DCIS Lumpectomy without radiation/age 72
DCIS lumpectomy scheduled June 30. Has any women in senior years (I am 72 years old) optioned to not have any radiation successfully. Up to now I have been sweating it out trying to make the choice between Mammosite or full breast radiation and it just occured to me that I could choose to have NO RADIATION. As I read on this site the after effects of either radiation treatment are frightning. Both radiation options leave the patient with years of medical problems and I have to ask myself if that is worse than a re -occurance of cancer that could be treated if it occurs with another lumpectomy. Any comments. Cathey/Indiana
Comments
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Cathey,
You brought a smile to my face in reading your comment saying it just occurrred to you that you could choose no radiation. I got a mental image of a light bulb turning on in your mind. I've always wondered why so few people ever consider saying no and your statement just goes to show that sometimes it's just simply because people don't even realize that for some, declining might actually be a reasonable option. It's certainly not a reasonable option for everyone, but in my opinion neither is automatically radiating everyone just because they had a lumpectomy.
I didn't just have DCIS - also had invasive disease (IDC) too. It was all wrapped up in a single, small grade 1 tumor which was removed with wide margins back in 3/2004 just after I had turned 49 (but already in menopause). It was 40% DCIS and 60% IDC, so we're not talking just tiny bit's of invasive disease either. I refused radiation after my lumpectomy and also refused tamoxifen and arimidex, yet here I am 5+ years later and no local recurrence (radiation only treats local and regional) as of the last mammogram in March of this year. So obviously, I didn't really need radiation. If I happen to get a local recurrence of that cancer or a new cancer someday, I'll re-evaluate at that time. But assuming it's just another well behaved, low grade tumor with wide margins achievable, it will be yet another lumpectomy without any further treatment for me once again.
Good luck with making your decision - it's never easy.
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Thanks Mariie for your response. Your comments were the only one I received. I have been looking for the percentage of reoccuring bc after lumpectomy with or without radiation especially in a senior age 72 and have not been able to find. Isnt the whole idea of radiation to prevent or lessen any reoccurance of cancer. When I discuss this with my surgeon I have no doubt that she will not agree that having no radiation is the best option. When I read of the many and terrible after effects of radiation (of any kind) and the side effects of tamoxifen, I wonder if the effort to avoid a reoccurance isnt worse than the possibility of that reoccurance. Mammosite radiation only protects from cancer the small part of the breast where the tumor has been removed. Full breast radiation is meant to protect the entire breast from future cancer. Is the price I would pay for a smaller percentage of future cancer, and percentage wise, how much less. Thanks again for your experience Im sure will help me in my decision. Cathey/Indiana
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Hello 03- I wish it had occured to me that I didn't HAVE to have radiation- I am only 47, but the thought just never occured. It DID occur to me that I didn't HAVE to have chemo thank God! I just want to tell you that radiation really was not bad at all- I finished last month and I did not have any side effects, skin got a little red that's it. I respect your choice- just wanted to put my two cents in! Health and peace to you, Tami
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Cathey,
I'm not sure why you have the impression that radiation leaves such terrible long-lasting effects. I had lumpectomy plus radiation at age 54. Other than some mild sunburn-like effects at the time of the treatment, I've had no lasting ill effects that have been problematic so far (six years later). Yes, radiated skin is different (so they say), but not in any way that I can see on myself or that has affected my quality of life.
I would not have felt protected by a lumpectomy alone. Plus, as someone who had a new primary cancer detected in the other breast three years later, I can tell you that going through this again is NO fun. If I were you, I would treat your cancer as aggressively as possible the first time around, hoping to avoid a recurrence, especially as 50% of recurrences of DCIS involve an invasive component.
One more thing--I didn't experience any real fatigue during radiation, though I know some women do. However, bear in mind that women who sail through radiation are less likely to post extensively on these boards. Many of the posts here involve women who have had problems. I'm not minimizing their problems, just saying that these boards might present a somewhat skewed picture.
