ER/PR-, Her2+ Recurrence Rates

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shadow2356
shadow2356 Member Posts: 393

I am ER/PR-, HER2+. Node negative. My tumor was 1.7 cm, 2 satellites, 5 and 6 mm. There was also a small area of DCIS in another area of the breast. I had a bilateral mastectomy. They told me it was stage 1, grade 3. The doctor recommends TCH. Six cycles of TC and herceptin every three weeks but the herceptin will be every week at first. Then the herceptin goes to every three weeks for a year.

I asked him what my recurrence rate was. He said with no further treatment it is 30%. He said the treatment will reduce it by 30%, leaving the recurrence rate after treatment at about 20%. Does this sound right to all of you doing this same treatment? It seems like all the chemo and herceptin doesn't have that much of an effect.

I didn't realize the recurrence rate would be so high for a stage 1 after treatment.

Any input would help. I am feeling discouraged.

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Comments

  • digid
    digid Member Posts: 65
    edited November 2009

    My breast health doc said that Herceptin alone cut recurrence rates in HALF.  (I had exactly the same anxiety attack as you a few weeks back after some uncontrolled Googling).  Chemo adds another reduction of 5-10%.  Remember too, that statistics include people who keep smoking, don't change their diets or their lifestyles.  Herceptin is also very new, so alot of statistical data doesn't include it , or only includes clinical trials that were done on Stage IV patients alone.  This is what the lovely HER2 forum ladies told me 2 weeks back when I was shaking from a panic attack  (I am only 31 and the online data for me was very upsetting).   Keep positive, we'll make it through.  HUG.

  • Jaimieh
    Jaimieh Member Posts: 2,373
    edited November 2009

    There was a study done by MD anderson that puts the recurrence rate at about 7 percent after TCH. - believe if I read it right it is z per for the first 2 years and then it drops off sharply.

  • bluedasher
    bluedasher Member Posts: 1,203
    edited November 2009

    Jaimieh, I think you got the studies crossed-up but the number is correct. An MD Anderson study looked at recurrence for small tumors without chemo and the BCIRG 006 study tested TCH vs AC-TH and AC-T.

    The MD Anderson retrospective study that determined that the risk of recurrence was quite high for HER2+ even when node negative with tumors less than 1 cm. They looked 5-year recurrence for women diagnosed between 1990 and 2002 with node negative tumors less than 1 cm and checked the tumor blocks that they keep to determine HER2+ status. For the women with HER2+ tumors they found that 23% had recurrences. Even more worrisome, about 15% had distant recurrences (i.e. mets). I've also seen a post here with graphs showing recurrence around 30% for tumors between 0.5 and 1 cm.

    In the BCIRG 006 drug trial, they reported the recurrence rate for the node negative participants. after 4 years, In the TCH arm, 7% had recurrences. Most of the recurrences happened between 1 year and 3 years after treatment. After 3 years, the disease free survival line becomes pretty flat (i.e. there are very few recurrences after that). That is really impressive since the trial required that women with node negative disease have a tumor greater than 1 cm to participate

    Shadow, you might ask your onc where he got the 20% number. The 30% for recurrence without chemo sounds about right - maybe a bit low. The 20% for recurrence after TCH sounds much too high. About 2/3 of the women in BCIRG 006 were node positive. More than half had tumors over 2 cm and 5% were over 5 cm. For the whole group, recurrence was 18% at 4 years and it looks like the curve could hit 20% by 5 years. Perhaps your onc is looking at numbers that include node positive women for the recurrence after chemo. 

    Since you are node negative, I think your recurrence risk would be about 7%. Perhaps a bit less because your tumor size is at the low end of the range that was included in the BCIRG 006 clinical trial.

  • weety
    weety Member Posts: 1,163
    edited November 2009

    Here is the way I was told to look at it:

    Recurrence without any treatment--approx 25%

    Chemo cuts that in half--so now approx 12-13%

    Herceptin cuts that in half again--now about 7%

    These numbers are based on the same studies that Bluedasher mentioned above.

  • Jaimieh
    Jaimieh Member Posts: 2,373
    edited November 2009

    Thanks Bluedasher.  I just knew that it was closer to 7% (thanks to you :) ).

  • seaofhope
    seaofhope Member Posts: 66
    edited November 2009

    I have a question about recurrence - if the breast surgeon does a great job and removes all of your breast tissue, where does your recurrence recur?  Does the cancer move to distant places because there isn't any breast tissue left to attach to?  I took off the other breast, afraid that the cancer would come back to the "good breast".  I would think it would be better if it comes back to a breast area than somewhere else.  Where else is considered a "local recurrence"?

  • Liz08
    Liz08 Member Posts: 470
    edited November 2009

    Shadow-

    One important lesson I have learned is that most oncologist won't promise anything when it comes to cancer and that's just the way it is.  I have come to accept that fact.     

