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Inflammatory breast cancer is a rare and particularly aggressive form of breast cancer that forms around 1% of all breast cancers. Inflammatory breast cancer has a different pathology to other forms of breast cancer as well as a different symptom profile, prognosis and treatment approach.

Inflammation

Inflammation is the body's response to harmful stimuli, and involves the accumulation of white blood cells at the site of infection, damage or irritation. Inflammation is typically characterized by redness, heat, swelling and pain at such sites.

Inflammatory breast cancer

In inflammatory breast cancer, the breast shows symptoms of inflammation. The breast may be swollen, red, warm, itchy and painful. Other symptoms include a thickening or pitting of the skin, one breast larger than the other and nipple changes. In inflammatory breast cancer, cancer cells grow along the inside of the lymph vessels in the breast causing them to become blocked. These obstructed lymph vessels are then unable to drain fluid or filter bacteria and waste substances effectively, which causes swelling and the symptoms of inflammation.

As the cancer cells grow along the inside of the lymph vessels rather than forming a lump, this form of breast cancer is more difficult to detect using routine screening by mammogram. In addition, the symptoms are easily confused with those of breast infection and inflammation (mastitis), further complicating the diagnosis process for inflammatory breast cancer.

Age and other factors in inflammatory breast cancer

Inflammatory breast cancer generally occurs at a younger age than other, more common forms of breast cancer. The average age for developing inflammatory breast cancer is 52 years compared with 57 years for the other forms. Other factors that influence the risk for inflammatory breast cancer include ethnicity and weight. African-American women are at an increased risk for the condition over white women and overweight or obese individuals are at an increased risk compared with normal weight individuals.

Men can also develop inflammatory breast cancer, but this is rare.

Sources

  1. www.cancer.org/acs/groups/cid/documents/webcontent/002298-pdf.pdf
  2. http://ww5.komen.org/uploadedFiles/Content_Binaries/806-03202a.pdf
  3. http://ctep.cancer.gov/highlights/docs/swain.pdf
  4. http://jco.ascopubs.org/content/21/12/2254.full.pdf
  5. www.nhs.uk/…/Inflammatorybreastcancer(CB).pdf
  6. www.nhs.uk/…/Inflammatorybreastcancer(BCC4pages).pdf
  7. www.cancerresearchuk.org/…/inflammatory-breast-cancer

Further Reading

  • All Inflammatory Breast Cancer Content
  • Inflammatory Breast Cancer Symptoms
  • Inflammatory Breast Cancer Treatment
  • What is Inflammatory Breast Cancer?
  • Inflammatory Breast Cancer Diagnosis

Last Updated: Feb 26, 2019

Written by

Dr. Ananya Mandal

Dr. Ananya Mandal is a doctor by profession, lecturer by vocation and a medical writer by passion. She specialized in Clinical Pharmacology after her bachelor's (MBBS). For her, health communication is not just writing complicated reviews for professionals but making medical knowledge understandable and available to the general public as well.

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