Crazy Sexy Cancer in Seattle

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  • golfer779
    golfer779 Member Posts: 1,378
    edited December 2009

    Karen .... I'll keep it brief .... AAAAWWWWEEESSSOOOOMMMEEEE news on your MRI !!!!!!

  • Anonymous
    Anonymous Member Posts: 1,376
    edited December 2009

    Eastender - wonderful news on your MRI - I can imagine that you are breathing a huge sigh of relief.   Great way to start 2010!!!!

    Everyone - have a wonderful, safe, joyful New Year's!  I can't wait until 2010!

  • eastender
    eastender Member Posts: 29
    edited January 2010

    Happy New Year to everyone....I am thankful that 2009 is behind us.  We should all raise our glasses to the our continued hope and courage.  Karen

  • js37
    js37 Member Posts: 77
    edited January 2010

    hi everyone - new to this group, unfortunately. :(  i've been diagnosed with idc with a cystic component, 2.4cm (including the cyst), 0/5 nodes, er+/pr+, her2-, grade 3.  my lumpectomy came back with clean margins except on one side there was only 1mm clean so my surgon is going back in on monday to take out a little more tissue. mri showed no hot spots, nothing in the blood work. so it seems we caught it early - which honestly, i thank the cyst part for, even if it has the most aggressive of the cancer cells in it, because without it, i would have never noticed the tumor.  i'm only 37, and the tumor mass itself is really small, but they count the cyst in the size. 

     i go through good days & bad days, numb to optimistic.  i saw my oncologist (i'm at swedish) on wednesday too, and he sort of sucked all the optimism out of me.  he's really pushing chemo aggressively, making me feel like if i don't do it, then it will come back & i'll die sooner because even though everything is clear, i'm a grade 3.  i haven't decided what i want to do yet.  the onco typing hasn't come back yet.  i had resigned myself to radiation & tam, but have never been a fan of chemo - i can't imagine pumping my body full of poison for "a just in case".  i'm waiting for the onco to really make a decision, but i'm feeling really discouraged after talking to my onco.  i feel like he's not giving me any positives, just negatives, unless i do the chemo.  :( 

  • Tina-in-Seattle
    Tina-in-Seattle Member Posts: 100
    edited January 2010

    Wow I didn't realize how long it's been since I've been here.  So much going on.  The roller coaster continues.  Lost two friends one in Oct one in November to Stage IV.  My sister-in -law was just diagnosed last month lumpectomy and waiting on Onc to see if she

    should do chemo.  So far rads on the table.  I finished my reconstruction last month with good results.

    Now welcome to all the new folks, I hope you all continue to do well and keep fighting the good fight.  Sorry that we meet under these circumstances but it is good to meet you all.  I am sorry for Robin's passing one more warrior who now sits in heaven.

    JS my advice is to wait on the Onc results before making a decision on chemo.  Chemo was an option for me but I did it anyway.  I had two tumors and one was rather large and close to the chest wall.  But that was me, I have two young children and was thinking of the better odds for myself.  If you decide on chemo it is doable.  There is nothing that you cannot handle on this journey even though you may not think you can, you can.  You are now a warrior destined to do some ass kicking.  My other piece of advice is don't be afraid to speak up to your doctor.  I remember telling my Onc's PA in a discussion of Tomixfin and that I was not comfortable with taking it and would rather have my overaires removed to take Arimedx.  He downplayed the risks by holding his two fingers slightly apart to demonstrate the risk.  My answer to him was to go get a uterus then come back and talk to me.  My Oncologist thought that was very funny and agreed with my decision for an oopherectomy.  Do what you think is best for you.  There are things we cannot control with our diagnosis but there are many we can.  Whatever you decide you will know if it is the best for you.  I will keep you in my thoughts and hope that your good days overwhelm your bad ones.

