Questions about radiation in early stage IDC
Comments
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I don't doubt this one woman's experience and that others have, unfortunately, had a bad time with rads as well but the vast, vast majority of women find it much, much easier than chemo. Some of these side effects don't sound radiation related, frankly.
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God, Mathteacher, that is horrible. I have a friend who had endometrial cancer. She fought and fought, and finally found a radiation onc who was willing to bombard her with less radiation, and more treatment dates. She had read it was equally as effective, and didn't do the horrible damage to a woman's inner organs.
I was alarmed that the woman who did the same TC treatment as me at my clinic got neuropathy AFTER the treatment. Well, it turns out that's when it happens. It makes me feel like my onc is being a little disingenuous asking me every time I'm there if I have symptoms. Really, that's not when it starts, and what would she do anyway, tell me to stop?
I think oncologists are focused on what they are supposed to do: get rid of cancer. The other stuff requires advocacy on our part. I am going to write my friend and ask her more about radiation, she's the only person I know who bargained a different treatment plan.
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I think I would of turned radiation down if I had known about the stress it put me under. For me it was way worse than chemo.
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Mumayan, would you be willing to describe your experience a little?
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Mathteacher, I'm confused--an earlier post said you didn't do radiation, did you have a recurrence? If so, I'm sorry. I'm sorry for anyone who has as hard a time, it sounds like it has been really awful.
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MHP70,
No, I didn't have radiation. The post I reposted was from Connie07 on the Radiation Forum here. I gave the direct link.( Connie07 wrote: http://community.breastcancer.org/70/topic/747085?page=1#post_1684284)
I only mentioned my neighbor because she didn't find chemo bad but the radiation burn complications really took a toll on her and she is quite the athlete and a real stoic.
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Gotcha, Mathteacher--I couldn't get the link to load, so I thought it was you. Thanks for the post.
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MPH70, I think it would be helpful to learn more about grade 3. Grade 3 is very aggressive. Also, in addition to your research--this is a question people ask themselves when trying to decide on a treatment--how would you feel, if you didn't throw everything at the cancer and you had a recurrence? Good luck with your decision.
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Cowgirl, that is a very vague and misleading question you claim people are asking themselves.
First, breast cancer patients don't die from local recurrence. They die from distant mets. Radiation only addesses local recurrence. The question would be better put, how would you feel if you didn't do things that could ACTUALLY extend your life?
Anyway, I don't know what "throwing everything at the cancer" would include. Wheatgrass juice? Distilled water? Melatonin? Organic only? Flax? The list is endless. At what point should a patient feel guilty for not doing "everything?"
Obviously, no one can "throw everything" available at cancer. Educated patients pick and choose based on their individual preference and consultation with those they respect. You set up a patient to fail when you expect them to do what you consider everything. I sincerely hope I misunderstood what you said.
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Well, yeah rads are for local recurrence but local recurrence is just another opportunity for bc to spread. Chemo and hormonals are effective for distant recurrence but less so for local for some reason. You are welcome to fight cancer with wheatgrass. Mine was node positive and I needed bigger guns.
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MHP70--thank you for starting this thread.
The lesson I'm taking away is there is no full disclosure about radiation therapy. Has anybody written a book about what we should know to ask about our therapies?
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I agree, Mollyann--my takeaway on this is a good confusion. Local recurrence is an unclear relationship to long-term health, and I hope to learn more when I speak to my radiation onc.
He's a great guy, and honestly, he expected more questions from me. I basically brushed it off, feeling like radiation was the easy part. I've got a slew of new questions. For instance, it's clear to me he shared the relative, not absolute risks in my case.
I'll report back. As always, I hope this is helping more than just me. We talk a lot about respect for both sides, but this thread did a pretty good job of maintaining it. Where I stand: it takes courage to say "yes" and "no" to these treatments, all of us are twice as strong as when we started. This is TOUGH stuff, and I hope we are all contributing to the evolution of knowledge about this darned disease! The one sad note: there really is a long, long way to go, and the incidence only seems to be increasing in our toxified environment.
I do think there is a groundswell of change-a-comin'. When I walked into Borders the other day, the featured an entire wall of books on food and environment issues. It's now part of the mainstream thinking to question our environment, food sources, and lifestyles. Let's hope it's not too late.
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By the way, I think a book specifically on all the questions to ask about BC treatment with a checklist and aggregator would be best-seller. Lord knows, I've spent hours and hours trying to cobble it together.
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The I in IDC means INVASIVE. That means it is a fact the cancer has invaded through the cell wall into the breast tissue. In the adjuvant setting, radiation therapy is designed to possibly kill the rouge cells that may be lingering in the breast tissue. When/if this is successful (studies have proved it is successful in some cases) it prevents a local recurrence. By successfully preventing a local recurrence, you not allowing the cells to go elsewhere, thus preventing distant recurrence. Choosing to do radiation for an INVASIVE tumor that threatens to metastasize is only one option among many, including wheat grass.
