Breast cancer tends to develop faster than breast cancer when compared with other cancers, such as lung, liver and pancreas. Breast cancer is growing at a relatively slow pace in the form of real cancer cells and edema. The natural course of breast cancer, from one cancer cell to a clinically diagnosed cancer stove, i.e. a 5mm3 level, takes as little as 3-5 years, in part or more, and takes 10-20 years.
If compared vertically, the development of breast cancer cells from normal to cancer cells is slow. As cancer cells form cancer stoves in the body, they evolve and grow more rapidly. From millimetre to centimetre, usually in monthly terms, and if several centimetres of cancer swelling continues to increase, it is weekly.
What are the factors contributing to the faster growth of breast cancer?
The factors that contribute to the faster growth of the breast are: young, unmenopausal, hormonal treatment after menopause, tumour hormone receptor negative, high tumour grade and high tumour Ki-67 index.
Breast cancer transfer
The most common transfer of breast cancer is the lymph nodes of the armpit, and the mere presence of lymph nodes of tumours is likely to heal, but if there are long-range transfers such as bones, lungs, liver, brain, etc., it can only be controlled as far as possible and cannot be cured. Of course, if the drug is effective, the patient can survive with a tumor for a long time, so there is hope that, with the discovery of new drugs in the future, a full cure is possible. In addition, in situ cancer is almost non-apocalyptic.
Cells immersed in immersion in breast cancer are transported through blood to other organs and then take root in certain organs at the right time, such as liver, and grow into detectable mutamas. The mechanism of transfer is currently unclear, as is the reason why cancer cells have been hidden in the body for many years before they are transferred.