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1/4. Successful in vitro fertilization and embryo transfer after treatment of invasive carcinoma of the breast.

    carcinoma of the breast is the most common female malignancy and may occasionally affect women in the reproductive age group. We report a patient who had primary infertility after surgical extirpation of breast carcinoma. Successful pregnancy and delivery of a healthy baby were achieved after two cycles of IVF-ET therapy.
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ranking = 1
keywords = pregnancy
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2/4. pregnancy and breast cancer.

    breast cancer in association with pregnancy and lactation is rare, but presents a therapeutic problem of considerable magnitude. The outlook for such patients is less favorable than that of nonpregnant, nonlactating women, probably because the stage of the disease is more advanced when it is discovered. The most significant factor in the poorer prognosis is physician delay in diagnosis and therapy. When mastectomy is carried out early in pregnancy, the operation can be as effective as in nonpregnant women of the same age groups. It is emphasized that when pregnancy and breast cancer are found concurrently, prompt therapy for the cancer should be undertaken. Interruption of pregnancy in nondisseminated breast cancer is of little value. If pregnancy is near term when the diagnosis of disseminated breast cancer is made, the desire of the husband and wife for a child should be considered. A modest delay in therapy to allow for delivery probably has no deleterious effect. castration should be withheld and used only for the patient with metastatic disease. There may be a place for prophylactic castration in the treatment of disseminated disease, but its role is yet to be clearly defined. Subsequent pregnancies in a patient with axillary spread at the time of mastectomy are contraindicated, because of the high rate of treatment failure and decreased rate of survival. In patients desiring future pregnancies following mastectomy, a period of observation of at least 2 years seems wise. At the end of that period, if clinical evaluation, laboratory values, roentgenographic studies, and isotopic bone scanning are negative for disseminated disease, subsequent pregnancies seem safe. Prompt evaluation of any breast mass found during pregnancy and lactation should be carried out by needle or operative biopsies under local anesthesia. Although the prognosis of the pregnant or lactating woman with breast cancer is generally favorable, numerous long-term survivals are encountered in those women who undergo prompt mastectomy early in pregnancy. The former pessimistic outlook for such patients seems unjustified. With modern methods of diagnosis and treatment, therapy can be effective and successful.
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ranking = 7
keywords = pregnancy
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3/4. pregnancy after breast reconstruction with a transverse rectus abdominis musculocutaneous flap.

    The transverse rectus abdominis musculocutaneous flap has been used for breast reconstruction with increasing frequency in recent years. It has not previously been reported whether or not an abdominal wall weakened by the transfer of this flap can withstand the added stress of pregnancy. An experience with one such patient who successfully carried a pregnancy to term is described.
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ranking = 2
keywords = pregnancy
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4/4. diagnosis of breast masses in pregnant and lactating women by aspiration cytology.

    Five pregnant women with dominant breast masses underwent fine-needle aspiration cytology. Fine-needle aspiration cytology findings of the three patients with benign pregnancy adenomas and the two patients with ductal carcinoma are described. More extensive use of fine-needle aspiration cytology in the evaluation of breast masses in pregnant patients may decrease delays in diagnosis of breast cancer in pregnant women.
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ranking = 1
keywords = pregnancy
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