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There actually is a book about questions to ask if you have bc, I saw it at a bookstore a couple of months ago. Wish I could remember the name or the author. Its something like 100 Questions to Ask, or something like that. I have no idea if its any good.
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I'll check it out, Member. I must say, they don't make it easy to piece this all together, I feel like I'm swimming in questions and paperwork spread from one end of the house to the other.
Mountains, thank you for helping me be more articulate about this. From what I gather, then, a local recurrence or stray cells left from surgery CAN CREATE DISTANT METS. This is ALL the difference. This goes from "distressing" (Mollyann mentioned a study that referred to local recurrence as such) to potentially "life threatening".
Even though the new studies show that in wide-margin, node-neg ladies (that'd be me) radiation may not be helpful, other studies show that biopsies and lumpectomies can release rogue cells. It seems to me that with the biopsy, which was basically a drill down into my boob, this is absolutely possible. And I'm grade 3. My doctor describes these cells as not just aggressive, but unpredictable.
Well, that'd be me in a nutshell!
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I am just as confused as everyone else. My PS thinks they will recommend radiation for me because of the size of the tumor. I'm really hoping he's wrong. I am node negative and he got clear margins. Radiation just because my tumor is 5.5 cm. It will be interesting to see what the oncologist says Tuesday. I know chemo/Herceptin will stress my heart. Do I really need the radiation to complicate that even further?
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BTW my BS did tell me that you are at increased risk of lymphedema by just getting a simple mastectomy. (I had simple MX with sentinel node biopsy on right/Modifed radical (10 nodes) on left).
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Lago, it will depend on type of chemo--TC has been a big breakthrough in lowering cardiotoxicity.
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I did agree to radiation after my lumpectomy but, had I to do it over again now with the knowledge I've gained through research over the last couple of years, I would have declined the radiation. Yes, it does decrease the risk of the cancer returning to that breast by 30 per cent but how much does it decrease the expected mortality rate? According to the statistics (those things that oncologists love to throw at us when advising certain allopathic treatments, having radiation therapy after a lumpectomy does not increase your expected survival rate by even a fraction of a percentage point - nothing, rien, nada.
Also, perhaps my experience is not the norm, but when I asked the radiation oncologist about possible long-term side effects as a result of the treatments, she reassured me that there were none, particularly given the fact that my lump had been in my right breast. It was only after the fact that I learned that this was far from the truth - that these treatments actually permanently altered my DNA, increased my chances of developing lymphedema, and severely impaired my immune system.
I would never advise any woman to get or not get radiation therapy. My only advice would be to do your research and then decide whether or not this treatment will benefit you personally given your particular diagnosis.
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Interesting article from the Journal of Clinical Oncology on how how 50% relative risk benefit can translate into only a 1% absolute risk. This is why it's not really ethical for doctors to use relative risk figures to patients who don't understand.
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Relative risk is real bunk--that is definitely one of the things I resent about standard treatment. They don't explain absolute risk, which varies incredibly patient-to-patient.
Thought I would share this latest. Talked to my absolutely amazing friend, who studied and studied, and talked to the best doctors (one of whom was a close friend) about treatment options. Bottom line, European studies show that less radiation per dose over a longer period has equal benefit, with less toxic SEs. However, this was for endometrial cancer, I am not sure if this has an equivalent in the BC world. I am going to seek a second opinion, perhaps with Block Center if they offer radiation.
Second, it is important to note that radiation absolutely has an effect on overall breast cancer mortality. Whatever study claimed it was a mere "distress" seems to be out-of-date. http://breast-cancer-research.com/content/11/S3/S14
This leaves the still burning question: why would overall survival then be lower? I am seeking studies to research this, but cannot find any. If you know a RECENT one, please point me to it. Most of the longer-term toxicity studies can't account for the improvement in targeting, thus lowering much of the toxicity.
For instance, I read another study that said radiation does not affect the immune system.
Which perhaps leads us right back to where we started: there are studies both sides, and it may just be a question of which you'd prefer to believe.
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One difference (no idea if it matters) is that with breast cancer the radiation is intended to include the skin, because of he possibility of skin mets, which is not the case with radiation aimed at other organs. My mother had radiation for brain cancer and it was completely different than what I had -- far fewer, more targeted treatments and fewer side effects. Her skin was entirely unaffected and her rad onc explained this difference to me.
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In medicine "distress" is an aversive state in which an animal is unable to adapt to stressors. Not likely used in the context of medical literature for local recurrence unless it is proved stress and suffering is causation for such. Breast Cancer patients die in the thousands each year from distant mets and these same distant mets started from a localized area first that went undetected. In the adjuvant setting, there's really an overall survival advantage when we prevent a rouge cancer cell from mets due to radiation therapy. We just don't see this benefit in later stage cancers. Also, stray cancer cells aren't born from a surgery or a biopsy. They most likely have been there a long time dividing and moving into the blood stream/lymph system accordingly unless we are lucky enough to catch it early enough so that a treatment such as radiation can possibly stop it and increase our chance of long term survival.
