Breast Cancer

 

Dr. Harriet Borofsky, medical director of breast imaging at Mills-Peninsula's Women's Center

More than 200,000 new cases are detected every year; 4,500 here in the Bay Area. One in seven women in the United States will be diagnosed with breast cancer in her lifetime, making it the most common cancer among women. Although breast cancer survival rates have improved in recent years, the number of new cases is rising and the risk of developing the disease also increases with age. A woman’s chance of developing breast cancer at age 60 is 10 times higher than at age 50.

“The good news is that the past two decades have seen significant, life-saving new technologies in the area of early detection and diagnosis,” says Harriet Borofsky, M.D., medical director of breast imaging at Mills-Peninsula’s Women’s Center.

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One in seven women may be diagnosed with breast cancer in their lifetime – making it the most common cancer in women. In this blog post and video, Dr. Harriet Borofsky, medical director of breast imaging at the Women’s Center at Mills-Peninsula Health Services, shows us the technological advances in today’s breast cancer diagnosis and treatment.

Here at the Women’s Center, one of our main passions is early detection and diagnosis of breast cancer.  According to statistics, one in seven women may be diagnosed with breast cancer in her lifetime, making it the most common cancer among women.  There are over 200,000 newly diagnosed breast cancer cases per year in the United States and 4,500 here in the Bay Area.  This is a disease that touches all of our lives in one way or another and despite what many think, most women diagnosed with breast cancer have no specific risk factors other than the two main risks, being a woman and having breasts.  The great news is, the past two decades have seen significant life-saving new technologies in the area of early detection and diagnosis and new surgical radiation therapy and oncology approaches to manage this disease.




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