If I read one more post saying DCIS isn't cancer
Comments
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Raili - DCIS is a very sneaky thing indeed. I am still in disbelief that so much of mine did not show itself on mammo, ultrasound, or mri. If I had not had the lump....I shudder to think.
robin - love your new name "robin no breast"! That made me laugh!
I think 'bunny fluffs' is growing on me hmmm. Maybe when I go in for my mast I could ask them to just remove the bunny fluffs? It's be good for a laugh anyway.
k
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Once again Kathy, you've had the courage to bring up a tough subject and jelson I just loved your metaphor of bunny fluffs!!
I had a radiation oncologist tell me that this was as benign a breast cancer as possible. Huh? I've never heard of a benign cancer and now I should begin 8 weeks of radiation? Of course when I calm down I understand what they mean is I'm not stage I-IV, but talk about conflicting messages...I also now realize that whatever label docs put on it, stage 0 treatments that are recommended aren't what I thought they would be for a stage 0 cancer! Where are my bunny fluff treatments?
At the risk of adding insult to injury... http://www.medscape.com/viewarticle/715586
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I have seen posts that indicated that Stage 0 women don't have cancer and have read posts that Stage I women don't really have a clue as to how bad breast cancer really can be. Maybe they were not "inflammatory" but the message was clear and I was uncomfortable reading them. I was going to look for them, but what would be the point?
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DCIS is cancer.It is also multi-focal disease which makes proper treatment even more important.
I had tonnes of DCIS and also much invasive cancer. I also had surprise diagnosis of DCIS in my opposite breast which everybody told me did not have to be removed. Glad to have done so 7 years ago or I would be dealing with it again right now likely.
Michelle
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As so many before me have typed, DCIS is a sneaky bas**rd and not to be taken lightly, no matter what spin or label is put on it. My teeny little micro.calc. cluster turned out to be more extensive DCIS than originally thought and there was a 1.7 mm invasive piece when the final pathology of my partial mastectomy/lumpectomy was studied. MRI didn't show any of this, previous year's mammo. didn't show this (or it just wasn't detected by the person reading it). Thankfully that little calc. cluster showed up on this year's routine mammo. (and that I even got the mammo. as I'm under 45) or the DCIS would have keep spreading and probably more would have eventually been invasive.
I'm going through radiation now and expect to be monitored for the rest of my life.
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Why do some docs consider DCIS to be "pre-cancer"???? At my first oncologist visit this week, I was told that "my pre-cancerous" condition has a typical treatment of surgery, rads, then Tamoxifen. OK, well if it's pre-cancerous, then why did I just have surgery and radiation??? I wish these docs would get their nomenclature straight. Oh, and I felt better when she called it "pre-cancer".... sounded better than cancer to me, but then I pinched myself and made myself wake up....
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They should at least say "pre-invasive cancer"!
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Not if, to them, the definition of cancer IS invasion.
They should just give us an injection of magic healing stuff and leave us and our Bunny Fluffs alone.
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I love the phrase 'bunny fluffs',,,it makes me laugh everytime I read it!
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Oh sweatyspice you just made me laugh (laughing at the bunny fluffs comment). THANK YOU SO MUCH....you have NO IDEA (well yes you probably do have an idea) of how much I needed to laugh!
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I also love the 'magic healing stuff and bunny fluff' comment about DCIS. I too would wonder why I opted for bilat mast for a pre-cancer condition if my doctors called it pre-cancer. Although my doctor did recommend preventative bilat after my 2nd dx of ADH (true pre-cancer) in 18 months, just 6 months prior to my dx of DCIS.
Sheila
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HAAA! Let's all change our signature lines - "Diagnosis, 11/9/09: 1.4 cm Bunny Fluff, Grade 2. Magic dust sprinkled in on 12/2/09."
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RAili - I love it!
diagnosis: 1/10/10 4+cm bunny fluff, Grade extra fluffy, and pixie dust sprinkled through-out!
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Whheeee! And we can hold hands in a big circle, with our oncologists, and sing Kumbaya, and roast some fluffy, fluffy marshmallows! Yaaaay!
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anghub....I was diagnosed 2/15/10 & I'm going for a second opinion April 1st. All of the literature I've read suggests getting a second opinion. The BS I've already seen even encouraged getting a second opinion too.
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I am the (self-proclaimed) Queen of Second Opinions.
Just claiming my title.
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I love the bunny-fluff diagnosis and the pixie dust treatment! I'll go for that.