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I had posted this link previously showing recurrence rates from an earlier study:
This study from the '90's (which indicates margin width is the most significant factor for recurrence) breaks down risk of recurrence based on margin width for lumpectomy only and for lumpectomy plus radiation. It then further breaks down recurrence rate based on margin width and grade. Link: http://theoncologist.alphamedpress.org/cgi/content/full/3/2/94/T2
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Hi,
I'm no sorry you're in the position of even having to figure this out! The doctors use several factors to try to define your risk of recurrence: nuclear grade, margin size, and size of the original DCIS lesion (that is, size of the actual lesion, as defined by pathology after surgery, not the original size estimated before surgery). Some systems for estimating risk also include age as a factor - and being over 60 is to your advantage in that case.
One of the commonly referenced recurrence risk indicators is called the Van Nuys Prognostic Classification (VNPI). I'll see if I can get it to post below. ("BCS" means "Breast Conserving Surgery" - that means lumpectomy). There have been quite a few studies using it, trying to determine how accurate it is. Most agree that the lower scores come out with no or very little gain from radiation therapy. How the VNPI works is that you look up the characteristics of your DCIS in the first table, and add up the points. Then you look up the risk of recurrence in the second table, based on your score. I'll give a couple of examples below the charts.
The charts wouldn't post
So I went through and wrote it up mannually. Here you go:
Van Nuys Prognostic Classification (VNPI)
- 2003 Update PMID 14682107 -- "An argument against routine use of radiotherapy for ductal carcinoma in situ." (Silverstein MJ, Oncology (Williston Park). 2003 Nov;17(11):1511-33; discussion 1533-4, 1539, 1542 passim.)
- 706 patients with DCIS, 426 excision alone, 280 excision + RT.
1 point items:
Size: <=15mm
Grade: Grade I-II
Margin: >=10mm
Age: >60
2 point items:
Size: 16-40mm
Grade: Grade I-II + necrosis
Margin: 1-9 mm
Age: 40-60
3 point items:
Size: >40 mm
Grade: Grade III
Margin: <1mm
Age: <40
Total your score
10 year VNPI Local Recurrence (LR) Rates
[BCS= Breast conserving surgery. RT=Radiation Therapy]
6 points or less:
Overall LR: 3%
BCS Alone LR: 3%
BCS+RT LR: 3%
7-9 points:
Overall LR: 27%
BCS Alone LR: 36%
BCS+RT LR: 21%
10-12 points:
Overall LR: 66%
BCS Alone LR: 88%
BCS+RT LR: 41%
VNPI Treatment guidelines:
- 4-6 points: BCS alone
- 7-9 points: BCS + RT
- 10-12 points: Mastectomy
Example #1: Low-grade DCIS, 1.2 cm, smallest margin .5cm, age 72. Score would be 1+1+2+1 = 5. According the the second table, that would put the risk of recurrence after 10 years at 3%, regardless of whether or not the patient did radiation.
Example #2: High-grade DCIS, 2 cm, smallest margin .5 cm, age 72. Score would be 3+2+2+1 = 8. With this combination, the risk of recurrence within 10 years with just surgery and no radiation is estimated at 36%. Radiation cuts that risk down to 21%. [Some other studies cut the risk even further, but in the VNPI, it's down to 21%]
I hope that helps! Without knowing the characteristics of your DCIS, I cannot estimate how high your risk of recurrence might be. But with that information, you can use the VNPI or one of the other indicators to make a more informed decision about radiation in your case.
I wish you the best, whatever you decide to do!
Linda
- 2003 Update PMID 14682107 -- "An argument against routine use of radiotherapy for ductal carcinoma in situ." (Silverstein MJ, Oncology (Williston Park). 2003 Nov;17(11):1511-33; discussion 1533-4, 1539, 1542 passim.)
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BUMMER! It did not post correctly. I need to go attend to my toddler right now, but will come back later and clean it up for you. (If someone else has the link and can post it, that would help, too. I wasn't able to find it easily.)
Linda
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I think this can all be summed up by saying my doc has expressed to me that cancer spreads very slowly in the over 70 crowd (I was talking to her about my mother - over 70 with suspection of DCIS - mammo).. So considering you are starting with a non-invasive stage if you had an honest talk with your general practioner rather than just "go along" with the radiologist oncologists.. he/she might explain why that is (that cancer grows more slowing in the elder population) you might get some support for opting out of radiation.. Good luck and please let us know how things went!! Best
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Cathey
Don't automatically assume the radiologist will not support you. I have no doubt they will suggest./offer radiation, but may well be supportive of an "older" person with a low grade tumor opting out. It is your choice and you need to do what makes sense for you. I would think this would especially be true if your lumpectomy gets good margins. I did not want radiation and while the radiologist didn't really agree with me, she readily admitted that everyone has their own limits. She was the most reasonable ( and best listening ) Dr I met in the breast cancer saga. In the end, with no margins and at age 49, I ended up with the radiation anyway. You make your plans and then adjust bases on what happens. Had I had grade 1 or 2 dcis I would definitely have had a lumpectomy without radiation.
