Hyperplasia involving normal breast tissue doesn’t require any treatment but you might need a small operation to remove the affected area and reduce your future breast cancer risk.
You will also need to attend regular check-ups at your local breast clinic and undergo more frequent mammograms compared to women whose breasts have never shown any signs of hyperplasia.
It is important to remember that, while atypical hyperplasia is linked with a slightly increased risk of developing breast cancer in the future, this does not mean that it will happen to everyone with atypical hyperplasia.
It is important to attend all of your follow-up appointments and to remain breast aware in the future, but not to worry unnecessarily.
In some cases, where the risk of developing breast cancer is thought to be particularly high, possibly due to the presence of other risk factors such as family history, you may need further risk reduction treatment.
You might be prescribed a preventative medicine such as tamoxifen, and advised to avoid hormone replacement therapy or herbal menopause treatments that can increase breast cancer risk.
In the small number of extremely high-risk cases where genetic tests show you have a mutation in one of the known breast cancer genes, you might be offered a prophylactic mastectomy.
This surgery will remove one or both breasts to take away all of the glandular tissue to prevent breast cancer developing there.