I chose to do a BMX for DCIS because mine was grade 3, comedo with necrosis; also my mother had the same exact kind and after a SMX she had a recurrence that killed her 6 years later. Now, she might have gotten it anyway, but my research tends to suggest that a recurrence after DCIS tends to be invasive and seems to metastisize fast. Since they can't guarantee we won't have a recurrence, I wanted to make my chances as low as possible. I do think it is a cancer, just not an invasive cancer. It may sit there for years before becoming invasive, or even noticed (as I think mine did) but eventually it will probably become invasive DCIS, and then barbara's your aunt - who knows how fast it can spread? The amount the medical community DOESN'T know about our bodies equals what they do know. So those who call it pre-cancer can stick it in their ear, even though I think they are mistakenly trying to make it easier to hear.
Elaine
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I have done the BC route and occasionally I'm asked what kind of therapy I had? Then they say 'How lucky' I am, and was it really cancer then? (Hmmm, lucky) Isn't a BiLat enough? I guess there are always if(s), and(s) or but(s) to everything. Noone will really understand till it happens to themselves or a loved one.
bookart, I am so sorry to hear about your mother. Prayers to you.-catherine
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Ladies: I'm seven weeks out from my mastectomy. The pathology confirmed I had 9cm of high and intermediate grade DCIS, but no micro-invasion, thankfully. I too am frustrated by the lack of consistent interpretation and battle with semantics in the medical community and beyond. It's the same in the UK as it is in the US. By broadly calling DCIS pre-cancer or "the good kind of cancer", people are minimizing the confusing range of scenarios. It's just not one-size-fits-all. Articles like this freak me out, because they don't even mention that there are various grades of DCIS, and I worry that it will lead to women NOT being treated when perhaps they should: http://www.timesonline.co.uk/tol/life_and_style/health/article6993062.ece. Surely it's far better to overtreat than undertreat? I mean, I lost a breast, but that doesn't bother me. I am more likely to be here for my children because of my mastectomy. Watching and waiting until something becomes invasive or dangerously close to it seems loopy to me - what about the stress and anxiety the "what ifs" bring about? We'll be spending more money on mental health problems in that case! I really do think DCIS with all its issues should be publicly addressed, especially now, where any future decision of the National Health Service regarding this will have far-reaching consequences. I am planning to write a newspaper article about it. If anyone who has posted here would be willing for me to quote them, please send me a direct message so we can talk. It would be great to get some other voices in there. Kelly
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Now that I think of it more, my PS said 'I picked the good cancer'.
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iHEARTu - Wow, how nice of you to 'pick' your cancer! The things that get said.....amazing.
Kellyrs - I would love to participate in your article.
I agree with what so many of us have said...until you are 'in' it you can't really understand or even know what you would do. Each cancer, no matter how similiar the diagnosis, is different.
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Believe me, DCIS is cancer. Maybe an early form, but it is cancer. In 1999 I was diagnosed with early DCIS ( calcifications only) and had a mastectomy ( my choice - I didn't want a lumpectomy and radiation. I wanted to be done with it.). The mastectomy was thought to be a cure and I would never have to worry about it again. In January 2010 I was diagnosed with mets to the spine from that DCIS. Don't freak out - I am just one of the lucky 1%. I am doing well. There was a time I wondered if i needed the surgery at all because I too had heard DCIS was not really cancer. I don't believe that anymore.
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Mari55 -
I am sorry about the mets to your spine - I can not imagine how painful for you!! I agree we should not take any of the DX lightly.
Olivia
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As I mentioned in my earlier post, I don't even tell anyone my BC was DCIS and is considered "pre-cancer"....I just say cancer....I had a BMX. It was caught early, before it was invasive. I was blessed....as my BS said, I was a "mammogram poster child"....
because of my situation, several of my friends who had put off their mammos had them done - so I feel that some of my mission was accomplished.....
And you know what? It's really no one's business what kind of BC I had.....it's enough for them to know I had BC and I had to lose both breasts in order to keep from having it (possibly) become invasive....
just my two cents.....
besides, to ME, it will ALWAYS be cancer....it is, it was...for it took something away from me, and gave something to me, too...
blessings..robin
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Robin - I do the same thing. I don't really go into discussion about my diagnosis. Just explain it was caught early - due to a mammogram. I have been encouraging friends to get their mammos also. I know some who were past due have went and gotten their mammos, after my dx. If it keeps them aware, and makes them proactive for their own breast health - then that will bring some good from this situation.
And you are so right......to ME, it will ALWAYS be cancer....it is, it was...for it took something away from me .