    xxo

    Tina

  • js37
    js37 Member Posts: 77
    edited January 2010

    thanks tina.  my onco is apparently highly respected and very well liked, but sometimes i think he's very "chemosentric".  he seems to be very fixated on the fact that my tumor is grade 3 - it scored 9 out of 9, but everything else is clear & clean.  he wants me to do 8 cycles of the most potent aggressive chemo cocktail, and everytime i bring up different options or questions he doesn't necessarily dismiss them, but brings it back around to the most aggressive chemo option. he's probably seen things i haven't, for sure, but sometimes i just feel as if he's not giving me all the information on any other option.  i know that people who have been diagnosed as i have that have only done radiation & tam that have gone on to live long long lives, and are still living.  but i also know a lot depends on the onco typing as well.  i'm just having a lot of anxiety over this decision.  i have such a hard time with the thought of chemo - it's poison. they pump our bodies full of poison.  and yes, it *may* kill the cancer so it doesn't come back, but it may not.  there is no guarantee.  and i have a hard time with the idea of poisoning myself at the expense of the "maybe it got out there" of my case.  as it stands now, they are saying no lympathatic or vascular, so i'm just having a hard time reconciling myself with his hard line of if i don't do chemo i will probably be dead in 10 to 15 years just because my cancer is a grade 3.   i just need to stop thinking about it for awhile until the onco type comes back, it's depressing me to the point that i just don't have any interest in anything at the moment.  it's pity party for one time. ;p

  • Tina-in-Seattle
    Tina-in-Seattle Member Posts: 100
    edited January 2010

    Hey JS,

    sometimes you have to deal with the ego's as well as the medical knowledge.  It almost sounds like your doctor is just determined for you to do chemo.  Have you asked him why he feels so strongly about doing 8 rounds of heavy chemo?  Has he broken down the odds for you by saying if you do this, then the change of re-occurance is this??  I never had an oncotype score on my tumors not sure why maybe because I had a bilateral mast.  I know several people who elected lumpectomies that had to do chemo.  My sister in law just had her lumpectomy and is waiting for her test results before making the decision.  Another reason could be you are still very young at 37.  Some docs believe in being aggressive with younger women.  There is never a gurantee with cancer, you just have to trust as much as you can.  Have you thought of a second opinion at all?  It is certainly your option.  It's a bit of a pain as you kind of have to go through it all again but it might be worth having another point of view.

    Don't worry about having a pity party, I usually have one at least once a week.  Some days are great others just suck.  Sometimes I just want to stay in bed all day with the covers over my head.  If it weren't for my two kids I don't think I'd leave my bedroom some days.  It's all part of this journey.  The only other thing I can say is to get as informed as you can be about your cancer and the treatments available to others who are like you.  There is also another list that I am on calledBreast Cancer Discussion List (breast-cancer@cliffy.ucs.mun.ca) .  It is a group of women from all around the world and they are very helpful.  I have posted there many times and have received great advice.  You might try it out and see if it is helpful for you.

    I hope all your questions will be answered soon. Feel free to get in touch anytime.

    xxo

    Tina

  • Anonymous
    Anonymous Member Posts: 1,376
    edited January 2010

    JS - welcome - sorry you are here!  I also recommend discussing the oncotype test - Tina - I don't know why you didn't have one (lump vs. mast. doesn't go into that equation).  I am wondering if oncotype is for tumors less than 2cm ????  This is just a  guess - I would push for it anyway.  I know of women on here with grade 3 that had lower oncotype scores than I had with a grade 2.

    That said, like Tina, I kind of had a choice regarding chemo - and did it.  My oncotype was in the gray area - and I have relatively young kids at home.  The fact that you are 37 would make most oncologists chemo happy - I was treated "young" by the oncologists I saw and was 44 at diagnosis.

    My cancer team is at SCCA - I have 3 bc friends with a male onc. at Swedish - Dr. K?  They all really love him - also had chemo, but had different stats than yourself - either positive nodes or her2+.

    Hope everyone had a good night last night - back to cleaning out my closets - heading to Snoqualamie tomorrow!

    edited to add:  I just checked on line and oncotype is for stage I/II node negative er/pr+ cases so 2cm tumor should not be an issue.  I know of women that have 1-3 positive nodes that have had it too so I would really push for it - it will give you more info. regarding your recurrence risk.

