DCIS and Recurrence???

2

Comments

  • Stanzie
    Stanzie Member Posts: 1,971
    edited May 2010

    gcpommom - Thank you. I guess because reoccurence is something we all worry about and for those of us who aren't having any followup it does make one worry. However, with this thread, it also gives me something to take back and ask my doctors about so that perhaps I can get some kind of followup. I so feel for all of you who have and will go through this all again - so horribly unfair and somewho with the DCIS diagnosis I wasn't really expecting to read this.

    Also thanks for the reminder about how a lot of women who are fine no longer post. That is a good thing to remember. I like being on this and reading all the posts not only to ask questions but hopefully be supportive and I do think you feel like you know these women and care about them an d want to make sure everyone is OK. 

    I wish eveyone the best in dealing with more difficult times. I hope they will come up with more information about all this soon.

  • lassie11
    lassie11 Member Posts: 1,500
    edited May 2010

    I think gcpommom makes a good point - those women who had DCIS and have gone on to "live your life" aren't posting here. They aren't even thinking about breast cancer. I was one of those women. I had the lumpectomy and radiation, did carry on with regular mammograms and drat - five years later, there was a new deal in the same breast. This time it had gone from DCIS to IDC. Why does it happen? There is no real answer. Bad luck, probably.

    That was a year ago. Having been through a mastectomy, chemo, radiation, Herceptin (almost done) and Femara (4 years to go), it seems to me that I have done everything possible to keep the thing away. Even if you do get it again, you still can carry on to live your life. I plan to see my two little grandchildren grow up.

  • Roberta2
    Roberta2 Member Posts: 106
    edited May 2010

    In addition, to the news the fluid was cancer, I just received a copy of my physical blood test (not related to thecancer finding at all, just a yearly physical).  The doctor's office did not mention the following findings but I have left a message for them to call me back probably on Monday.  Plus I will take the results to my surgeron's office visit this week.  Does anyone know what any of this might mean, cancer related at all??  Looked it up on the web and looks like it is all associated with red blood cells.  Is this any indication regarding cancer or unrelated?  All was bolded typed and say abnomal but they appear to be slightly high or low.  This is on CBC work up.  To my knowledge, this report for me has always been within range.  Coincidence?

    TEST NAME                   RESULT                             NORMAL RANGE

    MONO #                         0.7                                      0.1-0.6

    GRAN #                          6.6                                     1.4-6.5

    RBC                               5.13                                    3.8-5.10

    MCH                               26.9                                   27.0-33.0

    MCHC                            30.9                                   32.0-36.0

    RDW                             15.9                                    11.0-15.0

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

    Roberta, I don't really know what your blood count report means, but it looks like you are almost in the range for all of them (of course you already knew that).

    I wanted to bring up something, but I'm almost hesitant to do it.  But here it is:

    In 2005, after my very first biopsy, I was told I had DCIS which needed to be excised surgically.  Knowing that DCIS meant that the cells were contained in the duct, I got very concerned because during the biopsy I was poked 8 different times.  So I asked my doctor if it was possible that the cells escaped during the biopsy.  He said that it is possible.  

    After my lumpectomy the path report said my DCIS had invasive components.  Did the biopsy cause my DCIS to spread?  It is possible, the doctor said, but we should not be concerned about what already happened.

    I was just bringing this up for those who have not had biopsies yet.  Do you know that there are risks involved when you get one?

    Of course I have had another dx since then.  2 new tumors in the same location, despite radiation and chemo.  But I thought I'd share this feeling that once bothered me.

    Brenda 

  • Beesie
    Beesie Member Posts: 12,240
    edited May 2010

    Brenda, I had my biopsies and surgery in 2005 too.  What your doctor told you then was the understanding at that time, but since then, new information has become available about DCIS which indicates that for DCIS cancer cells to survive and thrive outside of the milk ducts, they must undergo one final biological change.  In other words, DCIS cancer cells need this one final step before they can become invasive.  So even if DCIS cells are moved outside of the duct, during a biopsy for example, these cells won't become invasive.  They will remain DCIS cells and they will not have the ability to spread or move outside of the breast. So no one should be worried about having a biopsy and possibly moving DCIS cells.

