Expert Breast Care at Providence Saint John’s Margie Petersen Breast Center
With an emphasis on patient dignity and comfort, the Margie Petersen Breast Center at Providence Saint John’s Health Center offers some of the finest breast care in Southern California. We want to change the way women look at breast health and can identify and treat breast issues from pain and discharge to cancer. In fact, we have a dedicated Breast Health Center designed to function like a breast urgent care. Should a person find a lump or change in their breast, this program allows the patient to come in within 24 hours for an evaluation.
Call 833-923-3553 for an appointment or request one online.
Expert Breast Care at Providence Saint John’s Margie Petersen Breast Center
With an emphasis on patient dignity and comfort, the Margie Petersen Breast Center at Providence Saint John’s Health Center offers some of the finest breast care in Southern California. We want to change the way women look at breast health and can identify and treat breast issues from pain and discharge to cancer. In fact, we have a dedicated Breast Health Center designed to function like a breast urgent care. Should a person find a lump or change in their breast, this program allows the patient to come in within 24 hours for an evaluation.
Call 833-923-3553 for an appointment or request one online.
Meet the Team
At Providence, you'll have access to a vast network of dedicated and compassionate providers who offer personalized care by focusing on treatment, prevention and health education.
For those diagnosed with breast cancer, we focus on caring for the whole person: mind, body and spirit and provide access to medical expertise, innovative treatments, and support services. Our doctors and nurse navigator make sure to provide each patient, and their families, a comprehensive and personalized path to the most effective treatment. This includes combining quality care with integrated practices such as mindfulness and yoga. From the moment you walk through our doors, you can expect to find compassion and a tranquil environment.
- The same comprehensive, cutting edge services offered by major academic centers, provided in the community hospitals you know and trust
- A team of specialists in every aspect of breast care who collaborate across multiple locations to provide convenient, connected care close to your home or work
- World-class treatment options, including the latest clinical trials
- Personal support, beyond treating the disease, that eases the ripple effects on your emotions and your life
Providence provides expertise in treating all types of breast cancer, including rare forms.
- Ductal cancers start in the ducts that carry milk to the nipple.
- Lobular cancers start in the glands, or “lobules,” that produce milk.
- In situ indicates abnormal or cancerous cells that have not spread beyond the duct or gland.
- Infiltrating or invasive cancers have spread into surrounding breast tissue.
- Metastatic cancers have spread beyond the breast and nearby lymph nodes to other parts of the body.
The cancers we treat include, but are not limited to:
- Infiltrating ductal carcinoma (IDC): This is the most common type, making up 70-80% of all breast cancers. It begins in the lining of the milk ducts and then grows through the ducts into the nearby breast tissue. If not treated, it can spread, or metastasize, to other parts of the body.
- Ductal carcinoma in situ (DCIS): This is a non- or pre-invasive cancer that is still confined to the milk ducts, but that may become invasive.
- Infiltrating lobular carcinoma (ILC): Another common form of breast cancer, this type begins in the lining of the milk-producing glands and grows into the breast tissue. Without treatment, it can spread outside of the breast.
- Lobular carcinoma in situ (LCIS): These abnormal cells, confined to the milk glands, are not technically considered cancer and don’t typically become invasive. However, they do increase the risk of developing cancer in either breast in the future.
- Inflammatory breast cancer (IBC): In this rare and very aggressive disease, cancer cells block the lymph vessels of the breast skin, causing inflammation, swelling, redness and thickening of the skin. This fast-spreading cancer can metastasize without quick treatment. About 1-5% of breast cancers are inflammatory.
- Metastatic breast cancer (MBC): While breast cancers that have spread to other parts of the body can’t be cured, there are many treatments that can help keep them under control for years.
Your personalized treatment plan will depend on factors that are unique to you, from your specific diagnosis to your personal health and preferences. But one thing that most patients can count on is that it will take a team. And that’s where the Margie Petersen Breast Center at Providence Saint John’s Health Center shines.
Your team may include multiple experts who specialize in very specific aspects of treatment, as well as nurses, dietitians, counselors and others, all collaborating on your care. Collaboration is key, and we do it well. One way is through regular case review meetings, where members of your team, as well as Providence experts from outside your team, gather to review patient cases and to share clinical opinions, recommend treatments or symptom-management strategies, suggest opportunities for clinical trials and optimize care coordination.
The earlier breast cancer is found, the better the chances of successful treatment. That’s why it’s so important to pay attention to any changes in your breasts that could be signs of breast cancer. Understanding what is normal for your breasts, and what isn’t, can be lifesaving.
In the very earliest stages, breast cancer has no outward symptoms. Sometimes the earliest sign is a tiny lump, or mass, that’s detectable only on a mammogram. As the disease progresses, however, more noticeable changes might appear. These can vary widely — while a lump is the most common symptom, it is by no means the only one. Any of the following changes could be a warning sign of breast cancer:
- A lump in the breast or armpit area
- Thickening or redness of the breast skin
- Swelling in all or part of the breast
- Dimpling, puckering, irritation or scaliness of the breast skin or nipple
- Pain or tenderness in the breast or nipple
- A nipple that turns inward, flattens out, pulls to one side or changes direction
- Bloody nipple discharge or unilateral discharge other than breast milk
These symptoms may be signs of breast cancer in men as well as women.
If you notice a potential symptom of breast cancer, or if you’re concerned about any changes in the way one of your breasts looks or feels, please call your primary care provider or breast care specialist. While these symptoms don’t always indicate cancer — sometimes they are signs of something less serious, such as a cyst or an infection — it’s important to have a physician evaluate them right away. Don’t wait to see if they go away on their own. It bears repeating: treating breast cancer successfully is much easier when it’s caught and treated early.
Thanks to our dedication to advancing health for our breast cancer patients, the breast center offers the most recent medical developments and clinical trials. Clinical trials help doctors and scientists find better ways to diagnose, treat and prevent disease. Individuals who volunteer for clinical trials play an active role in their own health care and help others by advancing medicine.
Many of the physicians and surgeons who are treating and caring for patients in the Margie Petersen Breast Center at Providence Saint John’s are also faculty, adjunct faculty and physicians in a fellowship program affiliated with the Saint John's Cancer Institute. The Saint John's Cancer Institute is a cancer research organization dedicated to the understanding and curing of cancer in order to eliminate patient suffering worldwide.
View some of the current breast oncology research efforts at the Saint John's Cancer Institute.
Why Choose Us for Breast Cancer Care?
At Providence, we see the life in you. We know how important family celebrations and special occasions can be. Together let’s finish cancer so you don’t have to miss any of these moments.
Part of the Providence Cancer Institute in Los Angeles
Our patients are the center of everything we do:
- Our unique patient navigator program offers navigators specific to each cancer type to assist you throughout your cancer journey.
- Our beautiful, modern hospitals are equipped with the latest technologies.
- We also offer robust research labs not found in local, community-focused hospitals.
Learn more about the Providence Cancer Institute in Los Angeles
Find Clinical Trials
Are you looking for a clinical trial for yourself or for a patient? We’d love to help you find one!