    I have read from several sources and have been told that chemo is supposed to reduce the risk of recurrence by 1/3 (33%) . I noticed that you were a grade 3 and chemo works best with the higher grades of cancer. I'm just using a risk of 25-30%(minus 1/3) doing chemo alone would cut the risk down to 17-20%.  Then Herceptin is supposed to lower that risk by another 1/2 so that would bring your risk down to 8-10%.  Plus you were node negative which is another favorable prognostic factor.

    Don't let the fear of recurrence take over your life or it's not really living at all.  You have a little one who needs you to be strong. And most importantly live, love and enjoy each and everyday to their fullest.  Don't let cancer win by robing you of your happiness and enjoying life and most importantly "your little one".  Stay positive....remember the mind is very powerfull

    GOD BLESS and HAPPY THANKSGIVING,

    Liz

  • KathyL
    KathyL Member Posts: 534
    edited November 2009

    Shadow:

    I agree with all the above numbers mentioned.  The risk with a small tumor, node negative, using chemo and herceptin is low.  My onc once quoted me "less than 5%".  I was dx in August of 2007 at age 36.  I had just finished nursing my son who was about 20 months old at the time.  I remember crying, thinking I'd never get to hear my baby talk more.  I am thrilled to report he is a very active 4 year old now.  I have managed to push through a lot just by focusing on the fact that I HAVE to be here as my kids grow up.  There just is no other option in my mind! 

    I did 4 rounds of TCH and followed that by herceptin every three weeks for a full year.  I had a unilateral mastectomy.  I had no family hx of BC. 

    Keep your head up, and focus on your beautiful daughter.

  • LJ13-2
    LJ13-2 Member Posts: 235
    edited November 2009

    MaryEllen ... my heartfelt advice to you is: don't worry about statistics. Recurrence is a 100% or 0% thing. You either do, or don't. Knowing the averages is meaningless, as you will be in one group or the other.

    Do everything you can to be in the 0% group. Exercise 45 mintues a day, 5-6 days a week. It has a more positive outcome on hormone negative/HER2 positive bc than other types (onc just told me this last week).

    Lose any extra weight you may have.

    Eat lots of fruits and veggies. Forget the supplements, they mostly do little good. Exceptions are acidophilus and calcium/Vit.D.

    Purge the stress from your life. If there is a continuing source of stress, undertake a mitigation program: yoga, meditation, tai chi, etc.

    Enjoy the life you are living. Knowing a statistic for recurrence will have no effect on whether or not it occurs, it will only mess with your mind.

  • suemed8749
    suemed8749 Member Posts: 1,151
    edited November 2009

    Wonderful, wise advice, LJ13-2! I'm putting away the leftover pumpkin pie and hauling my rear to the Y!

  • mmm5
    mmm5 Member Posts: 1,470
    edited November 2009

    Sue Med-

    LOL LOL - just loved your post today!!

  • shadow2356
    shadow2356 Member Posts: 393
    edited November 2009

    Thankyou all for your advice. I am trying not to stress about it. My Mom died of BC at 44 and I am now 44 with BC so I guess that does a big job on the stress level. I am BRCA neg but the third generation with it. I have a lot to be thankful for, it is stage one. So many others aren't so lucky. How do you all keep it out of your head? My chemo starts 12/7. Scared, but happy to bombard any cells that may have survived surgery.

  • Melinda41
    Melinda41 Member Posts: 672
    edited November 2009

    I especially like what LJ said, either you do or you don't recur.

    My Onc asked me if I wanted to hear the stats, I said no. I don't need those numbers rattling around in my head. I figure if 1 in 8 get BC, and 80 percent of biopsies are benign, well, so far the stats have not done me any good.

    Honestly, I guess at some point, I will have a recurrance, I am only 41 years old, I have another 40 years or so to go, I imagine there will be more cancer in my future. My goal is to get the beast tamed for now and then do everything I can to keep it gone for as long as possible.

    Wow, I am not sure I realized I had that pessimistic view of my situation.

    I have a book about "After Breast Cancer" and it talks alot about the constant fear of recurrance. I guess it helped me see that we are always going to have that fear and not all of us, hopefully very few of us will recur. So we have to make a decision on how to handle the inevitable fear.

    How much of our lives are we willing to let cancer take, it has taken my boob, my hair and so much of my "normal" life. I will not let it take my ability to dream, make plans and have hope.

  • carcharm
    carcharm Member Posts: 486
    edited November 2009

    My onc quoted a 40-60% chance of reoccurance with my tumor at .3cm node neg without chemo/herceptin and with tx it gets reduced to 30% and that's with distant mets only. It turned my stomach hearing these numbers. I am overweight and I don't workout daily because I am so ill from the chemo. I will when i'm done but I just have not energy to do it now. I had LVI which kind of skews the risk.

