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What is a lumpectomy? A lumpectomy is a type of breast cancer surgery in which the tumor and a small amount of surrounding tissue called the margin is removed. The purpose of a lumpectomy is to remove the cancerous cells.
A lumpectomy is an option for most people who have early breast cancer or ductal carcinoma in situ (a non-invasive breast cancer). A lumpectomy may also be an option for some people with locally advanced breast cancer after treatment with neoadjuvant therapy (drug therapy given before surgery).
Lumpectomy is a treatment option for early-stage breast cancer. Sometimes lumpectomy is used to rule out a cancer diagnosis. When a lumpectomy surgery is performed to remove cancer, it usually is followed by radiation therapy to the breast to reduce the chances of cancer returning.
Recovery after a lumpectomy can take days or weeks, depending on your individual situation. Many people can return to work and driving within a week.
A lumpectomy is a surgical procedure that’s performed when you have cancer and need to have some of the cancerous tissue and nearby areas removed. The goal of this procedure is to extract cancer tissue while still maintaining breast tissue.
A lumpectomy, also known as partial mastectomy or segmentectomy, is breast cancer surgery that removes a tumor in your breast while leaving your breast intact. Lumpectomies can be diagnostic — a procedure that tests whether a tumor is malignant (cancer) or benign (not cancer). More often, a lumpectomy is cancer treatment.
Breast-conserving surgery (sometimes called a lumpectomy) removes the cancer while leaving as much normal breast as possible. Learn more here.
A lumpectomy (also called a breast-conserving surgery, a partial mastectomy or a wide excision) is often done under general anesthesia. This means you’re asleep during the surgery. In some cases, local anesthesia with sedation, or regional anesthesia may be used. During surgery:
Lumpectomy is a procedure that removes breast cancer along with a small amount of the healthy tissue surrounding it.
Doctors also call this type of surgery a wide local excision or lumpectomy. The surgeon removes the area of cancer and some of the surrounding breast tissue. They leave behind as much normal breast tissue as possible.