    If you think about this, this makes sense because pretty much everyone who is diagnosed with DCIS has had a biopsy - either a needle biopsy or a surgical biopsy.  So we all have open ducts that the DCIS can escape from.  And yet most women who are initially diagnosed with DCIS via a biopsy end up with a final diagnosis of DCIS. Only about 15% are found to have invasive cancer in addition to the DCIS and in most cases, these are women who had "high risk" DCIS - DCIS that clearly was at a stage where it was ready to become invasive (i.e. high grade DCIS or DCIS with comedonecrosis). 

    My case is a good example.  I had a stereotactic biopsy first - only AHD was found but we knew that because of the location of my DCIS, the sample taken wasn't the best.  Then I had an excisional biopsy; the results showed two separate areas with high grade DCIS; in one of the areas I also had a microinvasion of IDC.  The fact that I had the IDC was not surprising, considering how much DCIS I had and that it was high grade with comedonecrosis. After the excisional biopsy, I had no clear margins at all - which means that I had lots and lots of open ducts with DCIS right at the edge, ready to spill out.  For various reasons (changing surgeons, coordinating with a PS, etc., having an MRI, having a biospy of my other breast), I didn't have my mastectomy for another 2 1/2 months.  When I got the pathology report from my mastectomy, it showed a lot more high grade DCIS in both areas, but no additional microinvasions.  So despite all those cut ducts, despite the fact that I had high grade DCIS, and despite the amount of time I waited, my DCIS did not become invasive.  While there may have been DCIS cells in my open breast tissue (I don't know if there were or weren't, I just know that I had a lot of DCIS throughout my breast tissue), the remainder of my DCIS had not yet undergone that final biological change and therefore was not ready to become invasive.    

    I hope this eases the mind of anyone who's had a biopsy that showed DCIS. A biopsy isn't going to release DCIS cancer cells and allow them to become invasive.  It's the cell itself that is going to decide when that's going to happen.

  • sunnyhou
    sunnyhou Member Posts: 169
    edited May 2010

    Roberta

    those numbers are all within a close range. That is prob why the Dr did not mention it. I think for something to be wrong they have to be more off than that. I understand your concern and worry though and hate this for you. I just had the BRCA test done this week and have made myself sick with worry. Only to find out on Friday it was negative.  I have had abnormal blood tests before and sometimes if they run it again a day later they are all normal. Sometimes it is a virus, cold, etc. I do not think your blood count is anything to worry about. Hoping you get some answers soon. The waiting is the most god awful part..

    the mind can go so many places..

  • mginger
    mginger Member Posts: 150
    edited May 2010

    MCTHO, what a badluck you had!  I must say I was in shock after reading your story. Hope everything goes well now.

    Sadly, I spend too much time myself worrying about recurrence. The other day, I tried to think the other way around:  if somebody told me I had 98% risk of dying within the next ten years, I would be sure to die... so why don't I think the same when I look at my 98% probability of survival? 

  • ladyod
    ladyod Member Posts: 152
    edited May 2010

    The mono and gran are a white cell count.  Real high numbers can indicate some types of cancer, but yours are not that high.  WBC counts can be high from infection, autoimmune disease such as arthritis, trauma,  as well as allergies.  The rest of the CBC is concerning the red blood cells.  Again, not far off of the norm.  I'm not an MD, but I am an OD.....I don't think you should lose too much sleep over your CBC counts, unless they continue to go higher/lower. 

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

    Beesie, thanks for the information and for sharing your experience.  I was hoping for at least one doctor to tell me what you just stated in your post.  Not one doctor said "It's not possible."  My intention was not to worry people who have DCIS.  I thought I'd make them aware of what I thought I knew.  I wish there were less invasive ways to determine the presence of cancer cells.

    There's something else that bothers me, and again, my intention here is to share information and not worry people.  My first tumor was less than a centimeter, non-palpable, triple negative and grade 3.  We treated it with lumpectomy, SNB, AC and 33 rads. That happened in 2005.  Last year we found 2 new tumors in the exact same location as the lumpectomy.  2 new tumors with 2 different pathologies.  Is it possible that radiation caused these tumors to morph and grow?  I am hoping that someone will say it is not possible.

