Breast Cancer Videos
Side Effects of Early Breast Cancer Treatment
- Treatment Decisions When HR+/HER2- Breast Cancer Has Spread
Treatment is always a combo of two key medications that starve and attack breast cancer cells. Here's what you need to know.
- What Treatment Looks Like With an ESR1 Mutation
With this mutation, your tumor is resistant to first-line therapies. Doctors now use targeted drugs in pill form.
- Why You Should Understand Your Mutation
A breast cancer specialist explains the role of genetic testing and how it impacts a patient's treatment decisions.
- Discussing Palliative Care
Your care team will help manage your side effects and symptoms. It's not the same as hospice, so ask about it early on to reduce pain.
- Questions About Your Current Treatment
Everyone's journey is different, so speak up and tell your oncologist how you're feeling both physically and mentally. Be sure to mention any side effects as well.
- When Your Breast Cancer Turns Metastatic
Don't stress yourself out with endless online searches. Trust your oncologist to give you the latest research on the metastatic stage.
- How Treatments for HR+/HER2- Breast Cancer Have Changed Over Time
Surgery, radiation, and chemo are traditionally used to treat this common type with a high risk of recurrence. But have you heard of CDK4/6 inhibitors?
- Follow-Up Visit: What Comes After Treatment?
Who can help coordinate follow-up care? How long and how often do you need to see your care team? What about screenings?
- Follow-Up Visit: Candidates for Clinical Trials
Trials test new drugs, new sequences, new combos, and even non-medical options that relieve symptoms. There’s a lot to consider, starting with eligibility.
- Follow-Up Visit: Available Resources and Advice
It’s not hard to find the help you need. Hospitals and support groups have tips on nutrition, exercise, relaxation, and more for those with breast cancer.
- Follow-Up Visit: Erasing Confusion Around Therapies
Still have questions? We uncover a few puzzles around switching treatments, genetic testing, fertility specialists, and mental health.
- Follow-Up Visit: What to Expect After Surgery
As your wounds heal, learn about surgical drains, possible lymphedema, regaining mobility, reconstruction, and if any additional therapies are needed.
- Follow-Up Visit: Combat Side Effects
Try these tried-and-true strategies to ease tiresome side effects like chemo brain, fatigue, hot flashes, and loss of libido.
- Follow-Up Visit: Considering Reconstruction?
Explore the benefits and risks of reconstruction after a lumpectomy or mastectomy. Plus, more on implants, recovery time, and insurance coverage.
- Uncovering the Mystery of TNBC in Women of Color
Black women have an alarming rate of triple-negative breast cancer, from 15% to 30%, says Demetria Smith-Graziani, MD. Here’s how to address the disparity.
- Disparities in mTNBC Survivorship
Black women are three times more likely to get triple-negative breast cancer. And they’re often diagnosed at a later stage. Are there barriers to care?
- Empowering Young Women
A 17-year survivor of triple-negative breast cancer, Maimah Karmo is a warrior. What’s her battle plan to erase disparities and promote survivorship?
- Lesson 3: Breast Reconstruction
Not everyone opts for reconstruction, but breast implants are common after surgery. The decision is yours.
- Lesson 4: Managing Side Effects of Treatment
Speak up and ask your doctor for solutions to side effects like nausea, swelling, insomnia, or hot flashes. You don’t have to grin and bear treatment.
- Lesson 5: Practical Advice
Breast cancer survivors know firsthand which habits help during treatment, whether it’s avoiding junk food or joining a support group.
- Lesson 6: Clinical Trials
Clinical trials aren’t specifically for advanced cases of breast cancer. Promising new therapies are available for early stages, too.
- Lesson 7: Follow-Up Care
You’ve finished treatment. Now what? Here’s what life after breast cancer may look like.
- Lesson 1: Making Your Treatment Plan
There’s no one-size-fits-all approach, but early-stage breast cancer is very treatable. Your doctor will consider things like type, stage, and lifestyle.
- Lesson 2: Surgery Is Often the First Step
Surgery is usually needed to remove cancerous breast tissue. What determines a lumpectomy vs. a mastectomy?
- Barriers to Treatment for Minorities
What factors come into play when treating minorities for this more aggressive type of breast cancer?
- MBC in Young Black Women
Why are Black women more likely to be diagnosed at a younger age and at a higher stage than white women? Do disparities play a role?
- Eat a Healthy Diet After Diagnosis
What are the added benefits of eating healthy with breast cancer? And what foods should be in your cart?
- The Advantages of Continuing to Exercise
Exercise is one of the best things you can do for your body, and a diagnosis of early-stage breast cancer doesn’t have to keep you from being active.
- Considering Breast Reconstruction After Surgery
Whether you have a mastectomy or a lumpectomy, there are several things to consider with your surgeon and oncologist before breast reconstruction.
- Where Breast Cancer Treatment Is Heading
Innovative breast cancer treatments are on the horizon, with a more personalized approach to diagnosis and care.
- What Is a Cold Cap?
The jury’s still out, but some women going through chemo say that cold caps help cut hair loss. What are the potential benefits and risks?
- Breast Cancer Roundtable With John Whyte, MD
John Whyte, MD, MPH, chief medical officer at WebMD, covers metastatic breast cancer with two oncology experts. Claudine Isaacs, MD, and Kathleen Harnden, MD, talk about exciting advances in treatment.
- The Stages of Early Breast Cancer
The first step after diagnosis is to determine the stage of your breast cancer. What’s the difference between stages 0 through III?
- Treatment Options for Early-Stage Breast Cancer
With an early-stage diagnosis, you have the advantages of time and options, says Ian T. Greenwalt, MD. Your detailed plan can span from surgery to chemo.
- How to Style a Wig During Cancer Treatment
During cancer treatment, wearing a wig can provide a sense of normalcy and comfort. Here’s how to style one so that it looks natural and flattering.
- What I Want My Future Family to Know About My Breast Cancer
At 19, Molly Mae was told she had breast cancer from the BRCA1 gene. Here’s what she wants her future husband and kids to know about her journey.
- The Promising Future of Treatment
Radical mastectomies used to be the go-to treatment for breast cancer, but now there are so many more routes that have specialists excited.
- Where Breast Cancer Treatment is Heading
An oncologist breaks down exciting treatments on the horizon for breast cancer.
- Treatment Options
There are two surgery options to remove tumors from breast tissue: mastectomy and lumpectomy. The patient has some choice in the decision. Find out the differences and how they impact you going forward.
- First Steps After Your Diagnosis
A biopsy lets you and your doctor know a lot more about the cancer in your breast. The results will inform your treatment as well as the order in which procedures will be done.
- Candid Feelings After My Diagnosis
Lindsey Gerdes is living a full life with metastatic breast cancer, and she fills it with plans for the future. Living scan to scan is not an option for her.
- Inside a Doctor Visit
Approaching the 5-year mark, Christen Chandler talks with her doctor, Jane Meisel, MD, about her treatment plan and what it will look like in the future.
- Raising the Bar
Karen Whitehead is a therapist and advocate for women with advanced breast cancer. As much as she enjoys helping them through their journey, she’s also learned so much from them.
- Inside the Body: Benefits of Movement
Regular exercise helps your body and your brain in multiple ways.
- How Targeted Therapies for Metastatic Breast Cancer Work
There are several kinds, but targeted therapies can slow cancer growth. Find out how these treatments can help.