Trish
Trish
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Okay, I went back and just wrote out the Van Nuys Classification categories. (See my original post.) I hope that helps. Please feel free to ask more questions as they occur to you...
Linda
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i would keep an open mind about this.
If your area is small and your margins are wide it won't be needed. But DCIS can reoccur and if it doesn't you'll have to go through this drill again. Clearly you are someone who'd rather not spend her days dealing with the medical establishment -- so why give them the opportunity to put you through this again because you didn't do the entire treatment scheme -- if it's deemed necessary?
My Mom had a lumpectomy and radiation for DCIS when she was 57 in 1985. She's not had any problems either because of the radiation or with DCIS/bc since then.
I know it's a pain to do the radiation, but unless you are going to forgo future mammograms and the possibility of DCIS turning up again I'd wait and see what' recommended before deciding.
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Has anyone had the short radiation course? Going once a day for 3 weeks instead of 5 weeks. Each treatment is a little stronger rads but the accumulative total for the 3 weeks course is 42.5 Gray of radiation compared to 50 Gray of radiation for 5 week course.
Source: hhp://www.breastcancer.org/treatment/radiation/new_research/20080922b.jsp
This 3 weeks is appealing to me. Any comments. Thanks
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Cathey,
I was a "young" 58 year old when I had my lumpectomy in 2007. I too decided to skip radiation because my score was 5 on the Van Nuys Prognostic Index. If your DCIS is low grade and smaller and you got good margins you also would be a good candidate to skip radiation. Being older is very good in this context.
I did not have enough confidence to just use the Van Nuys myself and make that decision, so I consulted with Dr. Michael Lagios,who developed the VNPI with Dr. Silverstein. He is a well known expert on DCIS and a pathologist as well.
He has a web site: www.breastcancerconsultdr.com and you can call and set up a phone consult with him if you like or even have him review your pathology. In addition to being a competent caring doctor, he is also a very kind person.
Having no radiation is an option for some DCIS patients. Maybe you are one of them.
Best wishes as you make your decision.
SW
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I'm wondering the same thing, although my age is 52 -- I have low-risk DCIS that was only 3 mm -- all gotten in the original biopsy, weakly + estrogen & progesterone receptors. Grade 2 changes. Small amount of necrosis. Are there others "out there" who have elected not to do radiation? My radiation oncologist and surgeon really left the door open for me to decide b/c of the "limited benefits." I'd appreciate hearing your personal experiences/choices, versus "advice."
I would like to thank everyone who has shared so far -- I really appreciate the recap of the Van Nuys scale and its explanation -- also I appreciate knowing that others DO face this decision-making because of (yay!) earlier detection. Paradox. I do note that for 7 points on the Van Nuys scale (I have a "6"), the local recurrence rates w/o radiation jump to 36%. That is a big difference from 3% for a 6 point tally. Hmmmm . . .
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Hanney - it's such a hard call! In many of the study abstracts I've ready, the thing that makes the most difference in recurrence rates for small low or intermediate-grade DCIS lesions is margin size. How big were your surgical margins? If over 10mm, then with 3mm DCIS, most studies would put your risk of recurrence as pretty low. But having even a little necrosis confuses the issue, as that is most commonly (though not always) an indicator of grade III DCIS. The problem with pathology reports is that the pathologist cannot and does not examine every cell - s/he cuts the sample at various angles and then looks at that piece under a microscope. (Ditto with surgical margins - the pathologist checks 10-15 planes of the specimen, but as it is more or less a globe, there are almost an infinite number of planes that could be checked - whether all of the margins are REALLY clear is unknown.) It is quite possible to miss something - especially if there is just a small amount of higher-grade cancer. It's that possibility - and your relatively young age - that give me pause when considering going without radiation. The VNPI and other indicators are generally predicting recurrence rates within 7-10 years. Rates over 30 years would be higher. (There are a very few retrospective studies looking at women who were diagnosed with low-grade DCIS 20 or more years ago, and who had just lumpectomy and no rads. Their recurrence rate continues to climb over the years. Unfortunately, it's a little like comparing apples and oranges to try to use that information to make current choices - there was so much they didn't know then. Margin sizes and size of DCIS lesion were widely variable. Diagnostics were not as good - so some of those women may have had additional undiagnosed DCIS or even IDC. And in some cases, women with known microinvasions were still thrown into the DCIS group.) What is almost certainly true is that over more years, there are more recurrences. For people who plan to be around for another 30 years or more, our risks of a recurrence are certainly higher than the stats we are given (which are only for 7-10 years).
