Breast Cancer

At Trinity Health Of New England, your breast cancer care journey is as unique as you are. Our nationally recognized program is home to experienced breast cancer providers.

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Breast Cancer

We work as a team delivering today’s best treatments along with support that keeps your recovery moving forward. Many of our patients return to their everyday lives with a renewed sense of hope about their future.

Nationally Recognized Breast Cancer Treatment

Our breast cancer experts hold themselves to the highest standards. Patients put their trust in us because we deliver safe, effective care. Our commitment to delivering high-quality breast cancer services has helped us earn national recognition from:

  • National Accreditation Program for Breast Centers (NAPBC)
  • Women’s Choice Award® – Breast Care Center designation 

Highlights of our program include:

  • Highly skilled team: Our team includes surgical oncologists who completed additional training (a fellowship) in breast cancer surgery. You may also receive care from oncoplastic surgeons who specialize in breast reconstruction after cancer surgery. Trinity Health Of New England is also home to medical oncologists who treat breast cancer with chemotherapy (cancer-fighting drugs) and other substances.
  • Timely care: If you receive abnormal mammogram results, you don’t have to wait to learn about the next steps of your care. Patients at Saint Francis Hospital speak with a breast surgeon the same day, and at Mercy Medical Center the next business day. We discuss additional tests you may need and answer questions about breast cancer treatment.
  • Coordination: Our cancer experts, which also include radiation oncologists and nurse navigators, are in regular communication about your care plan. We work as a team to plan the best therapies for your needs. As you progress through treatment, we arrange additional therapies as needed to keep your recovery on track.
  • Treatment for men: On rare occasions, men receive a breast cancer diagnosis. Our team also has experience meeting the unique needs of men with breast cancer.

Additional Support Throughout Your Care Journey

Patients in many of our locations receive a helping hand from nurse navigators. These specialists are available to you at any point in your care journey. Nurse navigators help you by arranging appointments and additional services that make your life a little easier.

In most breast cancer cases, surgery is necessary. Our team considers the options that are best for your situation and takes time to explain our care recommendations. This thoughtful approach helps you receive exceptional breast cancer treatment that best meets your personal preferences.

Your surgery may include:

Breast-conserving techniques

We use sophisticated techniques to treat the cancer while preserving healthy breast tissue. These techniques allow you to retain a more natural look and feel.

Breast-conserving techniques we offer include:

  • Lumpectomy: Surgeons remove the cancer leaving nearby healthy tissue alone.
  • Nipple-sparing mastectomy: We remove the entire breast while preserving the nipple and nearby tissue (areola). This technique allows many patients to retain sensation in their breast after surgery and reconstruction.

Reconstructive breast surgery

All patients undergoing a mastectomy or lumpectomy meet with an oncoplastic surgeon to discuss breast reconstruction options. These experts specialize in reconstruction after cancer surgery, giving you access to the highest level of care. The choice of whether to receive reconstructive surgery is yours.

Reconstructive breast surgery often includes:

  • Creating new breasts in women who have had a mastectomy
  • Repairing gaps in breast tissue from a lumpectomy

Additional Breast Cancer Treatments We Offer

You may receive additional treatments before or after surgery, including:

  • Chemotherapy: We recommend cancer-fighting drugs and other substances that destroy cancer cells. Our medical oncologists tailor doses to help you achieve excellent results.

    Read more about chemotherapy and medical oncology
     
  • Radiation therapy: We offer the latest treatment technologies as well as techniques, like deep inspiration breath hold (DIBH), that protect your heart. With DIBH, you take a deep breath and hold it, pushing your heart out of the way, while we deliver treatment.

    Get more information about radiation therapy
     
  • Magtrace®: Saint Mary's Hospital offers breast cancer patients access to the world's first non-radioactive, dual-tracer breast cancer staging technology. The Magtrace® lymphatic tracer is a simple iron oxide-based magnetic solution that is designed to simplify breast cancer surgery, while allowing you to have a more patient-friend experience.

