Anybody NOT have dose dense?
I had my first appt with my oncologist last week and he told me that he was going to do the classical dose of AC x 4 (every three weeks) and Taxol. I thought he said Taxol x 4 (every three weeks also but not 100% sure on that). They want me to participate in the Avastin trial. I have decided to do that. The nurse said on the clinical trial the Taxol would be x 12 (every 7 days). Anyway, I am worried about not doing the dose dense. When I asked him why he wasn't doing that, he said he didn't feel there was enough evidence to prove it was more successful than the classical dose. He said it was big on the east coast, but not so much in the rest of the country. I don't know what he means by that because I see people here doing dose dense all over the country. I just keep reading everywhere that the dose dense is the "gold standard" and I am very concerned that I won't be getting that.
Has anybody else done the classical plan of AC plus Taxol?
Comments
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TexasRose -- I did not have dose dense -- I had the classic TAC (6 cycles/every 3 weeks) however my chemo was neoadjuvant (i.e., before my surgery). The T in my case was Taxotere. My initial diagnosis was Stage III, Grade 3, TN. My tumor was over 10cm originally (before the excisional biopsy of about 4cm). I had surgery recently - mx and 16 nodes removed. My results were complete clinical and pathological response -- no evidence of disease -- in the breast tissue and all nodes removed. I had scans before the surgery and they were all clean. I have read many journal articles on this subject and did not get the sense that dose dense is the gold standard -- it is merely one of the current treatment modalities.
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My oncologist originally reccomended TACx6, and I had the same questions as you based on reading here and around about dose dense and triple negative. She had the same reasoning as your onc, that it wasn't proven to be more effective than classic. It is, however, considered to be equivalent, so she did not see a problem switching to dose dense if that would make me less nervous. So we changed plans.
You don't have to take the first protocol offered, the choice should be yours in partnership with your oncologist. If you aren't confident in the treatment plan as is, you should push for answers that make you comfortable, or a change in plan, or a second opinion. Asking those questions is also how I ended up on the Avastin trial when that was not originally offered to me either.
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Zuffa- Thanks for the reply. I'm glad to hear that you had such a great pathological response! It's also good to know that in your research you didn't find DD to be the only effective treatment for triple negs.
becca743- Thank you also. I know that before I have read some articles on the two being equivalent, but now I can't seem to find them. I would be comfortable with the classical dose if it was equivalent to the DD. My husband tells me the onc is the expert and I should trust him. I was never very good at that. I question everything. I will definitely revisit this with him and the clinical trial nurse.
Good luck to both of you.
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TexasRose..I am not Triple Neg, but I had Her2+ BC. I did the ACX4 & TX4. I didn't even know about DD untill AFTER chemo. But I am ok with it because I had the same view as your husband...my onc is the expert and he knows my case.I trust him with his recomendations.
I see you had no lumph node involvment, that could be the reason why your onc does not feel the need to do the DD.
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If you look at the statistics of all cancer patients combined your onc is right, does dense AC is not much better than the once every 3 weeks AC. But remember that triple negative is only 15% of total, and that chemotherapy doesn't impact hormone positive cancers much anyway. When the effectiveness of does dense compared to traditional once every 3 weeks chemo is considered for only triple negative breast cancer patients it is striking how much more effective the dose dense is over the once every three weeks.
While zuffa and becca743 didn't get dose dense AC they also did not get once every 3 weeks AC. TAC is hardly a classic treatment. TAC is a 6 treatments of all three chemos at once delivered once every three weeks. The 'classic' treatment is 4 treatments of AC once every three weeks followed by 4 treatments of T once every three weeks. TAC and dose dense are both considered to be 3rd generation regimens and appear to be equally effective (but it seems like the larger the tumor and/or more nodes involved the more likely TAC will be used over dose dense AC, and that the side effects of TAC are alittle more severe).
AC once every 3 weeks is a 2nd generation chemotherapy treatment. Because chemo is so effective against triple negative (versus almost ineffective against hormone positive), most triple negative patients get a 3rd generation chemo. See https://www.adjuvantonline.com/ for a comparison of the impact of the different types of chemo on your particular characteristics.
I recommend you continue to push for dose dense treatment (if for no other reason you get done 2 months faster!) or TAC. Stay in the Avastin trial if you can, especially given it sounds like it is supposed to be given with weekly Taxol. I am confused why your onc would push the old chemo, could it be the only way you can qualify for the Avastin trial is if you do the classic AC every 3 weeks? .
As for an east coast thing, that is hogwash, I was treated at the Fred Hutchinson Cancer Center in Washington several years ago and while they still have AC every 3 weeks to hormone positive patients, triple negative patients were pushed hard to take a 3rd generation chemo. What I have noticed is that it is typically oncs in small towns that still give the old chemo, but large teaching hospitals, and oncs that specialize in only breasts do not.
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I was scheduled for dd AC followed by dd Taxol.
I ended up doing 3/4 dd AC (got very sick and couldn't finish) and then 12 weekly Taxol. That was in 2005/6 and I'm doing well.
Avastin works best with other chemos so this could be why you may get scheduled for weekly Taxol. I've read that weekly Taxol may be better than dd Taxol and in fact, though they lowered my dose more than the normal (because I had gotten so sick on AC) I actually received more of the drug in the end than I would have on dose dense.
I would google this and read up on the effects of every 3 weeks for triple neg and get a second or third opinion...
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I received Taxotere and Carboplatin together every 3 weeks for 6 sessions. I was told that the Taxotere had been shown to be as effective as Taxol and had fewer side effects. I was happy to have the 2 week rest periods. My life was relatively normal during those two weeks. I was offered an experimental trial of Taxotere plus Carboplatin and taxol and carboplatin or some other c chemo every two weeks for 8 weeks. (TIC TAC study) It sounded pretty rough so I opted out of that trial. I'm hoping that by vamping up my diet and exercise post chemo I'll have done myself as much good as any extra toxins they might have thrown at me. My oncologist was very supportive about a diet and exercise program. He said some studies even indicated it was as good as chemo and that it reduces recurrence by 50%. He assured me that my TIC cycles times 6 were state of the art for 2009. I received treatment at the Cancer Center in St. Thomas Hospital in Nashville, TN. My young Oncologist was trained at John's Hopkins and seems to be constantly on top of the latest research so I trust his judgment.
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I did AC (4x every other week) and then Taxol (4x every other week) my onc. seems to think this is the standard agressive way to treat my cancer. and believe me...after the 4 rounds of AC the Taxol was a walk in the park for me! No nausea just fatigue and some blood pressure issues.
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Hi TexasRose,
I did DD A/C and 12 taxols....I also did the Avastin trial, E5103. I live in Kansas. If you want some info on this trial and what to expect go to "help me through treatment" and look for the thread Clinical trial E5103....I would be happy to tell you what I know just PM me if you would like to.
Teresa
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Just posted this on another thread- Thanks to everybody for sharing their thoughts on this. BTW, my hospital is a large teaching hospital.
Just got home from yet another run up to the hospital. I met with the clinical trial nurse for her to take a more involved medical history from me. She talked to the onc and said that in their research doing the dose dense gives me 1% greater odds, but the onc said that I am a younger (47) cancer patient and in otherwise very good health and he thinks I will be able to handle the dose dense well. So, he said if that is what I want and makes me feel more confident, than that is what he will do. And that is what I want. My heart, my gut, my inner voice are all telling me the dose dense is the way to go. I do not want to leave anything on the table in this. I will take every extra percentage point I can get. I am just not willing to gamble with my triple neg status.
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