  • LJ13-2
    LJ13-2 Member Posts: 235
    edited November 2009

    Suemed, pumpkin pie counts as a vegetable I think. At least I would count it. Wink

    MaryEllen, you're in such a new place ... it's so hard to not think of cancer, recurrence, etc.

    Don't try to censor yourself, just reschedule the thoughts. Allow yourself a reasonable amount of time to dwell on it. Say, 20 minutes per day. Schedule it for a time when you don't have to worry about distractions. Not driving, maybe exercising, or having your morning coffee/tea. If you think of it later in the day, just tell yourself, no, I'll think about that at the scheduled time. It takes persistence, but you can put your mind on something else. Then, when the scheduled time arrives, think about the cancer and recurrence. If you find you don't need the whole 20 minutes, cut back to 15, then 10, then 5.

    If that whole thing doesn't work, then just believe that as time passes, but especially as you complete different phases of treatment, and then live a number of months beyond the completion of all treatment, you do think of stuff less. It pops up, for sure. But no where near like it does now for you.

    In my cohort (starting chemo Jan 08), one of our members is a second time survivor, one has had a recurrence, and one has just been diagnosed with mets. But most of us are doing very well, getting on with life, dealing with family members' cancers, etc. 

    Life goes on.

  • Brenda_R
    Brenda_R Member Posts: 509
    edited November 2009

    LJ13-2, can you tell me how exercise and weight loss helps reduce recurrence risk in hormone negatives?  Thanks.

  • TammyLou
    TammyLou Member Posts: 740
    edited November 2009

    "I have a question about recurrence - if the breast surgeon does a great job and removes all of your breast tissue, where does your recurrence recur?  Does the cancer move to distant places because there isn't any breast tissue left to attach to?  I took off the other breast, afraid that the cancer would come back to the "good breast".  I would think it would be better if it comes back to a breast area than somewhere else.  Where else is considered a "local recurrence"?"

    It is generally accepted that distant recurrances happen because cancer cells may have the ability to circulate in the blood stream and lodge in organs and bones.

    My own layperson's theory (I am a gardener  :)) is that (from the stories I've heard), it may be possible that cancer cells can lie dormant.  What makes cancer "bloom" is largely unknown.

    As far as local recurrances go....it is virtually impossible to remove all breast tissue from your torso...even if the surgeon scrapes your chest wall.  (All it takes is one cell to build a cancer colony.)

    Follow on radiation is often used to reduce risk of local recurrance.  There is some data I've seen that suggests that radiation can also reduce risk of distant mets. 

    tl

  • TammyLou
    TammyLou Member Posts: 740
    edited November 2009

    P.S.  Why breast cancer remains in the breast area or doesn't remain in the breast area is very mysterious.

    People who have bi-lateral mastectomies...particularly people who have ER neg cancers, reduce their risk of recurrance and (subsequent) death significantly.

     In ER+ patients, tamoxifen and other hormone blockers reduce risk of more cancer significantly.  ER negs do not have that.

    There is ABSOLUTELY NO DATA that supports the idea that keeping your breast (or not keeping your breast) prevents distant metastesis.

    Local treatment (lumpectomy and rads or mastectomy or mastectomy and rads) are principly targeted at the breast and chest wall.

    The underlying reason why in early stage ER+ cancers that their are not significant survival differences between lumpectomy and rads and mastectomy is that these cancers (generally) have a low risk of mets.  In other words, the cancer that STAYS in your boobies is not likely to be life threatening.  Small cancers carry a low risk of mets (generally).  We also know that cancer does not always follow the "rules."

    The principle future risk of death is from mets, the sequelae of cancer treatment (cardiac) and recurrance that leads to mets.

    What is KNOWN is that people who develop recurrances have a higher likelihood of THAT cancer metastesizing (than a typical original primary.)

    Mastectomy reduces risk of recurrance...and IN SELECT PATIENTS, it is probably a better option than other choices.

    tl

  • LJ13-2
    LJ13-2 Member Posts: 235
    edited November 2009

    Brenda_R, I searched and could not find a reference to support it. As I said, it was something my oncologist mentioned to me recently. Could be I misinterpreted it slightly. He said something along the lines of "You exercise and take care of yourself, and eat right, and this is especially important in hormone negative bc's." I did find some support for low fat diet having a statistically higher impact in reducing recurrence in hormone negative bc. Perhaps that is what he meant.

