Treatment for invasive lobular carcinoma often starts with surgery to remove the cancer. Most people with breast cancer will have other treatments after surgery, such as radiation, chemotherapy and hormone therapy. Some people may have chemotherapy or hormone therapy before surgery. These medicines can help shrink the cancer and make it easier to remove.
Invasive lobular carcinoma treatment is very similar to the treatment for other types of breast cancer. Some things that might be different with this type of cancer include:
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Most invasive lobular carcinomas are sensitive to hormones. Breast cancers that are sensitive to hormones are likely to respond to hormone-blocking treatments. This kind of treatment is called hormone therapy or endocrine therapy.
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Most invasive lobular carcinomas don't make extra HER2. HER2 is a protein that some healthy breast cells make. Some breast cancer cells develop changes that cause them to make a lot of extra HER2. Treatments can target the cells that are making extra HER2. Invasive lobular carcinomas are less likely to make extra HER2, so they're less likely to respond to this treatment.
Your treatment plan will depend on many factors. Your healthcare team considers the stage of the cancer and how quickly it's growing. Your care team also considers your overall health and what you prefer.
Breast cancer surgery
Surgery for invasive lobular carcinoma typically involves a procedure to remove the breast cancer and a procedure to remove some nearby lymph nodes. Options include:
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Removing the breast cancer. A lumpectomy is surgery to remove the invasive lobular carcinoma and some of the healthy tissue around it. The rest of the breast tissue isn't removed. Other names for this surgery are breast-conserving surgery and wide local excision. Most people who have a lumpectomy also have radiation therapy.
Lumpectomy might be used to remove a small cancer. Sometimes you can have chemotherapy before surgery to shrink the cancer so that lumpectomy is possible.
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Removing all of the breast tissue. A mastectomy is surgery to remove all breast tissue from a breast. The most common mastectomy procedure is total mastectomy, also called simple mastectomy. This procedure removes nearly all of the breast, including the lobules, ducts, fatty tissue and some skin, including the nipple and areola.
Mastectomy might be used to remove a large invasive lobular carcinoma. It also might be needed when there are multiple areas of cancer within one breast. You might have a mastectomy if you can't have or don't want radiation therapy after surgery.
Some newer types of mastectomy procedures might not remove the skin or nipple. For instance, a skin-sparing mastectomy leaves some skin. A nipple-sparing mastectomy leaves the nipple and the skin around it, called the areola. These newer operations can improve the look of the breast after surgery, but they aren't options for everyone.
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Removing a few lymph nodes. A sentinel node biopsy is an operation to take out some lymph nodes for testing. When invasive lobular carcinoma and other types of breast cancer spread, they often go to the nearby lymph nodes first. To see if the cancer has spread, a surgeon removes some of the lymph nodes near the cancer. If no cancer is found in those lymph nodes, the chance of finding cancer in any of the other lymph nodes is small. No other lymph nodes need to be removed.
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Removing several lymph nodes. Axillary lymph node dissection is an operation to remove many lymph nodes from the armpit. Your breast cancer surgery might include this operation if imaging tests show the cancer has spread to the lymph nodes. It also might be used if cancer is found in a sentinel node biopsy.
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Removing both breasts. Some people who have invasive lobular carcinoma in one breast may choose to have their other breast removed, even if it doesn't have cancer. This procedure is called a contralateral prophylactic mastectomy or a risk-reducing mastectomy. It might be an option if you have a high risk of getting cancer in the other breast. The risk might be high if you have a strong family history of cancer or have DNA changes that increase the risk of cancer. Most people with breast cancer in one breast will never get cancer in the other breast.
Complications of breast cancer surgery depend on the procedures you choose. All operations have a risk of pain, bleeding and infection. Removing lymph nodes in the armpit carries a risk of arm swelling, called lymphedema.
You may choose to have breast reconstruction after mastectomy surgery. Breast reconstruction is surgery to restore shape to the breast. Options might include reconstruction with a breast implant or reconstruction using your own tissue. Consider asking your healthcare team for a referral to a plastic surgeon before your breast cancer surgery.
