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In most cases, the smaller the tumor, the better the prognosis tends to be. A health care provider can estimate the size of the tumor if it can be felt during a physical exam. Images from a breast ultrasound or mammogram are also used to estimate tumor size.
T1b is a tumor that is larger than 5 mm but 10 mm or smaller. T1c is a tumor that is larger than 10 mm but 20 mm or smaller.
Its very small and hasnt spread. T1: This tumor is less than 2 centimeters (3/4 inch). It may or may not have spread to nearby lymph nodes. T2: This tumor is slightly larger, between 2 and 5 centimeters.
Tumor size is strongly related to prognosis (chances for survival). In general, the smaller the tumor, the better the prognosis tends to be [12]. Tumor Size Chart | Susan G. Komen Susan G. Komen diagnosis stages-staging Susan G. Komen diagnosis stages-staging
stage 1 the cancer is small and hasnt spread anywhere else. stage 2 the cancer has grown, but hasnt spread. stage 3 the cancer is larger and may have spread to the surrounding tissues and/or the lymph nodes (or glands, part of the immune system) What do cancer stages and grades mean? - NHS .nhs.uk operations-tests-and-procedures .nhs.uk operations-tests-and-procedures
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Some of the factors that affect prognosis include: The type of cancer and where it is in your body. The stage of the cancer, which refers to the size of the cancer and if it has spread to other parts of your body. The cancers grade, which refers to how abnormal the cancer cells look under a microscope. Understanding Cancer Prognosis - NCI cancer.gov about-cancer diagnosis-staging cancer.gov about-cancer diagnosis-staging
Tumor size is an important and often independent variable associated with metastasis in clinical studies and studies on poor-prognosis gene-expression signatures (9) (Fig. Lung metastasis genes couple breast tumor size and metastatic spread pnas.org doi pnas.0701138104 pnas.org doi pnas.0701138104
T1 (includes T1a, T1b, and T1c): Tumor is 2 cm (3/4 of an inch) or less across. T2: Tumor is more than 2 cm but not more than 5 cm (2 inches) across. T3: Tumor is more than 5 cm across. T4 (includes T4a, T4b, T4c, and T4d): Tumor of any size growing into the chest wall or skin.

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