    Here are some links: http://breastcancer.about.com/od/riskfactorsindetail/a/exercise_bc.htm

    http://www.dslrf.org/breastcancer/content.asp?CATID=0&L2=5&L3=6&L4=0&PID=&sid=130&cid=397 

    ACS notes that there were comparatively fewer hormone negative women in the big study on exercise and recurrence, so it isn't necessarily true that they don't benefit from exercise:

    http://www.cancer.org/docroot/NWS/content/NWS_1_1x_Exercise_Can_Improve_Breast_Cancer_Survival.asp 

  • Pure
    Pure Member Posts: 1,796
    edited November 2009

    Herceptin cuts your risk by 50%

    I would also ask about Zometa.

  • KathyL
    KathyL Member Posts: 534
    edited November 2009

    Hi LJ!  I thought it was you (by your good advice and knowledge base)... now I'm sure by your recent post!  How are you???  Vegas was cool.. wish I'd been able to meet you, too.

  • LJ13-2
    LJ13-2 Member Posts: 235
    edited November 2009

    I'm glad you still post here Kathy! You have so much to offer the community.

    Ditto on the meet-up ... hope we do the East coast next time.

  • Brenda_R
    Brenda_R Member Posts: 509
    edited November 2009

    LJ13-2, I found this article interesting.

    http://www.cancer.org/docroot/NWS/content/NWS_1_1x_Exercise_Can_Improve_Breast_Cancer_Survival.asp

    "We need to make sure women understand that survival rates for breast cancer are high regardless of whether women exercise or not. Women who are unable to be physically active should not feel that they are harming themselves, and women who do follow the physical activity guidelines have no guarantee against a recurrence " she said. "But that's true of every drug or intervention. "

    I understand why exercise can help hormone postives, but not sure about it helping negs, other than overall fitness helping with co-morbidities.  I see that some stated it helps hormone negs, but don't state why.  Could be that it helps build up the immune system?

    I'm just trying to understand why they state these things.

  • LJ13-2
    LJ13-2 Member Posts: 235
    edited November 2009

    Brenda, I think it was a good question to ask. I wish I had asked my onc the same thing. However, I try his patience each visit with all my questions, so I have to ration them (the questions) since I only see him every 4 months now.

    I agree with you ... and had the same thought about exercise helping the immune system.

  • Faith316
    Faith316 Member Posts: 2,431
    edited December 2009

    The following statement was written in one of the posts above: 

    "People who have bi-lateral mastectomies...particularly people who have ER neg cancers, reduce their risk of recurrance and (subsequent) death significantly."

    I am ER negative and the preceding statement is in direct opposition to what my medical oncologist (both local and at MD Anderson), my radiation oncologist and both of my surgical oncologists who I have consulted with have told me.  They are all recommending to me that I only have a unilateral mastectomy as removing my healthy breast does absolutely nothing to change my prognosis or risk of recurrence.  You can read my cancer history in my signature line below.  (BTW - I was diagnosed at age 45 and had BRCA gene testing which was negative.)

  • suemed8749
    suemed8749 Member Posts: 1,151
    edited December 2009

    Thanks, Faith. I am also ER neg, and had a unilateral mastectomy (after two lumpectomies failed to get clean margins.) Neither my breast surgeon nor my medical oncologist recommended bi-lateral, and it certainly seems that that would have been their recommendation if it would reduce my risk of death significantly.

    Best wishes to all my ER-PR-Her2+ sisters,

    Sue

  • PS73
    PS73 Member Posts: 469
    edited December 2009

    Hi guys, I hope you don't mind if I chime in. 

    All my drs stated that the only difference is a few percent between lump+rads and bmx for recurrance and that it's the new cancer that is significant over a period of time.  1% additional risk per year for lump and rads.  Im considered ER positive but borderline at 25%.

  • suemed8749
    suemed8749 Member Posts: 1,151
    edited December 2009

    Thanks, PS. I'm pretty sure anybody is welcome here!

  • kt57
    kt57 Member Posts: 425
    edited December 2009

    As I understand it, there are two types of "recurrence" local and distant.  Local refers to a recurrance of the same cancer in the same breast - risk reduction includes mastectomy with or without rads  or lumpectomy with rads.  Distant reccurence refers to metastasis of the original cancer to another part of the body, e.g., bone, liver, lung.  risk reduction is primarily chemo.  Bisphosphanates(zometa) has been shown to decrease bone mets.  There is a clinical trial currently in progress (and still looking for people) that is comparing three bisphosphanates to see if one works better than the others,

    LJ13-2: Thanks for your inspiring words.  I think devoting a limited amout of time to cancer each day is a great idea...give it audience, then put it away.    Am still looking forward to the day I haven't thought about it at all.

  • Brenda_R
    Brenda_R Member Posts: 509
    edited December 2009

    LJ13-2, I understand about trying your Onc. Lol

    I used to go in with a list of questions.  I think he got so he'd try to make a quick exit before I asked him more questions. 

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