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Cancer
Ductal Carcinoma in Situ (DCIS)
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Subject index
Credits
Full list of topics
Discovery and diagnosis :
What is ductal carcinoma in situ (DCIS)?
Routine mammograms: the UK Breast Screening Programme
Diagnostic mammograms
Referral to an assessment clinic
Diagnostic tests: mammogram
Diagnostic tests: ultrasound scan
Diagnostic tests: biopsy
Waiting for results
Feelings about the diagnosis
Telling other people
Treatments & their impacts :
Feelings about having a wide local excision
Wide local excision: the operation
Wide local excision: recovery
Wide local excision: pathology results
Feelings about having a mastectomy
Mastectomy: the operation
Mastectomy: physical and emotional recovery
Mastectomy: pathology results
Breast reconstruction using an implant
Breast reconstruction using an LD flap
Breast reconstruction using a DIEP flap
Nipple reconstruction
Choosing not to have breast reconstruction
Prostheses
Body image
Radiotherapy
Chemotherapy
Hormone therapy
Information and support :
Information
Support from family, friends and health professionals
Support from other women with DCIS or breast cancer
Effects on daily life :
How it effects families
Views on breast screening
Messages to others
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Ductal Carcinoma in Situ (DCIS)
Subject index
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Cancer
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Ductal Carcinoma in Situ (DCIS)
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Age at diagnosis: under 50
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Kath - Interview 12
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Kath is pleased that, in time, women will be invited for routine breast screening from the age of 47. She feels that more information should be availa
Kath was diagnosed with DCIS in 2007, aged 47, after seeing her GP because her breast felt dense. She had a mastectomy and LD flap reconstruction.
Cancer
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Ductal Carcinoma in Situ (DCIS)
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Age at diagnosis: 50-54
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Patricia - Interview 27
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Patricia feels that women should be made more aware of symptomless breast cancers. It was only after her own diagnosis that she learnt they existed.
Patricia was diagnosed with DCIS in 1999, aged 53. She had a mastectomy and, about a year later, a second mastectomy because she felt unbalanced with only one breast and worried about recurrence.
Cancer
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Ductal Carcinoma in Situ (DCIS)
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Age at diagnosis: 55-60
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Eileen - Interview 24
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Eileen was shocked to hear she’d need a mastectomy for DCIS and to learn that DCIS is a complex condition that doctors don’t yet fully understand.
Eileen was diagnosed with DCIS in 2002 and had a mastectomy. Afterwards, she questioned the value of breast screening and chooses not to have routine mammograms.
Cancer
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Ductal Carcinoma in Situ (DCIS)
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Age at diagnosis: under 50
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Sue - Interview 9
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Sue found a lump when she was in her early thirties which turned out to be a cyst.
Sue was diagnosed with DCIS at 49 and had a wide local excision. She was pleased she went for the mammogram and recommends them to other women.
Cancer
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Ductal Carcinoma in Situ (DCIS)
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Age at diagnosis: under 50
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Jane - Interview 14
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Jane had surgery to remove two benign lumps well before she was invited for routine screening.
Jane was diagnosed with DCIS after her first routine mammogram, aged 49. She had a wide local excision and is now getting on with life as normal.
Cancer
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Ductal Carcinoma in Situ (DCIS)
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Age at diagnosis: under 50
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Jo - Interview 11
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Bleeding from Jo’s nipple was dismissed by doctors when she was pregnant and later when she was breast-feeding.
Jo was diagnosed with DCIS in 2007, aged 42, over two years after seeing doctors about a bleeding nipple when she was breast-feeding. She had a mastectomy.
Cancer
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Ductal Carcinoma in Situ (DCIS)
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Age at diagnosis: under 50
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Felicity - Interview 23
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Tests to find out why Felicity was having breast pain led quickly to a diagnosis of DCIS.
Felicity was diagnosed with DCIS, aged 41, after being referred to a breast clinic because of breast pain. She had two excision operations, a mastectomy and radiotherapy.
Cancer
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Ductal Carcinoma in Situ (DCIS)
>>
Age at diagnosis: under 50
>>
Kath - Interview 12
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Kath was anxious because her breast felt different, but wondered whether she was just imagining things because she’d been depressed.
