These are fast and free, and the USPSTF's recommendation against teaching them has caused a big-time brouhaha. The group argues that self-exams have not been proved to reduce cancer-related deaths, though no conclusive study has been done in the United States. Most doctors say not to quit altogether. "Women often discover their own cancers," says Runowicz . "So if you're not going to panic about every lump—and if you're young and menstruating, there will be lumps—there's little downside to doing self-exams."
Most lumps in younger women are caused by benign cysts, but there are no absolutes. "I've evaluated women as young as 22 who were diagnosed with breast cancer and found the abnormality while doing a breast self-exam," says Sandhya Pruthi, M.D., director of the breast clinic at the Mayo Clinic Cancer Center. "If we'd told them 'Don't touch your breasts,' a lump that was cancerous may have been detected at a much later stage."
The bottom line: Become familiar with the normal changes of your breasts by examining them monthly, in the days just after your period. For instructions, visit cancer.org.
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