For those who have read Dr.Susan Love's Breast Book....

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  • roseg
    roseg Member Posts: 3,133
    edited March 2009

    Janet - I think you've got to remember than until rather recently the option of not having a mastectomy was not open to women. It's only been since the 1970-80s that women could have a lumpectomy.

    The surgical community judges the 'modernization' of surgery by how many women receive this 'newer' form of treatment.

    While many women may choose mastectomy, the profession is still operating under the cloud that forced mastectomy cast over it. My own mother had a lumpectomy some years ago before they were totally proven and she was quite upset that it was not an option for me because she was so relieved it'd been an option for her.

    It's a bit like old-line feminists and younger women, probably their daughters, who would prefer not to work and stay home with their children.  the old-line women had no choice, so the opportunity means a lot more to them than it does to their daughers who never knew what it was like not to have a choice.

    Lexi - When I look through my copy I don't see where she ever says 30-40% of node negative women have spread.I see two places where she says 20-30% of node negative women, with tumors > 1 cm have spread. It's in the chapters about staging and treatment.

    That doesn't mean that 30% of women in that category who receive systemic treatment have mets down the road. For women in the 1-2 cm tumor size they have to look at other factors like age, hormone receptors, her2 status to decide if chemo is worth it. Beyond 2 cm she implies chemo is always worth it, even if your nodes are negative.

     I can see where Susan Love is hard to read. By the time I read it all I'd been treated and wasn't  worried. As someone with DCIS I wasn't ever very worried, which gives me a different view of breast cancer.

    I did find that all of my doctors were familiar with the book so at follow-up appointments it was a good platform to ask questions from. I usually recommend books by John Link to women because I think he's written some good books that are easier to digest.

    Rose

  • lexislove
    lexislove Member Posts: 2,645
    edited March 2009

    Oh...... I totally agree with you Rose...

    I did it all Chemo , Herceptin and Rads. And now taking the Tamoxifen,Lupron AND Zometa...Geeesh*

  • roseg
    roseg Member Posts: 3,133
    edited March 2009

    L - I'm glad you agreed. I just thought of something else I wanted to say so I changed my answer!

  • AccidentalTourist
    AccidentalTourist Member Posts: 365
    edited March 2009

    Thank you Beesie for your explanation re Tamoxifen.

    I have not read Dr Love's book but am reading everything I come across on BC so I will look it up.  I think I am one of those people who need to be scared a bit as otherwise I would just continue as I was before bc.  It is fear that has made me clean up my act e.g. smoking and nutrition.  I have noticed that, as the time since diagnosis progresses I am eating more and more things I should not and it is only when I read some scary statistics that I get back to organic vegetables.

  • Abbey11
    Abbey11 Member Posts: 335
    edited March 2009

    I chose to have a double mastectomy after being diagnosed with bilateral BC.  Both tumors were very small, and I could have had double lumpectomies, but I just couldn't stomach the risk.  Susan Love is very, very anti-mastectomy.  Reading her book made me feel guilty for making the choice that I did.  I think that the basic science in the book is sound, but she writes with a huge slant toward breast conservation.  I do think there's a sort of feminist those-doctors-won't take-my-breasts attitude throughout the book.  Of course, we all would have liked to keep our breasts, but please don't make us feel guilty for trying to save our own lives. 

  • candie1971
    candie1971 Member Posts: 4,820
    edited March 2009

    I was advised by many women on the site NOT to read Dr.Love's book and I did not. Just hearing bits and pieces is scarey.

    edited to add: why are the statistics different for Canadian women?

  • sushanna1
    sushanna1 Member Posts: 764
    edited March 2009

    I read it, enjoyed it and recommend it to people. 

  • Beesie
    Beesie Member Posts: 12,240
    edited March 2009

    Candie,

    Every country has a different healthcare system and different treatment protocols.  So the survival rates of any disease will be different across different countries.  In Canada, for some diseases our survival rates are higher than those of the U.S. and for some they are lower.  Overall, our life expectancy is higher; the 2009 estimated life expectancy for Canada is 81.23 years vs. 78.11 years for the U.S. (https://www.cia.gov/library/publications/the-world-factbook/rankorder/2102rank.html) - that's my plug for the much maligned Canadian healthcare system!  