Hormone therapy
Hormone therapy, also called endocrine therapy, uses medicines to block certain hormones in the body. It's a treatment for breast cancers that are sensitive to the hormones estrogen and progesterone. Healthcare professionals call these cancers estrogen receptor positive and progesterone receptor positive. Cancers that are sensitive to hormones use the hormones as fuel for their growth. Blocking the hormones can cause the cancer cells to shrink or die. Most invasive lobular carcinomas are sensitive to hormones, so they are likely to respond to this treatment.
Hormone therapy is often used after surgery and other treatments. It can lower the risk that the cancer will come back.
If the invasive lobular carcinoma spreads to other parts of the body, hormone therapy can help control it.
Treatments that can be used in hormone therapy include:
- Medicines that block hormones from attaching to cancer cells. These medicines are called selective estrogen receptor modulators.
- Medicines that stop the body from making estrogen after menopause. These medicines are called aromatase inhibitors.
- Surgery or medicines to stop the ovaries from making hormones.
Sometimes hormone therapy medicines are combined with targeted therapy medicines. This combination can make hormone therapy more effective.
Hormone therapy side effects depend on the treatment you receive. The side effects can include hot flashes, night sweats and vaginal dryness. More-serious side effects include a risk of bone thinning and blood clots.
Radiation therapy
Radiation therapy treats cancer with powerful energy beams. The energy can come from X-rays, protons or other sources.
The radiation used to treat invasive lobular carcinoma and other types of breast cancer is often external beam radiation. During this type of radiation therapy, you lie on a table while a machine moves around you. The machine directs radiation to precise points on your body. Less often, the radiation can be placed inside the body. This type of radiation is called brachytherapy.
Radiation therapy is often used after surgery. It can kill any cancer cells that might be left after surgery. The radiation lowers the risk of the cancer coming back.
Side effects of radiation therapy include feeling very tired and having a sunburn-like rash where the radiation is aimed. Breast tissue also may look swollen or feel more firm. Rarely, more-serious side effects can happen. These include damage to the heart or lungs. Very rarely, a new cancer can grow in the treated area.
Chemotherapy
Chemotherapy treats cancer with strong medicines. Many chemotherapy medicines exist. Treatment often involves a combination of chemotherapy medicines. Most are given through a vein. Some are available in pill form.
Chemotherapy for invasive lobular carcinoma and other types of breast cancer is often used after surgery. It can kill any cancer cells that might remain and lower the risk of the cancer coming back.
Sometimes chemotherapy is given before surgery for invasive lobular carcinoma and other types of breast cancer. The chemotherapy might shrink the breast cancer so that it's easier to remove. Chemotherapy before surgery also might control cancer that spreads to the lymph nodes. If the lymph nodes no longer show signs of cancer after chemotherapy, surgery to remove many lymph nodes might not be needed. How the cancer responds to chemotherapy before surgery helps the healthcare team make decisions about what treatments might be needed after surgery.
When the cancer spreads to other parts of the body, chemotherapy can help control it. Chemotherapy may relieve symptoms of an advanced cancer, such as pain.
Chemotherapy side effects depend on which medicines you receive. Common side effects include hair loss, nausea, vomiting, feeling very tired and having an increased risk of getting an infection. Rare side effects can include premature menopause and nerve damage. Very rarely, certain chemotherapy medicines can cause blood cell cancer.
Targeted therapy
Targeted therapy uses medicines that attack specific chemicals in the cancer cells. By blocking these chemicals, targeted treatments can cause cancer cells to die.
The most common targeted therapy medicines for breast cancer target the protein HER2. Some breast cancer cells make extra HER2. This protein helps the cancer cells grow and survive. Targeted therapy medicine attacks the cells that are making extra HER2 and doesn't hurt healthy cells. Most invasive lobular carcinomas don't make extra HER2, so they are unlikely to respond to treatments that target HER2.
Many other targeted therapy medicines exist for treating breast cancer. Your cancer cells may be tested to see whether these medicines might help you.
Targeted therapy medicines can be used before surgery to shrink a breast cancer and make it easier to remove. Some are used after surgery to lower the risk that the cancer will come back. Others are used only when the cancer has spread to other parts of the body.