another odd question....

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mom3band1g
mom3band1g Member Posts: 817

Where does the DCIS go when it has no where to go?  Like when it bumps up against the skin or chest wall?  Does it just stop? 

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  • RegulJ
    RegulJ Member Posts: 244
    edited May 2010

    No the cells can burst from the duct walls and invade the surround tissue.

  • Deirdre1
    Deirdre1 Member Posts: 1,461
    edited May 2010

    RegulJ is correct that CAN happen but doc's have not yet proved that all DCIS turns into invasive.  It is strongly suspected that DCIS spreads through the ducts and will progress from grade 1 thru 3 and then on to invasive so your Grade 3 is an improtant factor.. but even with Grade 3 the medical community cannot say with certainty that when it comes to the end of the duct or fills up the ducts that it will then go on to become invasive.  There is some other catalysts that they haven't found yet - whether you have a genetic pre-disposition or you were exposed to some chemical that set the DCIS to invasive is just all a guess right at this moment in time.

    Personally I do tend to believe that it does progress from Grade 1 thru 3 and then on to invasive but I don't have proof of that and so I want you to know that that is not a "proven theory" yet..  Good Luck and by the way that isn't an odd question as a matter of fact I might venture to say it is very common!  Take care!  Deirdre

  • sweatyspice
    sweatyspice Member Posts: 922
    edited May 2010

    From what I understand, Grade 1 DCIS becomes Grade 1 invasive cancer; Grade 3 DCIS becomes Grade 3 invasive cancer.  I don't think it progresses through the grades from 1-3 and then to invasive.

    As to what happens when it hits the chest wall, I've no idea - perhaps it spreads out in the other direction down the duct... just guessing.

  • 3monstmama
    3monstmama Member Posts: 1,447
    edited May 2010

    sweatyspice wrote "From what I understand, Grade 1 DCIS becomes Grade 1 invasive cancer; Grade 3 DCIS becomes Grade 3 invasive cancer. . .."

    whoa!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!  Thats not what I understood at all.  Frown My understanding is they suscpect there is progression but that nothing is known for sure. . . .

    yargh.  time to call my oncologist and have that tamox sit-down and ask her this question as well... so much for my mental space today. . . .

  • sweatyspice
    sweatyspice Member Posts: 922
    edited May 2010

    Def report back on what the onc says!  I hope I'm wrong!

  • iHEARTu
    iHEARTu Member Posts: 213
    edited May 2010

    I know it's not known...but I'm just not quite convinced DCIS turns invasive and I have ABSOLUTELY no background in the medical field. My feelings are only based on, why is it that someone with calcification of 1cm be diagnosed with IDC and someone who has 10cm 'spread' of DCIS not have any invasion?

    It's unlikely someone with a diagnosis of DCIS would want to be part of a study to see if their DCIS would 'turn' invasive?

    Just my thoughts...
    -catherine

  • ebarry
    ebarry Member Posts: 46
    edited May 2010

     From what I read, and what my breast surgeon said, dcis stages do not progress from grade 1 to grade 3. Grade 1 is always grade 1, and the same for grade 3. On my last pathology report around December 30, 2009, besides the two tumors found on the mammo and mir, my breast were dotted with grade 3 como type cells. The dotted grade 3 cells were about .03 m and they were all .03 apart from one another. My bc surgeon said my breast wants to make high grade como type cells. There were no grade 1 or grade 2 cancer cells. Grade 1 cells can become invasive. As I understand it grade 1 dcis is a slower moving cancer. I'm not sure about grade 2.

  • redsox
    redsox Member Posts: 523
    edited May 2010

    DCIS does turn invasive.  One person may have a  non-aggressive DCIS that spreads out as extensive DCIS but takes a long time (maybe never) for an invasive component to occur.  Someone else may have a more aggressive DCIS that rapidly becomes invasive.  The amount of cancer and ratio of DCIS to invasive can vary greatly. 

  • Deirdre1
    Deirdre1 Member Posts: 1,461
    edited May 2010

    Well there are certainly a lot of opinions in the medical community about what happens that's for sure, but what pulled me in the direction of thinking that there is a progression was that when my second opinion came in from Vanderbilt it was considered Grade 1 after my local pathologist stated Grade 3..  At first I thought the local pathologist had probably misread (since Vanderbilt has the most experience) but I started to see in the research this occurring (multiple grades from the same sample) and then there was a theory that growth is always occurring (nothing new there) but not in a linear order but sort of a soup of ongoing growth which could explain the multiple grades in one tissue sample... or the pathologist could have gotten it wrong.  Honestly there is just no difinitive understanding about how it becames invasive lots of theory's but nothing that is concrete - at least not today - maybe tomorrow?  Best

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

    What is known is that a very large percentage (approx. 80% - 90%, I believe) of IDC starts as DCIS.  So DCIS definitely does become invasive. 

