After seeing a PSA about self-breast examinations, La’Draya Macon, then 34, performed one and discovered something alarming. She had a lump. “I saw a PSA that said, ‘Check your breasts.’ I went home and I checked, and I found something,” Macon, now 35, said in an Oct. 9 TODAY interview. “I was shocked.” She visited her doctor, but the doctor told her to watch it for a few weeks and then return for a follow-up visit. Macon knew that something was off in her body. “I had to advocate,” she said.
” Dr. Douglas Marks, a medical oncologist at NYU Langone Health, shared that while breast cancer is common, most women are diagnosed in their 50s and 60s. But even though it’s found less often in younger women, Marks believes women and doctors should remain attentive — especially if there’s a change in one’s breast. About “20% of women will be diagnosed younger than 50, and 5% of women will be diagnosed under 40,” he said. “That’s about 15,000 women under 40.
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