Kath was diagnosed with DCIS in 2007, aged 47, after seeing her GP because her breast felt dense. She had a mastectomy and LD flap reconstruction.
Cancer
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Ductal Carcinoma in Situ (DCIS)
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Age at diagnosis: 55-60
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Ann - Interview 2
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Ann wondered if she’d had symptoms but had pushed them to the back of her mind. She thought she’d have a lump if there was anything wrong.
Ann was diagnosed with DCIS in 2005, aged 56. She had a mastectomy and LD flap reconstruction at the same time. She is currently taking tamoxifen.
Cancer
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Ductal Carcinoma in Situ (DCIS)
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Age at diagnosis: 50-54
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Beverley - Interview 15
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Beverley feared the worst because the doctor found a lump when she was recalled after a routine mammogram. She was relieved to hear hear that, unusual
Beverley was diagnosed with DCIS in 2006, aged 50. She had a mastectomy and DIEP flap reconstruction, which she was very happy with.
Cancer
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Ductal Carcinoma in Situ (DCIS)
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Age at diagnosis: 50-54
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Gillian - Interview 4
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Gillian found the mammogram uncomfortable. She hadn’t had any symptoms and didn’t expect to be recalled.
Gillian was diagnosed with high-grade DCIS in 2006, aged 50, a year after her first routine mammogram. She had two breast conserving operations and, later, a mastectomy.
Cancer
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Ductal Carcinoma in Situ (DCIS)
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Age at diagnosis: 50-54
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Patricia - Interview 27
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Patricia was keen to be screened at 50 but lives in a rural area and didn’t have her first mammogram until 53.
Patricia was diagnosed with DCIS in 1999, aged 53. She had a mastectomy and, about a year later, a second mastectomy because she felt unbalanced with only one breast and worried about recurrence.
Cancer
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Ductal Carcinoma in Situ (DCIS)
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Age at diagnosis: 50-54
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Liz - Interview 16
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Getting to the screening unit was easy but Liz postponed her appointment several times because of other commitments.
Liz had a wide local excision, and was waiting to have a mastectomy and DIEP flap reconstruction because more DCIS was found after her first operation.
Cancer
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Ductal Carcinoma in Situ (DCIS)
>>
Age at diagnosis: under 50
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Jacqui - Interview 31
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Jacqui was chosen to take part in research and nearly didn’t go for a mammogram because she’d had no symptoms.
Jacqui was diagnosed with DCIS in 1995 after having a mammogram that was part of a clinical trial. She had a mastectomy and, two weeks later, a reconstruction using an implant.
Cancer
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Ductal Carcinoma in Situ (DCIS)
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Age at diagnosis: 50-54
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Beverley - Interview 15
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Beverley ignored changes in her breast for eight months because she’d had a cyst in the past, but felt something could be wrong.
Beverley was diagnosed with DCIS in 2006, aged 50. She had a mastectomy and DIEP flap reconstruction, which she was very happy with.
Cancer
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Ductal Carcinoma in Situ (DCIS)
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Age at diagnosis: 50-54
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Patricia - Interview 7
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Patricia had invasive breast cancer and DCIS. She feels that making treatment decisions for DCIS are harder because it might not develop. She would ha
Patricia was diagnosed with DCIS in 2007, aged 53. She had a mastectomy and LD flap reconstruction six months later. She will also be taking hormone therapy.
Cancer
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Ductal Carcinoma in Situ (DCIS)
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Age at diagnosis: 50-54
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Jacky - Interview 25
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Jacky advises women to be breast aware and to see their GP about any breast changes instead of dismissing them.
Jacky was diagnosed with DCIS in her right breast in 1994, aged 52, and had two wide local excisions. Later, a second cancer was found in her left breast and Jacky had a mastectomy.
Cancer
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Ductal Carcinoma in Situ (DCIS)
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Interview with Radiologist / Breast Surgeon
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Radiologist - Interview 36
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A doctor explains why screening and diagnostic mammograms are taken.
Dr Michell explains about screening and diagnostic mammograms, calcifications, normal and breast cancer x-rays, ultrasound scans and biopsies.
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