    As for breast cancer specifically, having reviewed the treatment protocols for both Canada and the U.S., I believe that treatment is identifcal (or almost identical) however annual mammos are not recommended until age 50 in Canada (except for those with risk factors) whereas in the U.S. annual mammos are recommended as of age 40.  That might explain the approximately 1 point difference in survival rates.  Overall however, both Canada and the U.S. are near the top of the list in terms of breast cancer survival.

  • cp418
    cp418 Member Posts: 7,079
    edited March 2009

    Well I just came across this recent news article and it certainly did not improve my spirit or hope.

    New Test May Predict Breast Cancer Metastasis

    http://www.medicalnewstoday.com/articles/144086.php

  • anondenet
    anondenet Member Posts: 715
    edited March 2009

    That is a sloppy book, full of inaccuracies. It is shocking that she gets things so out of context. There is a lot of dopey "fill" in the book to make it look so big.

    Susan Love used to be better in 1990. But she retired young to raise her child and her brain seems to have retired as well-- I don't mean that in an unkind way. She's just not sharp anymore.

    Worst sin: She cherry-picks statistics to make her point. And people who don't know the whole story believe her.

  • lexislove
    lexislove Member Posts: 2,645
    edited March 2009

    cp418....ahhh there we go the 40% thing again.

    The study is pretty small only 30 people..I guess we will see

  • orange1
    orange1 Member Posts: 930
    edited March 2009

    This link is from Bessie.  This is an excellent article for those node negative and fearful of recurrance.

    I haven't read Dr. Love's book, but based on the statistics I've seen posted on this thread, it sounds like a crock of s---.

    I have read many, many, many studies on the prognosis of node negative patients (I am totally obsessed and have access to a lot of journals).  The 30-40% recurrance for node- just doesn't ring true.  40% is even a little on the high side for untreated node neg, Her2+ tumors 

    http://www.annalssurgicaloncology.org/cgi/content/full/11/3_suppl/227S

    Thanks Bessie for setting the record straight.

  • rayhope
    rayhope Member Posts: 228
    edited March 2009

    I bought that book soon after diagnosis but have never read it.  Maybe I should pitch it! 

  • pip57
    pip57 Member Posts: 12,401
    edited March 2009

    I don't want to elevate the anxiety of the node- girls, but just take a look at the stage IV thread.  Lymph nodes are only one mode of cell travel.  Your pathology report has a lot of important info other than lymph nodes and tumor size.  If only it were that simple.

  • Beesie
    Beesie Member Posts: 12,240
    edited March 2009

    lexislove, 

    The "40%" reference in the article from cp418 is quite different from the discussion we've been having about what Dr. Love said.  The article says that "An estimated 40 percent of breast cancer patients relapse and develop metastatic disease."  This figure would include women who are node negative and women who are node positive but who are not Stage IV.  In fact the article specifies that the control group (i.e the "matching" group that didn't develop mets) included women who had "invasive ductal carcinoma limited to the breast or with regional lymph node metastasis only".

    Of those diagnosed with invasive cancer, approx. 6% of women are Stage IV upon diagnosis.  Another 31% have lymph node invasion (Stage II and Stage III).  This means that 63% of women diagnosed do not have lymph node invasion. So I believe that the group that this study is talking about represents 94% of all women diagnosed with invasive breast cancer.  Even at that, with a 20 year survival rate that's over 60% and these days may be closer to 70% (based on extrapolations of the SEER data - see my post above),  it would seem unlikely that 40% of women diagnosed with non-Stage IV breast cancer will eventually relapse and develop mets.  

    By the way, I reviewed Dr. Love's book in a bookstore today.  The only reference I could find was a comment along the lines of what Rose mentioned.  What Dr. Love said (in the version of the book I was reading) was that 20% - 30% of those with negative nodes have some spread elsewhere.  This is exactly to PIP's point.  These women have negative nodes at the time of diagnosis, but some cancer cells have already moved into other parts of their body.  The larger the tumor, the more likely this will happen.  This is why chemo is always recommended for those who have tumors greater than 2cm and why chemo is often recommended for those who have tumors greater than 1cm.  The role of the chemo is to find and kill those few stray cells that have already spread, so that mets never does develop.  So the 20% - 30% figure that Dr. Love quotes does not translate into the same percentage of women eventually developing mets - the percentage would be significantly lower, if it's assumed that most of these patients do get chemo (as per the current treatment protocol). 