  • js37
    js37 Member Posts: 77
    edited January 2010

    my oncologist at swedish is dr. fer - anyone know of him or had any interaction?  i am actually pretty lucky in the fact that this has all moved relatively quickly since i first went in for a momogram in late october - dr. fer was the onco that the nurses at my bs office could get me an appointment with as soon as possible.  he has great credentials, but yah, he keeps saying - you are young, we need to go at this as aggressively as possible.  he's older.  sometimes i think that older doc's tend to stick with older treatments as tried & true because it's what they know. but at the same time, you can't discount experience either.  i'm trying to get an appointment at seattle cancer care alliance for a second opinion. i thought about trying to get a second opinion from a different onco at swedish, but i'm worried that because it's the same organization that whomever would push chemo with the same gusto.  i know it sounds as if i'm looking for any little reason not to do it -and that's not the case.  i just need to feel confident that if i do choose chemo, that it's the right decision and not just because it's the "standard" decision.  anyone have any reccomendations of an onco at swedish that they really like?  it's not that i don't like him, i just worry he's too tunnel vision on the chemo as opposed to anything else.  when i have asked him about the % of re-occurence with just radiation & tam, he always comes back with 25%.  no matter what, it's just a standard 25%.  he says i can't count radiation because it's a "local" treatment, not treatment to address reoccurence in other parts of the body.  he seems super focused on me getting cancer again somewhere else and that's why we need to do chemo.  and it's not that i feel he's a bad doctor, just that i feel like i'm not getting all the info i need to make an educated decision because he is so focused on doing chemo.   he says he'll support me no matter what my decision, but he's pulling out all the stops for me to agree.   i mean, he's really super cute & very sweet, he even said if i agreed to chemo that he'd personally buy me 2 different wigs. ;p  you can't beat that kind of concern & sweetness for your patients, but i need more than just "do chemo". 

  • Anonymous
    Anonymous Member Posts: 1,376
    edited January 2010

    well, he's right about the radiation - when they or we address recurrence -they are talking about systemic recurrence - not local (in your breast).  Tamox. should help you.  I was told (with the oncotype dx results) that I had a 25% recurrence rate with just lumpectomy/radiation.  Tamox or A/I brought it down to 15% (I think) and then chemo cut that in half. 

    I had two opinions.  One at Virginia Mason (where I was diagnosed) and then at SCCA.  The women I know that go to Swedish have either Kaplan or Rinn.  I think all the docs there are good.  My onc. is Dr. Ellis at SCCA.   I wonder if you are clear that you really need a 2nd opinion it will be easier to get into an onc. there?  I had a hard time getting into SCCA initially.

    I seriously would push for the oncotype test - that will give you more info - for or against chemo (or if you are like me - you will be in the dreaded gray zone..  That test takes a few weeks to get back - so that will give you some time to get a 2nd opinion lined up. 

    Trying to get appts. between xmas and New Year's is not easy - last winter I was just WAITING for my oncotype, and my onc. appt. had to wait for that and my onc. to be back from xmas vacation......

  • golfer779
    golfer779 Member Posts: 1,378
    edited January 2010

    js37 .... just thought I'd throw in a quick comment.   Seeking a 2nd opinion is a "must" in my humble opinion.   Bottom line, you need to feel confident with the decisions you make.     I would hope that any onc you have a discussion with addresses the various drugs that can be used as a chemotherapy regimen.    There are so many different "cocktails", and some seem to be much more doable than others.   Just between us gals here on this post there are probably 4 or more different chemo cocktails that we we're on.   

    You are doing right by yourself with getting as much knowledge as you can.   Sad how we've all become "so educated" in the bc world. 

    Hugs, Carol

  • Issymom
    Issymom Member Posts: 264
    edited January 2010

    js37,

    I have following this discussion. My onc is at Overlake.  She showed us a report titled "Shared Decsion Making".  It was generated from a system called Adjuvant online or something like that.  Anyway, they enter tumor size, grade, ER/PR status, nodes, etc... and it gives you bar charts (and numbers) that show how many women are alive and cancer free in 10 years, how many have a "distant" cancer, and how many will die of other causes.  There is one of these charts for each treatment option: lumpectomy and rads or mast only, hormone therapy after surgery, and chemo after surgery.  This really helped lay out the odds. 

     For me, I had a 42% chance of a distant recurrence without chemo and 22% with chemo.  I don't like the 22% but it is much better than 42%.  I am triple negative and BRCA1+ so the odds are really stacked against me and hormone therapy is not an option.  I really didn't have a choice but I understand the difficulty with having to make these horrible decisions.  Once I found out about the BRCA1+ status, I had to decide if I would continue down the lumpectomy route or Bi-Mastectomy.  I chose the BMX with delayed reconstruction (after chemo) and am happy (all relative) with my decision.  I felt I needed to do everything I could get rid of the cancer.  This time next year, I hope to be done with all the treatments, reconstruction, and oomph and go back to not having to think about cancer every day.

    Good luck with your decision.  It sucks to have to make these decisions!

    Lorrie

  • cheers247
    cheers247 Member Posts: 270
    edited January 2010

    Hello JS...

