Dense breast tissue is made up of thick fibrous tissue and milk glands. It's different from fatty breast tissue, but both kinds of tissue are normal. You can learn how dense your breasts are from your mammogram report.
Dense breast tissue can make cancer harder to see on a mammogram. That's because dense tissue looks white onscreen, just like cancer does.
Things that can affect breast density include family history (genetics), being pregnant, and using estrogen hormone therapy. Age can also make a difference—breast tissue in younger women tends to be denser than in older women who have been through menopause.
If you have dense breasts but no other risk factors for breast cancer, a mammogram is the recommended test. There isn't enough evidence from studies to show that having other tests will help you.
If you have dense breasts and also have other risk factors for breast cancer, talk with your doctor to decide about screening.
In some cases, if further screening is needed, a breast ultrasound or MRI may be done.
If breast cancer screening tests can't tell you that a spot is harmless, your next step is to decide whether to have a biopsy tested for cancer cells.
Your doctor or breast cancer screening center may offer you other tests, such as digital breast tomosynthesis (also called 3D mammograms) or an abbreviated breast MRI (sometimes called a "fast MRI"). Talk with your doctor about whether these tests are right for you.
Having dense breasts may affect your plans for breast cancer screening. The more dense a breast is, the harder it is to see cancer on a mammogram image. That's because dense tissue looks white onscreen, just like cancer does.
Breast cancer tends to grow in dense breast tissue more often than in fatty breast tissue. So having dense breasts may slightly increase your risk for breast cancer.
On its own, breast density is not a major risk factor for cancer. Your overall risk is based on facts like how old you are, whether you've ever had breast cancer before, and whether any of your close relatives, such as your mother or sister, have had breast cancer.
For more information about your personal risk level, go to www.cancer.gov/bcrisktool.
Breasts come in all shapes and sizes. The tissue inside your breasts can be different types too. Some breast tissue is fatty. Other breast tissue is dense. "Dense" means it's made of thick, fibrous tissue and milk glands.
You can't tell how dense your breasts are by looking in the mirror or feeling them. The mammogram report sent to your doctor tells how dense your breasts are. It's written by the radiologist who reads your mammogram.
You can learn how dense your breasts are from your mammogram report. There are four levels of breast density:
All of these breast types are normal. You only have dense breasts if the report says that your breasts are level 3 or level 4.
Things that can affect your breast density include your family history (genetics), being pregnant, and using estrogen hormone therapy. Your age can also make a difference. Breast tissue in younger women tends to be denser than in older women who have been through menopause.
If you have questions about your breast density or other concerns, get a copy of your mammogram report. Then talk to your doctor about it.
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