Sally
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DCIS IS CANCER. If its not, someone owes me two breasts! My DCIS did not show up on a mammagram or ultrasound. Had I listened to the radiation I would have gone home blissfully unaware I was walking around with cancer. A MRI finally found it in one breast only, the other was 'normal.' I would have loved to be able to believe the radiologist except for one small symptom -- I had blood coming out of my left breast. I just figured this couldn't be good and my BS agreed.
I elected a BMX for many reasons. Turns out the right 'normal' breast had DCIS too!
If its not cancer - what are the abnormal cells if not cancer?
I did go to Georgetown university hospital for a second opinion. NO ONE was telling me to just sit back and see what happens.
And I am sick and tired of people telling me I didn't have cancer or I had the 'good kind' of cancer.
IHEARTu ... yes, that was good of you to choose the correct cancer (oh, sorry, non-invastive" non-cancer.
And I don't like being dismissed or have my 'cancer' trivilized by people who don't have a clue as to what they are talking about including doctors.
Sorry for the rant but, boy, that felt good!
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Good for you Kathleen....you needed to rant. DCIS is most definitely cancer. It just has not progressed far enough to get an actual number attached, but believe me it's going too. If it is not cancer, why are people watching it and having tests done all the time???? If only we all could have found ours at the beginning --- when it was DCIS cancer without a number.
Jackie
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I too was diagnosed with dcis and have never been told by anyone that it is "less than" what it is. Cancer. I don't even understand the thinking there. I had the dissection of the lymphnodes and out of 3, one was positive. Went through chemo then had a bi lateral mastectomy and am gearing up for my diep flap surgery. I met many many many wonderful people in chemo who definitely were battling more aggressive cancers than I and they would be there for longer than I, but cancer is cancer and have never been told any different. So, for those of you who have, I am sorry others ignorance and you go girls......................
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When I started out, I didn't realize that a certain sector of the universe didn't consider DCIS to be cancer. I got the same "good" cancer pitch as many of you and while at first, it made me feel a bit better, I came to realize that my "good" cancer wasn't all that "good"---here I was facing surgery, facing possible mastectomy, facing radiation, facing years of chemicals. But then there were the people who said "oh it can't be that bad, its just DCIS" while I was sobbing in my office with the door shut thinking about a mastectomy, reconstruction, etc etc etc.
Now I just say to people that I have stupidbreastcancer unless---and its a big unless--I'm talking to my kids. They are only 8, 10 & 12. Telling them mama has the "good" kind of cancer and that its so early that she will be all better soon, well, that works for me.
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KathrynMary, did you have invasive cancer along with the DCIS? I ask that because pure DCIS, non-invasive Stage 0 cancer, is completely confined to the milk ducts of the breast and therefore cannot travel to the nodes. Because of this, women who have pure DCIS do not get chemo. Since you had a positive node, and since you were given chemo, I'm guessing that you must have had some invasive cancer. It's very common to have invasive cancer along with DCIS - in fact most invasive cancer develops from DCIS. When the two are found together, because the invasive cancer is the more serious condition, the staging and treatment is determined by the amount and grade of the invasive cancer. The DCIS needs to be removed but other than that, it's pretty much ignored because anything done to treat the invasive cancer will be sufficient to address the DCIS.
As for DCIS being the "good" cancer, well, "good" is obviously a relative term. It's not good to have breast cancer. It's not good to require surgery, have rads, lose your breast. It's not good to have to deal with the emotional turmoil that a diagnosis of cancer brings. It's not good to have your world and your life turned upside down. It's not good to stop trusting your body. All that stinks. But it is good to not need chemo, to not need Herceptin, to not have to worry about distant recurrence (mets). And it is good to have the only breast cancer that can be considered cured. Because DCIS cannot travel to the nodes or into the bloodstream, it cannot move outside of the breast. So if all the cancer cells are removed from the breast, someone with DCIS is considered cured - there is no risk that a rogue cancer cell may be out there floating around in your body, waiting to take hold and develop as mets in 3 years or 5 years or 12 years or 20 years. While most women who have invasive cancer are also cured, they can never actually know this for sure (until in old age they die of something else). Anyone who's had any amount of invasive cancer always faces the uncertainty of wondering whether a rogue cell might be waiting to take hold.
I get angry when DCIS is called a pre-cancer. I get angry when the risks of DCIS, particularly high grade DCIS, are downplayed. I get angy when it's not appreciated that women diagnosed with DCIS go through scary, painful and life-and-body changing treatments. I get angry when it's not understood that women diagnosed with DCIS go through emotional turmoil, just like anyone else diagnosed with breast cancer. But I also think that it's important to have perspective and recognize that it could have been a lot worse than DCIS.
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