There was a collective gasp in the MM office this morning when we learned that 36-year-old Giuliana Rancic, US E! Entertainment host, has been diagnosed with breast cancer. The information in this post is vital. Please share it with your friends, your family and everyone you know.
The Los Angeles Times reports:
Giuliana Rancic revealed Monday that she has early-stage breast cancer — then went out of her way to thank husband Bill Rancic for letting her cry, and the baby she doesn’t yet have for most likely saving her life.
E! Entertainment host Giuliana and original “The Apprentice” winner Bill have been trying to get pregnant through in vitro fertilisation, a journey chronicled on their reality show, “Giuliana & Bill.” After two failed IVF attempts, Giuliana Rancic ended the show’s most recent season by heading back for a third round of fertility treatments.
This time, however, one doctor insisted the 36-year-old get a mammogram first, she said Monday on the “Today” show.
“He said, ‘I will not get you pregnant’ ” without ruling out her small risk of breast cancer, ” ‘because if you get pregnant it will accelerate the cancer, all the hormones will accelerate the cancer,’ ” said an emotional Rancic. She said she fought the idea at first, as she hadn’t planned on getting that type of scan until the recommended age, 40.
The National Breast Foundation for Breast Cancer say what a woman does after she finds a change in her breast could change her life. Finding breast cancer early increases the chances of effective treatment.
What should women look out for?
Look for any changes in the breast which are not normal for you, or which you have not seen before. You should visit a GP if you notice any of the following important changes:
– Lump, lumpiness or thickening: for younger women, if it is not related to the normal monthly cycle and remains after their period and for women of all ages, if this is a new change in one breast only
– Changes to the nipple: such as a change in shape, crusting, a sore or ulcer, redness or indrawing of the nipple
– Discharge from the nipple: which is from one nipple and is bloodstained or occurs without squeezing
– Changes in the skin of the breast: such as any puckering or dimpling of the skin, unusual redness or other colour change
– Persistent unusual pain: which is not related to the normal monthly cycle, remains after their period and it occurs in one breast only
– A change in the shape or size of a breast: this might be either an increase or a decrease in size.
Knowing what is normal for you is just as important after menopause. Breast cancer becomes more common as you grow older, so knowing what is normal for your breasts is just as important after menopause.
Breast Cancer Australia recommends three simple steps for regular self examination:
LOOK
Look
Whilst standing in front of the mirror with shoulders back and hands on hips.
– Check for changes in size, shape and colour of both breasts.
– Note if there is any dimpling, puckering or bulging of skin.
– Be aware of whether the nipple has changed position or if it has inverted.
– Monitor for redness, soreness, rashes or swelling.
– It is also recommended to do this whilst the arms are raised in the air.
PRESS
Apply minimal pressure with the thumb and forefinger to each nipple and check for discharge (milky, yellow fluid or blood).
FEEL
Feel
Feel your breast while lying down, sitting, standing or in the shower.
– Use a method which you become familiar with and record your observations on a monthly basis.
– When checking the left breast use your right hand (right breast use your left hand) and work gently on the top layer and then a little firmer as you press deeper into the tissue with your middle three fingers feeling down to the ribcage.
– Be sure to check all over your breast with a sequence you can remember. From the armpit to your cleavage, and from the top of the collarbone to top of your stomach.
– All the time feeling for irregular lumps, lumpiness or thickening particularly in one breast only.
Breast cancer is the most commonly diagnosed cancer among women in Australia.
* One in nine women will develop breast cancer in their lifetime.
* By 2015, 15,409 women are projected to be diagnosed with breast cancer in Australia every year – an average of 42 women every day.
* Australian women diagnosed with breast cancer have an 88% chance of surviving 5 years after diagnosis relative to the general population of women in Australia.
* Improvements in survival are attributed to earlier detection of breast cancer through population-based mammography screening and improved treatment outcomes for breast cancer.
* Increasing age is one of the strongest risk factors for developing breast cancer. About three out of four breast cancer cases occur in women aged 50 years and older.
* On average, seven women die from breast cancer every day in Australia. Finding breast cancer early increases the chance of surviving the disease.
Top Comments
Can have a little whinge please? I heard on the clip that Giuliana is having surgery followed by radiotherapy. I'm so jealous! When I had my breast cancer 2 years ago I was told that because of my age (34 at the time) that I had to have surgery, chemo and radiotherapy. Chemo was the hardest most awful thing I have ever been through in my life. I'm still having treatment too - tamoxifen every day for 5 years - this makes me feel nauseous on and off every day and I can't wait for it all to be over. I was told that because I was "young" that they had to hit me with everything!
Sorry, I just get really jealous when I hear about people not having to have chemo. I just took the advice of the doctors and never questioned them. It should be noted that my cancer was small (2cm) and had not spread to the lymph nodes and I just wonder if the chemo was necessary...
Sophie, forgive me....but I need to have a little whinge about your whinge.
I'd give my eye teeth to take tamoxifen, but it doesn't work for my cancer type (triple negative & it was in my lymph nodes which took 2 different surgeries to clean up) so my follow up treatment is 'keep your fingers crossed'. For me radiotherapy was more physically and mentally taxing than chemo (and I was REALLY sick during chemo).
Its early days for Giuliana and we only know whats been read off a press release. We don't know the extent of the surgery she's elected to have or anything else about the cancer they've found, or the pathology found during surgery (which after all, is what usually determines the need for chemo). Maybe her cancer type isn't reactive to chemo? We don't know.
What I'm saying is....I guess everyone's story is different, everyone's pathology and prognosis is different, and treatment is customised accordingly.
Don't be jealous. We're all equal members of the same shitty club that no one wanted to join.
Dont give up... I just had a healthy happy little girl (now 3 months), 3 years after stage 2 BC diagnosis. Im 37 years old. A healthy, happy attitude is key.