    Get more information about Magtrace
     
  • Rehabilitation: We don’t let side effects from treatment, such as weakness and nerve pain, prevent you from reclaiming your life. Our experienced physical therapists ease discomfort and help you regain strength. These services speed recovery so you can get back to daily life.

    Learn more about cancer rehabilitation
     
  • Supportive care: Living with breast cancer can leave you feeling uncertain about your health. Whether you are feeling depressed or need a caring ear, we are here for you. Our services include emotional support and childcare during appointments.

    Get more details about palliative and supportive care services

When you receive a mammogram at Trinity Health Of New England, time is on your side. This breast cancer screening test detects early signs of problems, so you receive treatment when it’s more likely to be successful. 

Schedule your mammogram today!

Breast Cancer Screening: Why Choose Trinity Health Of New England?

When you come to Trinity Health Of New England, you receive the highest level of breast cancer screening services. We use 3D mammography enabling a more thorough evaluation of breast tissue. Our experience from performing a high volume of 3D mammograms means accurate testing and results you can trust.

Highlights of our program include:

  • Expertise: Radiologists specializing in breast imaging review your mammogram images. These specialists have additional training in breast imaging enabling them to detect easy-to-miss abnormalities. 

     
  • Personalized recommendations: Most women receive a mammogram once a year. But we may recommend more frequent screening if you have a family history of breast cancer.

    Learn more about our cancer genetic testing and counseling services
     
  • Care close to home: Mammograms are available in our locations throughout Connecticut and western Massachusetts.

Timely Breast Surgeon Consultation for Abnormal Mammogram Findings

It can be concerning to learn you have abnormal mammogram findings, and our experts are here for you.

  • Women receiving care at our Saint Francis Hospital location speak with an experienced breast surgeon the same day.
  • Women seeking care at Mercy Medical Center often see one of our breast cancer experts the next business day.
  • Women who receive care at the Harold Leever Regional Cancer Center often see skilled breast cancer providers the following day

We explain the additional tests you may need to confirm or rule out a cancer diagnosis. These may include more imaging tests, such as breast ultrasound or breast magnetic resonance imaging (MRI). We may also perform a biopsy, which is a procedure to take a tissue sample so we can examine it under a microscope.

Breast Cancer Care at Trinity Health Of New England

Our nationally recognized breast cancer program offers the full range of services, including the latest surgical techniques and breast reconstruction. Our whole-person approach means our care team treats more than the cancer; they treat your well-being. And our breast navigators are with you throughout your care journey providing information and support.
 

Find out more about Trinity Health Of New England’s breast cancer program
 

Additional Women’s Health Services

Breast cancer screening is one of the many services we offer to help women maximize their health. Our women’s health services include heart specialists (cardiologists) who understand the unique ways women experience heart disease. We also offer family-focused pregnancy services.

Get more information about women’s health services

Saint Mary’s Hospital is the only hospital in New Haven County that now offers breast cancer patients access to the world’s first non-radioactive, dual-tracer breast cancer staging technology. It’s a simple iron oxide-based magnetic solution called the Magtrace® lymphatic tracer and is designed to simplify breast cancer surgery, while providing a more patient-friendly experience.

The Procedure – What To Expect

1) Injection Of the Magtrace lymphatic tracerMagtrace lymphatic tracer

The Magtrace® lymphatic tracer will be injected at a time that suits you and your surgeon. It can be administered at the start of your surgery when you’re under anesthesia, or many days beforehand, timed to coincide with your pre-surgical visit to the hospital. If done beforehand, local anesthetic or a numbing gel may be applied, and your surgeon or radiologist will then use a small needle to inject the liquid into your breast.

2) After the injection

Shortly after the injection, the Magtrace® tracer liquid will flow through your lymphatic system, taking the route a migrating cancer cell would take. It will then collect in the sentinel nodes in your underarm. You will not be able to feel any of this and can continue on as normal until your operation.