Don't know if that helps or makes it harder....
Linda
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Thank you, Eldub, very helpful questions to consider re: margins & necrosis -- intuitively I knew that if there were necrosis, it meant that cell-death was occurring, so faster spread of cancer cells . . . also, the microcalicfications had NOT shown up in as much detail on the mammogram one month beforehand. hmmm. So, I'm going to get a second opinion by a top radiation oncologist in a close-by city and see what they think about my path report. I appreciate the explanation about the "planes" of the "globe," which makes total sense . . . b/c, if the DCIS is so "new," or small why is there necrosis?
Bless you for taking the time to answer!
My doggie, Hanney, sends her thanks, too. She had two breast surgeries the same week I did! How's that for togetherness?
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PS -- just getting the hang of this whole forum process, Linda
Thanks also for the info on the longitudinal aspect of the studies. Would you by any chance know the statistical accuracy of the Van Nuys scale?
Le
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Hey Hanney's "mom"
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Glad that was helpful! To answer your question, there have been quite a few studies trying to replicate the Van Nuys stats. (You can go to Google Scholar and then type in Van Nuys Prognostic Classification (or even just VNPI) and get a host of stuff. Beware of the older studies, though.) Anyway, most everyone else gets lower recurrence rates than the original VNPI, but the general categories seem to hold - meaning that women with the lowest scores have the lowest risk of recurrence (and no or very little benefit from radiation), and those with higher scores have higher risk. The VNPI was based on a single study of 706 women treated at a single institution. The advantage to that is that, at least in theory, there should be relative consistency in both diagnosis and treatment processes. But whatever weaknesses existed at that institution applied to all patients, too. Also, some of what are developing as norms in DCIS treatment didn't apply to the 706 women in the study. For example, almost no place would consider a margin under 1mm as acceptable - there would be re-excision. So the "margin <1mm" category would not exist. Later studies have shown that the real cut-off seems to be at 2mm - that is, there is very little difference in outcome between a 2mm and a 8mm surgical margin (>10mm is better, though). <2mm increases recurrence risk. So in the end, it looks to me like the VNPI is a useful tool to figure out what type of risk you are facing given the factor of your diagnosis, as long as you don't get too hung up in the actual percentages. Some doctors rely on it, some disregard it completely, and most seem to use the general categories to help inform their recommendations. (Have you seen the Standard of Care paper for DCIS? That also talks about risk of recurrence and who might be able to skip radiation. In includes the VNPI, but also many other studies.)
Anyway, hope that helps!
Linda
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i agree. I don't want all the problems with radiation etc. I feel that if my dcis comes back I will deal with that without the other problems that radiation brings. I had a lumpetomy on Wed for dcis noninvasive stage0 . I hope the radiologist agrees with me at my meeting on the 20th
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peb,
I don't know how extensive or what grade your DCIS is. However, do bear in mind that half of all recurrences of DCIS are invasive. That's why some of us went ahead with radiation despite our concerns about it.
Barbara
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Hi, I am now undergoing radiation treatment, 18 sessions which is shorter than the previous 5 weeks, 25 treatments that used to be used. I know your post is from last year but I share your interest to know anything regarding this shorter regime. Did you learn more concerning this with your post. I am 59, diagnosed with DCIS, intermediate grade, less than 2cm. The surgeon and radiologist have not said anything regarding hormone receptors or need for further treatment with oral drugs. I will see the radiology oncologist this coming Thursday and will be certain to ask. How did you do with radiation, side effects etc.
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