    Hindsight is 20/20.  If I had to do it all over again, I would have had the double mastectomy, no radiation, maybe even chemo.  Who knows, the 2 new tumors may never have sprouted (or, some may say, they may have sprouted in other parts of my body).

    Again, I could just keep quiet and not share my feelings and experience, but I really believe that learning is better achieved when you study different sources of information, and I sincerely hope I am helping someone as I share my views and experience. 

    Brenda 

  • Leah_S
    Leah_S Member Posts: 8,458
    edited May 2010

    Brenda, if the tumors had different pathologies then it is likely that they were new primaries. As far as I know rads would have had no influence on that.

    Another thing I want to say about the DCIS cells being different from invasive cells: I had a core biopsy (NOT an excisional bioopsy) and the results were invasive carcinoma. So even from that small sample they could tell by the characteristics of the cells that it was invasive and not in situ.

    Leah

  • hellome
    hellome Member Posts: 41
    edited May 2010

    I don't know if they are so much different, but more along the lines of less developed, from what I have read at least. I wish I could remember and cite the article, but it explained it as the grades in stage 0 (DCIS) become more like stage I invasive cancer as is indicated by the grading system. So the DCIS grade 1 would be least like stage I and the grade 3 the closest to it on the cellular level.

    That made me understand it to be like a progression. Not so much a change from stage 0 to stage 1. Sometimes the cells do not progress, which I think is where the debate comes from i.e. is it "cancer" or is it not. But obviously it can, and that's where those of us that have the diagnosis have the problem.  You know, do we take it seriously in the event that it does become invasive? Or do we hope that maybe we will have the type that won't continue to develop along the way to become invasive?

    Anyway, that should be the real argument. Most sources seem to agree that DCIS is cancer on the cellular level. But it is considered pre invasive. I think it's sad that a handful of doctors try to claim that it isn't cancer. I think they have the right idea in a way because they don't want women to panic and choose overtreatment. But in a way I think they are doing the opposite because they put women with DCIS in the position of thinking they are going to be fine, don't really need treatment, etc., when in many cases obviously, they do.  

  • Beesie
    Beesie Member Posts: 12,240
    edited May 2010

    Brenda, I think if you asked doctors today, you probably would hear from at least one - if not all - that "it's not possible" for DCIS cancer cells to be moved outside of the duct and become invasive cancer.  In fact some of the women on this board who are going through their diagnosis now have asked this exact question and been told exactly that - "it's not possible".  There's been so much new learning about DCIS over the past few years and this is information that simply wasn't known back in 2005, when both you and I were diagnosed.  So what you were told by your doctors was accurate based on the knowledge at the time; today, there is new information available that changes these assumptions.  Here is an article that explains how DCIS converts to become invasive cancer, through the "loss of a protective cellular barrier".  This finding was published in 2008.  http://www.medpagetoday.com/HematologyOncology/BreastCancer/9348  And here is another article that talks to the molecular changes that occur as DCIS progresses to become invasive.  This article was also from 2008:  http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/18928525         As Leah mentioned, today when breast cancer cells are examined under a microscope, pathologists can actually determine whether a cell is invasive cancer or DCIS, not by where it is located (in the duct or not in the duct) but by the biological characteristics of the cell.

    Speaking of new learning, something that I learned (thank you Jenna!) is that sometimes cancer cells change hormone status as they develop.  I had always believed that if a cancer cell has a different pathology, it is a new primary.  But recent studies suggest that this is not necessarily so.  It's been known for a while that hormone status may change as cancer cells move from the nodes into the body, which can be a factor for those who are Stage IV.  I've seen articles going back 10 or 15 years that mention this, although most of the studies are from the past few years:

    More recently, it's been determined that the hormone status may change as cancer cells move from the breast to the nodes.  Here is an article that talks to this:

    And I've now found two studies, from just last year, that suggest that as DCIS progresses to become IDC, hormone status might change.  This has been known about HER2 status for a while but now it seems that this can happen to ER status as well: 

    To me, this is fascinating stuff, and is completely contrary to the beliefs of just a few years ago. So it suggests that in some cases, cancer cells might be found to have different hormone status yet they might source from the same primary cancer.  Given the focus that is put on hormone status when we are diagnosed, it amazes me that information has not been more widely discussed and that there haven't been more studies on this.  This seems to be pretty critical information but it took me a very long time to even find these two articles, so there's obviously not much out there yet about it.