    I see Dr. Fer at Swedish.  I love him.  I'm 34 and was diagnosed with IBC in April.  I have finished chemo (for now) but I still see him every three weeks for Herceptin treatment (I'm also getting Zometa and Femara).  He is an excellent doctor, but my recommendation would be to get a second opinion and a third if necessary so that you feel confident in your decisions.  He is up on all the current research and clinical trials (I am getting in one soon) even though he's been an Onc since at least the 70's.  The good thing about having an agressive doc is he'd be just as agressive if there were to be a recurrance, which you don't find everywhere.  Your first shot at treatment is your best shot.  These decisions are incredibly personal, I don't know what mine would have been had I had a choice.  Feel free to PM me if you need anything. 

    On another note... I'm almost done with radiation... I'm burnt to a blistery crisp though... ouchie! 

    Much Love!  Jessica

  • js37
    js37 Member Posts: 77
    edited January 2010

    thanks jessica. :)

     i do actually like him, and i do believe he is incredibly knowledgeable.  i think i'm just one of those patients that needs more information - as in i want to know the whys and whats and short & long term side effects and benefits of ALL possibilities so that i can then sit down and weigh the pros & cons of each.  in order for me to feel informed enough to make a decision, i need to feel as if i'm getting all the information explained to me in a way that is like teaching me about whatever treatment they are advocating.  i'm probably not his usual patient. ;p i was saying to someone else, that i need it explained to me as if i'm a 1st yr med student, with that sort of detail.  my question is just that i've read tons of literature that says in my particular type of dx, that it benefits more from hormonal therapy than anything else, but who knows, that's just what i find on google. :) 

    so i'm going to wait for the oncotype to come back & see what it says.  depending on that, and what the % difference is between hormone suppressive therapy alone  vs. with chemo, that's how i'm going to make my decision.  i did one online calculator and the difference for me was only 3%, so that's not enough for me to do chemo - so that oncotype score is going to come into play once we get it.   i told myself i'd do chemo if the lymph nodes came back positive, but they are clear, so now i just feel like everything is this huge up in the air, who knows how it will go.  i need to definitely let it go though until we get those back because it's been affecting my day to day view on life & by nature i'm a very optimistic person, so when i'm feeling depressed it sort of spirals into more days of feeling down and i hate that.  

    chemo is such a hard decision.  it's hard for me to knowingly consent to poisoning my body to the extent in which it does just for an "in case", so i think the oncotyping results in addition the percentage # from the calculator is going to be what i really need to make the decision.  

     everyone has been so helpful, thank you. :) 

  • cheers247
    cheers247 Member Posts: 270
    edited January 2010

    JS, sounds like you've got a great plan in place to make your decisions.  I'm the same way with the explanations.  I'm and RN and have taken care of oncology patient's in the past (currently I'm on medical leave from working in perinatal nursing) so I understood what my path reports, treatments, risks, etc., meant and I read lots of research studies.  Even with all of the treatments I've had and will have for years to come, my recurrance rate is about 15%.  I know I have done everything I can do to prevent it, and I hope I never have to deal with it again.  I hope your oncotype score is low and that you get all the information you need to feel comfortable with your choice.  I can't imagine how hard this decision is... 3% does not sound like much benefit to me either... I'll be thinking of you!  xoxo  Jessica

  • Anonymous
    Anonymous Member Posts: 1,376
    edited January 2010

    Jessica - so great to hear that you are almost done with radiation - that will be such a relief - and I can imagine you are burned to a crisp.  It was amazing to me how quickly that burn faded - still kind of tan from it, but I was in serious pain and that faded fast.

    I am kind of sad that the school break is over - I really should be happy the kids are going back to school but I am enjoying the lack of a serious schedule!  Enjoy the rest of the weekend!  Did anyone happen to catch the blue moon at midnight?  Beautiful!  I think the sky cleared up over Bainbridge just in time for us to see it.

  • littlebird75
    littlebird75 Member Posts: 120
    edited January 2010

    I have my own little topic going where I  post my poetry. Here is a link. ( I think) http://community.breastcancer.org/forum/5/topic/741584?page=1#idx_29

  • Issymom
    Issymom Member Posts: 264
    edited January 2010

    Aprilgirl - I too am sad that break is over.  Usually, I am ready for everyone to go back to school and work but not this year.  I think part of the reason is that it means that it is time to start chemo.  I have done a great job to keep a positive attitude and really wasn't nearly as emotional as I would have expected when I had my bi-lat mastectomy.  Yesterday, I got teary when I thought of going in for my port surgery.  Why would that get to me.

