Inflammatory breast cancer treatment begins with chemotherapy. If the cancer hasn't spread to other areas of the body, treatment continues with surgery and radiation therapy. If the cancer has spread to other areas of the body, your healthcare team may recommend other medicines in addition to chemotherapy. These treatments can slow the growth of the cancer.
Chemotherapy
Chemotherapy treats cancer with strong medicines. You may receive chemotherapy medicines through a vein, in pill form or both.
Chemotherapy is used before surgery for inflammatory breast cancer. This pre-surgical treatment, called neoadjuvant therapy, aims to shrink the cancer before surgery. Neoadjuvant chemotherapy increases the chance that surgery will be successful.
If your cancer has a high risk of returning or spreading to another part of your body, your healthcare professional may recommend additional chemotherapy after you've completed other treatments. Additional chemotherapy decreases the chance that the cancer will recur.
Surgery
After chemotherapy, you may have a procedure to remove the affected breast and some of the nearby lymph nodes. The operation usually includes:
-
Surgery to remove the breast, called mastectomy. A total mastectomy removes all of the breast tissue. This includes the lobules, ducts, fatty tissue and some skin, including the nipple and areola.
-
Surgery to remove the nearby lymph nodes, called axillary dissection. The surgeon removes the lymph nodes under the arm and near the affected breast.
Talk with your healthcare team about your options for breast reconstruction. Surgery to reconstruct the breast is often delayed until after you complete all of your breast cancer treatments.
Radiation therapy
Radiation therapy treats cancer with powerful energy beams. The energy can come from X-rays, protons or other sources. During radiation therapy, you lie on a table while a machine moves around you. The machine directs radiation to precise points on your body.
For inflammatory breast cancer, radiation therapy is used after surgery to kill any cancer cells that might remain. The radiation is aimed at your chest, armpit and shoulder.
Targeted therapy
Targeted therapy for cancer is a treatment that uses medicines that attack specific chemicals in the cancer cells. By blocking these chemicals, targeted treatments can cause cancer cells to die.
For example, several targeted therapy medicines focus on a protein that some breast cancer cells make too much of. This protein is called human epidermal growth factor receptor 2, also called HER2. The protein helps breast cancer cells grow and survive. By targeting cells that make too much
HER2, the medicines can damage cancer cells while sparing healthy cells.
If your inflammatory breast cancer cells test positive for
HER2, your healthcare team might recommend combining targeted therapy with your initial chemotherapy treatment. After surgery, targeted therapy can be combined with hormone therapy.
For cancer that spreads to other parts of the body, targeted therapy medicines that focus on other changes within cancer cells are available. Your cancer cells may be tested to see which targeted therapies might be helpful for you.
Hormone therapy
Hormone therapy is used to treat breast cancers that use the body's hormones to grow. Healthcare professionals refer to these cancers as estrogen receptor positive, also called ER positive, and progesterone receptor positive, also called PR positive.
Hormone therapy can be used after surgery or other treatments to decrease the chance of the cancer returning. If the cancer has already spread, hormone therapy may shrink and control it.
Treatments that can be used in hormone therapy include:
- Medicines that block hormones from attaching to cancer cells, called selective estrogen receptor modulators.
- Medicines that stop the body from making estrogen after menopause, called aromatase inhibitors.
- Surgery or medicines that stop the ovaries from making hormones.
Immunotherapy
Immunotherapy for cancer is a treatment with medicine that helps the body's immune system kill cancer cells. The immune system fights off diseases by attacking germs and other cells that shouldn't be in the body. Cancer cells survive by hiding from the immune system. Immunotherapy helps the immune system cells find and kill the cancer cells.
Immunotherapy might be an option if your cancer has spread to other areas of the body and is triple negative. Triple negative means that the cancer cells don't have receptors for
HER2 or the hormones estrogen or progesterone. Your healthcare professional may test your cancer cells to see if they're likely to respond to immunotherapy.
Palliative care
Palliative care is a special type of healthcare that helps people with serious illnesses feel better. If you have cancer, palliative care can help relieve pain and other symptoms. A team of healthcare professionals gives palliative care. This can include doctors, nurses and other specially trained professionals. Their goal is to improve the quality of life for you and your family.
Palliative care specialists work with you, your family and your care team to help you feel better. They provide an extra layer of support while you have cancer treatment. You can have palliative care at the same time as strong cancer treatments, such as surgery, chemotherapy or radiation therapy.
When palliative care is used along with other treatments, people with cancer may feel better and live longer.