  • orange1
    orange1 Member Posts: 930
    edited March 2009

    Of coarse node negatives sometimes end up with mets.  Otherwise those with node negative cancer would have breast cancer specific survival of 100%. 

    My point was that the statistics quoted on this thread from Dr. Love's book don't agree with other credible sources.

  • lexislove
    lexislove Member Posts: 2,645
    edited March 2009

    Thank you once again Beesie.....your post completely makes sense!

    I initially said 30-40%...(thats what I thought I remembered..chemobrain) so..20-30% is what Dr. Love DID state. Regardless...it doesn't really matterSmile

  • mzmiller99
    mzmiller99 Member Posts: 894
    edited March 2009

    Thanks, Beesie, for your info!!  Sometimes, when I look at the charts, etc., like the Oncotype dx scores, I get stupid!  Can't understand sh*t.  You make it very simple.

    Susan

  • Estepp
    Estepp Member Posts: 6,416
    edited March 2009

    My entire team here did not want me reading her book... so, of course... I ran out and bought it...LOL. It was the WORST thing I cold have done. FOR ME... I should have known.. after my first breast surgeon WANTED me to get the book.

    ALL my team was soooooooooooooooo happy I choose a Bi-lat. They were afraid, I would not.

    I am an educated woman, and I knew, for me.. what I had to do. If I would have followed what Susan Love talk of, I would still have my breast tissue.

    I know she has done so very much for BC. I admire that. But, I believe, you need to be very careful with your choices. I left a breast surgeon who thought I was NUTS to have a Bilat at 40, with a 3cm tumor and 1-3 node positive with Her2+++. She was the one who suggested I get Susan Loves Book.

    I am very, very grateful ( for me) that I did not stay with that Breast Surgeon.

    JUST MY OPINION in MY Cancer journey.

  • revkat
    revkat Member Posts: 763
    edited March 2009

    And for me on my journey, Dr. Love's book was very helpful. Particularly in balancing what sometimes seems like an anti-lumpectomy bias on these boards. And, paradoxically, it encouraged me to question the medical establishment until I had real answers (not necessarily answers I liked, but at least ones that reflected their best knowledge to date).

  • Caya
    Caya Member Posts: 971
    edited March 2009

    When I was diagnosed in Oct. 2006 a collegue of my DH's called - his wife is a survivor, and they recommended I purchase Dr. Love's book - I went to the store and looked through it - almost no information on Her 2+ and Herceptin, which I needed. I also was disturbed by her tone in general.  So that was enough for me, no sale.

    Most of the stats are old, old (especially with Her2+) - I got most of my info from this site, and my onc., who tells me that with my pathology and treatment - MRM, chemo, and Herceptin, node negative status, taking Tamoxifen - my "cure" rate - he used that word - is well over 90%. 

  • lexislove
    lexislove Member Posts: 2,645
    edited March 2009

    I wonder if there are any other breast books out there beside Dr. Loves that are more recent regarding Her2 ect?

    Caya...thanks for your support ..looks like your onc and my onc are on the same page..

  • candie1971
    candie1971 Member Posts: 4,820
    edited March 2009

    Beesie, thanks so much for the info....  :O)

  • EWB
    EWB Member Posts: 2,927
    edited March 2009

    I have looked at several of her books, really tried to like them and her but something just doesn't sit right for me. I think that all started when she said women didn't need mammograms until they were 50.  Seems like a lot of confusing, and opposing info coming from her. Not my first choice for info. Also not much info re AIs, advanced bc

    But thats just me.

  • cp418
    cp418 Member Posts: 7,079
    edited March 2009

    I never read her book as I was warned not to by a bc support person.  I'm glad I didn't and the feedback here confirms it.  Hmmm.... women don't need mammograms until age 50???  My IDC was only detected with a mammogram in my 40's - - what would be my dx if I had waited several more years???? 