    I have been feeling good physically and started to go to the gym and walk after Christmas.  I guess I overdid it.  Last night, my right breast area started to hurt and by midnight I had a 102 degree fever.  I felt like my breast was getting bigger and sorer by the minute.  I was either freezing or burning up so I didn't sleep much.  I called the doc this morning and went in to be drained (170cc out of the right and I just had 110 cc removed on Wednesday).  She said that I had an infection and am now taking antibiotics.  The fever has gone down to 100 but I amazingly sore even though I am not nearly as "full" as before.   She told me to refrain from excersizing until I heal some more.  I have to go back in on Wednesday to see if I can have my port surgery on Friday and begin Chemo the following week.  I guess this is something to be expected.  Bumps in the road.

  • Anonymous
    Anonymous Member Posts: 1,376
    edited January 2010

    Issy - you were diagnosed almost an exact year after I was, and I started chemo on january 7th of last year.  I so know how you feel.  Once you start, you can count down the infusions -and it just somehow becomes routine.

    So sorry you got an infection.  Yes, the port surgery would be minimal compared to a bilateral mast, but yet upsetting - just brings it all back to reality.  This will pass - I promise!

    It's great to get exercise thru chemo if you are up to it - I didn't do anything drastic but tried to at least keep up some cardio.

    Sending you positive thoughts for a very easy, painfree port install.

  • tkone
    tkone Member Posts: 511
    edited January 2010

    All,

    I hope everyone enjoyed their holidays and time off if you had it.  I will find it hard to get up at a regular time and even harder to get my girls going!

    JS37-I don't know if I have been on since you joined, if not, welcome and sorry you have to join us.  As far as chemo goes, here is my take on it.  NOBODY wants to do chemo.  I agree with you 100% that they are dumping poison into our bodies in the hopes that it will do more good than harm.  It is barbaric really and I'm sure there will come a day when they look back and say "can you believe we dumped poison into people and they even paid money for us to do it???"

    All that aside, I have two young children.  They were 10 and 11 when I was diagnosed.  They happen to be girls which means they are at an increased risk of developing breast cancer.  As far as I'm concerned, there is NOTHING and I mean NOTHING that I wouldn't do so that I can be here for my children.  If they told me to drink arsenic and stand on my head so that I can be here when my children graduate from high school, I would have done it. 

    Does that mean I think you should do the same thing?  Nope.  It means that I think you have to do whatever it is that allows you to sleep at night.  For me, I couldn't sleep at night if I hadn't done every single possible thing to increase my survivability rate.  If doing chemo is going to cause you to doubt yourself and lose sleep over your decision, then don't do it.  Do what is right for you.  Be informed and ask lots of questions, but don't let anyone talk you into doing something that you are absolutely not comfortable with.  We all have our own tolerance for risk. 

    Best of luck with your decision making.

    Thinking of everyone and hoping you are all doing well.

    Tracy

  • littlebird75
    littlebird75 Member Posts: 120
    edited January 2010

    Swelling?

     The past few days (3rd week of 2nd chemo) I've had extreme swelling in my lower legs. Has anyone else experienced this as a SE? I'm taking Cytoxan and Taxotere. 

    The ER ruled out any clots in my legs on Jan. 1. 

  • FanofSwimfan
    FanofSwimfan Member Posts: 14
    edited January 2010

    Hello ladies! I hope everyones holidays' were wonderful! Take care! -Amanda

  • js37
    js37 Member Posts: 77
    edited January 2010

    my reexcision surgery today went like a dream!  i had clear margins, but only 1mm so the surgeon wanted a bit more to be on the safe side.  only local with iv sedation this time, but it put me out like a light the exact same way the general did, except i woke up & was alert so much quicker than with general.  the only thing is that my breast has swollen to literally what would be a dd cup, usually i'm a c cup.  the nurses were all like "wow".  but said it should be okay, to watch to see if it got bigger, started to turn hard, or hasn't began to go down by wednesday. 