  • Stanzie
    Stanzie Member Posts: 1,971
    edited May 2010

    Beesie, thank you not only for your wealth of information but they way you present it - meaning easy to understand and very clearly with facts. You are such a calming person and such a wonderful help to us all. I always look forward to hear what you have to say on so many subjects involved with bc.

  • ladyod
    ladyod Member Posts: 152
    edited May 2010

    Adnerb:  I am sorry that you have had to go through this and thank you for sharing with us.  I noticed that you are triple negative...that may have a lot to do with your recurrance.  I have read that triple negative cancers tend to be more aggressive and recur more often than other types.

  • Roberta2
    Roberta2 Member Posts: 106
    edited May 2010

    UPDATE:  Doctor has cancelled Friday's surgery.  MRI shows the tumor is attached to the skin and pectoral muscle.  We are now doing a core biopsy on Wednesday to see stage, type, etc. Also, wants to do core biopsy on the lymph nodes because they should contain fatty substances to be bening/normal but one of them does not show that so it is inconclusive if cancer or not. I will be going to the oncologiest on Monday to see if the tissue test positive if they can give me medication to shrink it first, then do surgery later.

    Does anyone know what medication this would be?  A chemo drug such as?? What is the average time I would be on this medication before possibly doing the surgery?

    Also, he checked all my previous pathologies from the original masectomies and spoke with some others about my case, and said they had extreme clear margins.  Therefore, they believe this to be a new cancer.

    The doc said the recurrence rate for DCIS was low, but I believe he said for it to be a new cancer, was even lower.

  • Roberta2
    Roberta2 Member Posts: 106
    edited May 2010

    Bumping to top of the list....please see previous post.

  • sweatyspice
    sweatyspice Member Posts: 922
    edited May 2010

    Roberta, you might get more helpful replies from the ladies on the Stage I & II, IDC, or the recurrence forum.  Most of us won't know all that much about adjuvant chemo.  I'm sorry I can't be more helpful, and I'm REEEEALLy sorry you're going through this.

  • sunnyhou
    sunnyhou Member Posts: 169
    edited May 2010

    Roberta

    I have no clue but just want you to know I am so sorry this happened. I hope the Dr's can shed light on why this occured although they might be hesitant to tell you that the missed something. Possibly you are just dealing with a small cancer. I am not sure if they are talking chemo or not. I would def ask next time you talk to them. You are in my prayers.

  • sunnyhou
    sunnyhou Member Posts: 169
    edited May 2010

    Roberta did you ever do genetic testing? just wondering. It seems like you see more woman that have the BRCA gene come up with new cancers even with these tiny amts of breast tissue. I went to the dr last week and did the gene test. He said if I came back positive even with my double mastectomy that he would follow me more closely.

  • debintn749
    debintn749 Member Posts: 99
    edited May 2010

    Ok all this has thouroughly scared me to death! As if I were not already scared at every little ache and pain is something related. I had DCIS with double MX. Went to see my BS today and he said..." see u on 6 months" and now I come home to read this,,,,, roberta keep us posted

  • Stanzie
    Stanzie Member Posts: 1,971
    edited May 2010

    I agree on how scary all this is. I think more so cause they tell us we are now fine. I know some women are followed and some aren't and even those who are followed can end up with surprises. Cancer is always scary and for me I know I will always worry and I don't think anything will take that away. I hope they can soon tell us more so we can at least feel more comfortable knowing a bit about what we are dealing with but perhaps that is wishful thinking and not really possible.

    I know this just hits us all in our biggest fears and I am so horribly sorry for all of you going through this. I so appreciate you sharing your storied and process so we all will have more questions to take back to our doctors. It just seems like it doesn't get better some days. You are all in my thoughts and hope you are all taken care of and finally rid of cancer. 