  • sunkistmi
    sunkistmi Member Posts: 287
    edited March 2009

    Love's book was the one recommended by my breast surgeon when dx w/a 2" lump filled w/DCIS in 2/06.  I ran out and bought it but found it very difficult to understand.  I went the lumpectomy w/sentinal node biopsy route first but w/only one clean margin and a very small breast, surgeon said that after more surgery to clean it up, then radiation, I wouldn't like the look of the breast.  So I just went w/the mast and recon.  When dx on other side in 5/08, I knew in my heart it was going to come back eventually if I went w/the lump & radiation so just went direct to mast & recon.  Only regret is that I wish I would have done them both in 06. 

    My mom took tamoxifin back in 1984 & 85.  She took two rounds but still met to spine and brain.  At that time, I seem to remember it was the new "wonder" drug and there was alot of excitment about it.  It sounds terrible but I was so happy that I "just" had to have the masts and not the chemo and radiation, especially after what I saw her go thru.  I feel like such a coward!  You chemo and rad sisters have my admiration, lots of guts and gumption (is this really a word?).

    Bessie, you have given me so much wonderful information and support since I found this site last year.  I really wished I would have found it before my first surgery but.....  I think the information that I have taken from it has only reinforced the decisions I have made for me.

    I too do not like the way Dr. Love seems to hand-pick her stats.  Of course, my rational for not doing the second breast when the lump was found in the right was stats from her book.  I felt I had 85 to 90% chance of NOT getting in the left breast so I didn't want to take off a 'healthy' breast.  Course, it didn't even take 2 years for it to show up on the other side.  Most likely cells were there in '06, just not in an amount large enough to read.  Oh well, now that they are both off and I am doing well after the surgeries, I am just happy that I only had 2 (breasts that is) and I'm done.  I just pray that the tests were correct that it was all non-invasive.  I guess time will tell.  I do not have a real good track record for accurate test results.  It seems they always say one thing and it turns out to be something different.  The worst was when 3 scans over 10 months said the lump on my thyroid was not cancer, and it was.  Thank goodness for my doc, who just had a 'feeling'.  I had the same sort of reaction when the genetic testing came back that the colon, breast, ovarian and pancreatic cancer that gallops thru my family is all "random and a coincidence".  It did not make me feel good at all.  I really want that last ovary out but insurance won't pay because of way BRCA test came back.  I KNOW, in my heart of hearts, there is a link somewhere but I guess I just have to wait to see.  You better believe I am watching myself very carefully.

    My copy of the book went to the recycling bin because I didn't want to take a chance of selling it at a garage sale.  I did not want to be responsible for someone to use my book to make some decision that perhaps wasn't the best.

    The sisters on the site are the best!

    Blessings,

    Wendy

  • Laurie09
    Laurie09 Member Posts: 313
    edited April 2009

    I'm glad I wasn't the only one who was a bit disturbed by the statistics in the book. 

    There's definitely some good information in there, but I thought it was quite negative overall as well. 

    My mom just got the book to read and I tried to let her know it was a bit outdated, but I worry that she's going to fixate on those statistics.

  • AnnaM
    AnnaM Member Posts: 1,387
    edited April 2009

    I am not a number.

    I considered the statistics when it was time to make treatment choices. Now that my choices have been made I have stopped looking at them and listening to them. Statistics will never define me or my attitude toward my only life.

  • tos
    tos Member Posts: 376
    edited April 2009

    Sometimes a problem can arise because of the different types of pathology, genetic make-up, type of breast cancer.  So I don't like to see us all lumped up to gather info.

    I did read her book, I have had triple neg twice, she hardly had more than 2 sentences in regard to this type of bc.  I found that offensive and it was her latest update.  Not enough about brca 1/2 mutations either.  We can't get a general idea of where we personally stand if they put us all in one pile.

  • lexislove
    lexislove Member Posts: 2,645
    edited April 2009

    galnok..

    You are right. Nothing basically was mentioned about triple neg BC or the BRCA genes. It does seem like she "lumped" us all together. You would think she would cover this.....

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