     AND, i got an email from seattle cancer care alliance saying they want me to call them tomorrow & that they have an opening for an appointment on the 29th to review my case.  seriously, i think it's the odd cystic component to my tumor, everyone i've talked to in the medical field says it's super rare & don't seem to have any answers.  they basically admit it "we've only ever seen this present itself a couple of times in my entire 11 years of practice".  so yay for strange cystic components.  actually, i do say yay, because that caused nipple discharge, and it's the only way i would have ever noticed it.   :)

  • Anonymous
    Anonymous Member Posts: 1,376
    edited January 2010

    Cindy - I do not know anything about your legs swelling - hope it is getting better and your onc. find a reason why!

    JS - that sounds great!  I wonder who you will be seeing at SCCA.  A second opinion and the oncotype should give you the info that you need.

    Hi Amanda!

  • js37
    js37 Member Posts: 77
    edited January 2010

    i'm not sure yet, tomorrow i call a patient care coordinator (?) and apparently we'll do a phone interview then i'll have an appointment on the 29th.  :)

  • lovinmomma
    lovinmomma Member Posts: 1,879
    edited January 2010

    Good eveing! It has been a while since I have been on here. I am from the other side of the state, but just wanted to say hi!

  • Anonymous
    Anonymous Member Posts: 1,376
    edited January 2010

    Hi Kim!  I am fairly new to the state (moved here 11/06...2007/2008 getting settled, 2009 was all cancer) FINALLY ventured past snoqualamie - went thru Cle Elum and Roslyn.  Beautiful area!  I have yet to get to Spokane but will this spring I think. 

  • PAP
    PAP Member Posts: 142
    edited January 2010

    LITTLEBIRD.....Where are you receiving your treatment?  The Providence Regional Cancer Partnership in Everett has massage therapists and acupuncture and naturopathic care to help with side effects from chemo.  You might benefit from a light massage to help drain the lymphatics.  The Cancer Center there is phenomenal.  They have the newest building and equipment in the entire Puget Sound area.  My oncologist was formerly associated with Fred Hutchinson then moved to the Everett facility when they opened two years ago.  I was on supplements from the naturopath, received acupuncture and massage throughout my TC treatment and did really well with very few side effects.  Even if you are not getting chemo there, you could use the integral therapy people and would be close for you in Arlington.  Patti

  • daffodil45
    daffodil45 Member Posts: 76
    edited January 2010

    Hi all....

    I have not posted much in the past, but this is on my list of resolutions!!!!!

    Littlebird ... I am also stage 3, did 4 rounds of TC started at VM, went to SCCA and ended up with Dr. K at Swedish. My legs were swollen like little pigs..... for me, moving (walking at the park) and elevating my legs (a 90 degree angle) just lying on the floor helped a lot. I still deal with it. There is a PT at Kitsap PT (on Bainbridge Island), Linne Stringer, that specializes in breast cancer patients. She is amazing. Hard to get into, but my Dr.s pulled the right strings.  I had a very serious infection after my mastecomies and lymph node dissection, and she was able to work with me through all of it....and then chemo etc. Lots of lymphatic draining and massage. She taught me how to do it, so I continue on my own, whenever I feel puffy. I finished chemo exactly a year ago. Seems like a century!!!! I am fully integrated , back into my teenagers lives now!!!!(boys....,15 +18) Please PM me if you want........ full-swollen-exposure doesn't seem necessary on a public forum!!!!!!

    Everyone else...... Hello! (aprilgirl.... I know you are proud of me!)

  • Eldub
    Eldub Member Posts: 276
    edited January 2010

    JS - I think you'll like SCCA.  I went through Swedish - and was very happy with my surgeon and onc (Dr Rinn), but went to SCCA for a second opinion before having surgery or making other decisions.  I found the folks at SCCA VERY good with providing a lot of information, including references to relevant research, etc.  They ultimately made the same recommendations as I'd gotten through Swedish, but it was very helpful to get that extra information (which i went home and looked up afterwards!)  They even make an audio tape of the consultation so you can take it home and listen again.

    Like I said, I was happy with my docs at Swedish and especially appreciated the high level of customer service (for example, the nurse in the surgeon's office made ALL of the other appointments I needed prior to surgery - with onc, rad onc, plastic surgeon, MRI, etc - before I ever left the office after my very first appointment).  But the consult with SCCA gave me more confidence with my decisions.

    Good good luck to you, whatever you decide.

    Linda

    PS:  Dr Fer and Dr Rinn were the 2 oncs at Swedish who came highly recommended to me from several different friends and contacts in the medical community.  I've never met Dr Fer - but Dr Rinn is a great listener, for what its worth.

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