What’s going on with chemotactic breast cancer?

Chemotactic breast cancer is a breast cancer lesion that is particularly severe and has metastasized.
Chemotaxis is a pathological term, and chemotactic breast cancer refers to the transformation of breast cancer cells to other types with a higher metastatic rate. When applied to breast cancer, it is possible that the patient’s breast cancer lesion has already undergone metastasis and has metastasized to distant organs. If this is the case, it is mostly indicative that the patient is in an advanced stage of the disease, making it more difficult to treat.
Although the patient is in the advanced stage of the disease and the patient’s condition is serious, the patient needs to be treated regularly under the guidance of the doctor. Surgery is the main treatment option, trying to remove the lesion and the surrounding lymph nodes. After surgery, radiotherapy, targeted drug therapy and endocrine therapy should be used to stabilize the disease and prolong the patient’s survival time.