    What's not known is whether all DCIS eventually becomes invasive.  Some cases become invasive almost immediately, some cases become invasive within a few years and some cases become invasive after 25 years (yes, there are studies that show this).  What is known is that of those who have surgery for DCIS but who eventually have a recurrence, in 50% of cases, the recurrence won't be found until the DCIS has evolved to become invasive. So that suggests that by the time we find DCIS (remember that it might be in our breasts for 5 years or 10 years before it's large enough to be discovered), in many cases it's within a few years of becoming invasive.

    Many of the articles that talk about only 40% (or whatever percentage they quote) of DCIS ever becoming invasive look at populations over a 5 year or 10 year time frame - this is simply not long enough.  Additionally, most of these studies focus on women who have lower grade DCIS - this is because those who have high grade DCIS almost always have it removed surgically, so there is no possibility of measuring how long it might take to become invasive (if it were left in the breast).

    There have been recent studies that have shown that grade 1 DCIS tends to becomes grade 1 IDC, grade 2 DCIS tends to become grade 2 IDC and grade 3 DCIS tends to become grade 3 IDC.  There are exceptions to this - I had grade 3 DCIS and a grade 1 microinvasion.  But after this study came out (about a year ago, I think) someone here did a poll and it turns out that most of the women who had a combination of DCIS and IDC did have the same grade DCIS and IDC. 

    What this means is that those who have grade 1 DCIS do have a risk that their DCIS could develop into a low grade invasive cancer.  However because grade 1 cells are less aggressive, obviously this risk is much less than it is for someone who has grade 3 DCIS.  Perhaps grade 1 DCIS might develop into grade 1 IDC after 15 years but grade 3 DCIS might develop into grade 3 IDC within months or just a few years.  The most important thing to realize however is that whether you have grade 1 DCIS, grade 2 DCIS, grade 3 DCIS or DCIS with comedonecrosis, if all the DCIS cancer cells are surgically removed and/or successfully killed off (with radiation and/or Tamoxifen), then this is no risk of developing IDC from this DCIS.   

  • tovahsmom
    tovahsmom Member Posts: 196
    edited May 2010

    Beesie wrote:

     "The most important thing to realize however is that whether you have grade 1 DCIS, grade 2 DCIS, grade 3 DCIS or DCIS with comedonecrosis, if all the DCIS cancer cells are surgically removed and/or successfully killed off (with radiation and/or Tamoxifen), then this is no risk of developing IDC from this DCIS." 

    Beesie, I'm not getting it. My DCIS was surgically removed and radiated and it appears to have come back in a different part of my breast. I thought it would be zapped by the radiation. Of course I will wait for the results of the biopsy but I'm so confused about how this can happen 4 months after rads. I just thought the rads would have killed everything off in my breast. I just don't understand. 

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

    Patricia, I read your other post and know that you have new calcifications.  These may not be DCIS - in fact, it's much more likely that they aren't DCIS than that they are.  Radiation can cause benign calcs so given that you've just had radiation, that's the most likely cause.  And if that's not the cause, since these are new calcs that weren't seen in your breast previously, chances are that they are unrelated to your earlier diagnosis. If that's the case, then as with all calcs, there is a very high chance that they are benign. 

    As for whether this could be a recurrence, of course that's a possibility too - but it would be odd to have a recurrence in a different part of your breast.  In the unlikely event that these calcs do turn out to be breast cancer, then this could well be a separate primary breast cancer, perhaps one that was already there when you were first diagnosed, but was too small to be detected. 

    With regard to the radiation treatment that you had, hopefully it did kill off any cancer cells that may have remained in your breast after surgery, but there is always a possibility that it didn't. The simple fact is that no treatment is 100% successful.  Sometimes cancer cells are left in the breast after surgery (either a lumpectomy or mastectomy) and this can lead to a recurrence.  Radiation is given to reduce the risk of recurrence, but it only reduces the risk by 50% - radiation is not a 100% guarantee.  Tamoxifen is the same - it reduces recurrence risk by about 50% too.  No matter what treatments we have, we all face some level of recurrence risk.  With each treatment we add, we reduce the chance that there might be any cancer cells left, but we can never eliminate the risk completely.  In the end, for most of us, our treatments do successfully kill off all the cancer cells, but unfortunately there will always be a small percentage of cases where the treatments were not successful and in those cases, these women will have a recurrence.  Chances are that this isn't what you are dealing with, and hopefully it's something you won't ever have to deal with, but it's something that you - and all of us - always need to be aware of.  That's why it's important, after our treatment finishes, to continue to be monitored regularly. 

    Hoping that your calcs are benign!

  • Deirdre1
    Deirdre1 Member Posts: 1,461
    edited May 2010

    I second that - hoping that the calcs are B9!!!!!  Good luck and hang in there (I know easier said than done)!!!  Best, Deirdre

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