.
The most significant factor in
breast cancer survival is having early detection. When the disease is detected while it is till limited to the breast at Stage 1 the survival chances are very high at
ninety eight to one hundred percent. Survival rates drop to sixteen to twenty percent for metastasized breast cancer if it is first detected at Stage 4.
Women
who are in good health beginning at the age of twenty years until forty years of age should have clinical breast exams performed once every three years by their
health care providers. Regular self examinations should be done at the same time each month as an early detection practice. Breast exams should take place
routinely each year after women reach forty years of age. This exam should include a mammogram or equivalent procedure.