In some patients, a small brown mark may appear on the skin where the tracer was injected. This is the remnants of the tracer liquid which has remained under the skin and it is completely harmless.

Numerous studies have shown this doesn’t affect the majority of patients - and for those that do experience this mild blushing, it will go away in time, just like a bruise.

3) After the surgery

Once the breast tissue containing ductal carcinoma in situ (DCIS) has been removed and examined by a pathologist, your surgeon will share the diagnosis with you. This can take any time between a few days and a couple of weeks.

If the diagnosis is one of DCIS without invasive components, meaning the cancer has not spread outside of the ducts, you will be able to avoid an unnecessary Sentinel Lymph Node Biopsy (SLNB) procedure. Over time your body will break down the remaining Magtrace® components and transfer it to the natural iron stores in your body.

In the unfortunate circumstances where invasive cancer cells are identified, Magtrace® will allow your surgeon to easily find and remove the important sentinel lymph nodes marked by the tracer and your SLNB procedure can be scheduled right away.


FAQs

  • What is ductal carcinoma in situ (DCIS)?
    Ductal carcinoma in situ (DCIS) is considered the earliest form of breast cancer. It occurs when abnormal cells appear inside a milk duct in the breast, but importantly have no spread outside of the ducts.

    You may hear DCIS referred to as ‘noninvasive’ or ‘Stage 0’ cancer. It is generally identified through cancer screening methods, such as mammography.

  • Treating and staging DCIS
    While DCIS is unlikely to spread beyond the breast tissue, it is possible that if left untreated it could spread further, resulting in more invasive disease.

    When your surgeon removes DCIS from your breast, it is important to confirm if the cancer has spread to other parts of your body. This determines the ‘stage’ of the disease.

  • How will my surgeon know if the cancer has spread?
    The most common way to find out if the cancer has spread, is to analyze the lymph nodes near your underarm.

    If cancer cells break off from their initial position, they will travel through your lymphatic channels to your underarm and collect in the first lymph nodes they reach –the sentinel lymph nodes.

    The procedure to confirm whether the cancer has spread is called a sentinel lymph node biopsy (SLNB). This consists of the removal of a selection of lymph nodes for testing and analysis to see if they contain cancer.

  • Delayed Sentinel Lymph Node Biopsy
    The challenge with treating patients with DCIS is determining whether you have noninvasive DCIS, or whether it has developed into a more invasive cancer. For patients with DCIS alone, a SLNB is an unnecessary procedure, as cancer won’t have spread beyond the milk duct. However, because there is a small chance that there may be invasive disease, traditional methods have meant all patients receiving a surgery to remove their DCIS will also be given a SLNB regardless of whether they need it or not.

    Fortunately, new medical developments mean that there is now an alternative treatment. A delayed sentinel lymph node biopsy ensures that the only patients who undergo SLNB surgery are those who actually need their nodes removed.

    The Magtrace® lymphatic tracer allows your surgeon to mark the sentinel lymph nodes (the first nodes cancer would migrate to if present) in advance or on the day of your surgery.

    These nodes will remain marked in this way for many weeks, allowing a pathologist to look at the DCIS tissue removed from your breast and accurately determine if you would benefit from having those marked lymph nodes removed.

  • How many DCIS patients avoid lymph node surgery with the Magtrace® lymphatic tracer?
    The good news is that roughly 80% of patients will have non-invasive DCIS and will be able to avoid lymph node surgery altogether.

    For the 20% of patients who will go on to have a SLNB procedure, Magtrace® provides the opportunity to undergo a traditional SLNB, without the need for radioactive drugs and blue dyes, both of which can cause adverse reactions.

    Delayed SLNB allows surgeons the time to make well-informed decisions on the best course of treatment for their patients, reducing risk and sparing unnecessary surgery wherever possible.


Contact For more information or to schedule an appointment, please call 203.709.8662

In The News

Listen to our latest episode “Breast Health: Myths and Facts” as Christina Metcalf, M.D., breaks down tips and strategies on breast cancer and prevention.

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Services vary by cancer care location.