  • sweatyspice
    sweatyspice Member Posts: 922
    edited May 2010

    Roberta - PS

    I know they've been doing clinical trials of different things that might shrink DCIS before surgery, I wonder if your Dr. is referring to one of those?   Why don't you take a look at the national clinical trials lists for DCIS?

    I was enrolled for the Metformin trial at Columbia (Metformin is a drug originally intended for diabetes, I was supposed to take it for 2, maybe 3 weeks before surgery) but I didn't end up staying at Columbia for my surgery so I didn't do the trial.

    I've looked at the list of all the clinical trials since, and I think there were other protocols being tested for for DCIS, too - in other parts of the country.

  • Mantra
    Mantra Member Posts: 968
    edited May 2010

    After reading about several women on the group who have gone from DCIS, had bmx and now have a recurrence or new cancer, I decided to really review my pathology report and try and understand some of the stuff I fluffed off.

    I realized my original mastectomy also show ADH & ALH. I read about them today and made me realize that having both, made my chances of getting cancer was 8 times higher IN EITHER BREAST". If my surgeon had told me this, I would have said to book my prophylactic ASAP. But instead, I figured I was in no rush. I had it done two weeks ago and sure enough, the paltholgy came back with ADH and my surgeon told me this made me 4 x higher.

    So even though I have had a dmx, I am terrified that I will somehow manage to get cancer again. Afterall, some breast tissue is always left and this causes me great conern. I actually had a complete meltdown over this.

    I'm so sorry for each of you who have found yourself revisiting a part of your life you thought you left behind. My thoughts are with you.

  • Stanzie
    Stanzie Member Posts: 1,971
    edited May 2010

    I have been trying to undestand more of this and the risk factors. One thing I totally do not understand are the margins. I have gone back and read as many posts on margins as I could find so now I'm lost.... margins - close, narrow, positive, negative. Some say they didn't get clear margins does that mean positive or negative? I'm sure this is probably something easy and perhaps I have just been reading too much but I just can't seem to grasp this... Also it sounds like the location of the DCIS and where the margins are is important whether they are next to the chest wall or the skin - how do you know where they were? What number margins are good to have?

    All this reoccurence makes me want to make sure I understand everything correctly. I also wish the doctors would address the cells that are left behind in mastectomies - obviously they can't get everyone one so.... thanks, I'm sorry if I'm asking a too simple question that is answered elsewhere I have been looking. Thanks.

  • ladyod
    ladyod Member Posts: 152
    edited May 2010

    When I explain cataract surgery to people, I use an analogy of a grape, because people know what grapes look like and can better understand the structure.  So here is my food analogy of breast cancer.....  

    Clear Margins:  Lumpectomy:  No cancer found 10mm (1 cm) around lesion.  If your breast was a potatoe, the cancer would be like a brown, mushy part of the potato found inside the potato.  The doctor would take out the brown part plus 10 mm of white potato in all directions.  If they ran into more brown, then they would have to go another 10 mm of white potatoe for it to be clean margins, aka negative for cancer.  They don't know if the tissue is completely cancer free until they look at it under a microscope. 

    Clear Margins:  Mastectomy:   1mm from other tissue: aka skin or chest wall.  So if your breast is a hard boiled egg, the cancer would be the yolk.  After they get all of the breast tissue out, they examine it to see where the cancer is. Think of it like this:  on a hard boiled egg there are 4 parts:  the shell (your skin or muscle), the thin membrane (fascia in the breast), the white part (healthy tissue) and the yolk (cancer).   If the yolk is sitting farther than 1 mm or more from along the thin membrane , it would be clean margins.  If the yolk was sitting right up next to the shell without less than 1 mm of white part between it, that would be positive for cancer, and unclean margins.  The worry is that the cancer may be in the skin or chest muscle now.  So then they recommend radiation or chemo just to be sure there aren't any cells left behind.  My cancer was 1.5 mm from my chest wall.  Those are close margins because I only had .5 mm, about the thickness of 2 - 3 hairs, before it was to my chest wall.

     Hope that helps!

  • sweatyspice
    sweatyspice Member Posts: 922
    edited May 2010

    Interesting food analogy!  LOL

    It's my understanding that for lumpectomy clean margins of more than 2mm are usually considered "good."  I don't think anyone really tries for a full cm. due to cosmetic results, and probably also because the assumption is that you'll do rads.

    I didn't realize that clean margins for mastectomy were 1mm, I thought it was 2mm (same as lumpectomy) - though maybe there just isn't 2mm of breast tissue left (or shouldn't be).

    If someone says they "didn't get a clear margin" that means there was DCIS (or some more troubling cancer) present in the margin.  This is also known as a "dirty" margin. 

    Clean / clear / negative margins = no cancer was found 

    It's worth mentioning that ADH ALH and/or LCIS don't seem to be considered.  I had DCIS with LCIS in the margin, and they still considered it a clean margin.  They only seem to be concerned with surgically treating DCIS or worse.  The "lesser precancers" seem to get overlooked, which concerns me.   The treatment for those seems to be Tamoxifen (if you're ER/PR positive).

  • Roberta2
    Roberta2 Member Posts: 106
    edited May 2010

    UPDATE: I had the core needle biopsy today.  First, they did ultra sound for radiologist to look at.  Next, radiologiest came in and said she wanted to do another ultrasound in "real time" (in front of her).  Originally, they were due to two sections (tumor and one lymph node because it looked funny on the MRI, no fatty deposits like it should be).  She then tells me that there is another "spot" above the cancer tumor (blah, blah) AND another lymph node that looks funny.  Not sure why neither of these two showed on the MRI.  Now she needs to call my surgeron to see if he wants to have all four areas done...had to wait until his office open.  Finally, 30 minutes later, they said yes he does.  They did each of the four areas and did 5 tissue samples per area with a total of 20 tissue samples.  Will not know anything until atleast Friday.  They also placed clips where they removed the tissue, for when the surgeon does surgery if and when they can try to shrink the tumor.  Because of the clips, they then had to do mamogram to picture the location of the clips.  AND of course me being me, they found the first two right off, but could not find the last one until after 10 mamogram pictures.  Could they put anyone thru so much in one day!

    NOW JUST PLAYING THE WAITING GAME!  HATE THIS!  Not only two possible problem spots, but now they added two more to my worry.  They need to stop finding "stuff".

  • Stanzie
    Stanzie Member Posts: 1,971
    edited May 2010

    Oh Roberta - that just sounds horrible. I hope you had someone with you and the medical personnel were nice. That is so much to deal with on one day - I'm sure you are just exhausted. I am so sorry - hope you can get some rest and then some good news. I gather core biopsy is different than the sterotactic biopsy - hope it wasn't painful.

    LadyOD- thank you for the help on margins. I don't know why this still baffles me but... So if I had 4mm margins does that mean 4mm from where the cancer was is clear? It says distance from closest margin - So the margin is how far away without cancer???? Sorry to be so dense about all this. I think I'm just missing something. Thanks.

  • sweatyspice
    sweatyspice Member Posts: 922
    edited May 2010

    Stanzie - your hypothetical example in the post above is correct.   4mm would be the distance away from the cancer.   

    Roberta - that just sucks.  Sometimes things show up on MRI, sometimes they show up on mammo, sometimes they show up on u/s, sometimes they show up on all of them, sometimes they show up on a combo of them but not all of them, sometimes they don't show up on anything at all.  It all just SUCKS. 

    The clips are also for the surgeon to know where to go to remove tissue, you'll probably have a wire localization procedure before surgery.  I bled like a pig all over the mammo machine when I had my post-biopsy mammo.....ah, good times!!!!

  • saskabush58
    saskabush58 Member Posts: 9
    edited May 2010

    I too had DCIS 9 years ago with clear nodes, then a lumpectomy and 33 rounds of radiation. I could not take the Tamoxifen due to SE's, so had my ovaries removed the same year. Thought I had done everything possible. Then a new primary in the same breast was found last Xmas. This time it was IDC, relatively small, but Grade 3. I had a BMX in March of this year, with immediate reconstruction. These tissue expanders are really no picnic, and hopefully worth it in the end.

    Cindy 

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