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i had the best bc drs...they told me the survival rate visa vie mast or lumpectomy + radiation is the SAME...i chose lumpectomy..yes, radiation was very challenging for me and there were times i wished i had a total mastectomy, however, i am glad i did the lumpectomy..again, both onc and radiation dr said chances of returning, etc., were the same...i hope this helps!!
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According to the Fisher 20 year study comparing mastectomy, lumpectomy alone and lumpectomy plus radiation (which has been used to formulate the standard of care), there was no significant difference in disease free survival, no significant difference in distant disease free survival and also no significant difference in overall survival among the three groups.
http://www.nejm.org/doi/pdf/10.1056/NEJMoa022152
So although radiation may indeed prevent local recurrence in those with clear margins after mastectomy or lumpectomy, it seems to have little or no impact on survival statistics in those with negative nodes (these women all had level 1-2 node dissections). The theory had always been that reducing local recurrence will prevent distant metastatsis which in turn would be expected to increase survival. But apparently, according to this important study, that's not necessarily the case.
Another very interesting statistic in this study is regarding recurrence in the lumpectomy with radiation group - although the addition of radiation to lumpectomy decreased recurrence within the first 5 years years, once 5+ and 10+ years rolled around, the tables turned in favor of those who did NOT have radiation and in particular, the rate of contralateral breast cancer began to rise. (see table 3 in the above link)
There's also a 25 year study, again by Fisher, providing statistics comparing the old radical mastectomy technique to total mastectomy and mastectomy with radiation -http://www.nejm.org/doi/full/10.1056/NEJMoa020128
Again, radiation to the breast seemed to make no difference. The results showed no significant difference in disease free survival, no significant difference in relapse free survival, and no significant difference in overall survival.
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After my MX I was tatooed for three sites two sets of nodes and the chest wall. I was warned that my lungs could be damaged.Every day I went in there was a different team handling me.I was terrified that a mistake would be made.On top of that my skin was so badly burned the creams did not seem to help much.The whole experience was so stressfull. The burn healed up a few weeks later but my ribs remain tender to this day.
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MarieKelly,
Thank you! I am going to print these articles, and have my father read them tomorrow to get a fresh perspective on findings. Let's see where this goes. The study is 10 years old at this point, but I don't think much has changed in terms of radiation practice to warrant questioning that gap. I'll look into that, too.
Thank you also, Mumayan.
This has been a great thread. As I always say, thank goodness for this site.
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I had radiation 2 years ago to my left breast. At the time I was told it lessened my risk of reoccurrance by 40%. I never thought to ask what my risk of reoccurrance was to begin with. Now I'm wondering with a stage 1, grade 1, node negative .9cm tumor, ER/PR+, age 47 at diagnosis, what my actual risk of reoccurrance was, with lumpectomy alone?
Luckily, I had absolutely no side effects from radiation, no burns, no heart or lung issues, not even fatigue while I was going through it. I continued to work my night shift job the entire time. My Rad Onc's office staff gave me creams to use to help prevent burns. Also my Med Onc had told me it was important to go to a really good Rad Onc to ensure that I wouldn't get burns.
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Rose, that 40% figure came directly from the Fisher clinical trials and is a reflection of the potential benefit for the whole group of women who had a variety of different prognostic factors. It's a relative number and doesn't really provide anything useful in terms of individual benefit. Those studies included women with tumor sizes up to 4 cm (a BIG tumor). They included both stage 1 and stage 2 and all tumor grades. The ages ranged up to 75 and some of them had positive nodes The only thing that they all really had in common was clear margins - but exactly how clear they actually were was never really defined as best I could tell.
40% is an impressive number to throw out there when trying to convince someone that they should commit to radiation, but beyond that there's not much worth in it. The 40% is the worst case scenario for the group as a whole but individually it could be much, much lower for those with the lowest risk tumors ( something like 3-6%) and possibly even much higher than 40% if the studies only included those with the highest risk tumors (grade 3, smaller margins, on the larger side of the 4 cm maximum etc). Since it appears you had a low risk type of tumor, and assuming your margins were very wide and clear, your personal risk reduction benefit from having radiation after lumpectomy was likely not anywhere near 40%.
And not intending to scare you but rather alert you to being vigilant in the future - cardiac problems from radiation to the left chest aren't likely going to be evident for at least a decade, especially in someone younger with a healthy heart to begin with. Although there have been great strides in making changes that lower the risk to heart and lungs, the risk has not been completely eliminated and there have been a few small studies recently that show asymptomatic changes in cardiac structures even with contemporary radiation techniques.
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Marie, the 40% is a relative risk number. It doesn't reflect potential benefit, or worse case scenario.
Relative risk means comparing the women who would normally recur in the first five years without radiation and comparing that number with those who did take radiation. Very few women recur in the first five years anyway.
So, hypothetically, let's say that in a trial involving 100 women, two would normally get breast cancer during the trial without radiation.
But now when you radiate 100 people, only one person gets a local recurrence, meaning the reduction of breast cancer is one person out of 100.
Yet the statistically the relative risk reduction is 50 percent because one is 50 percent of two. In other words, the risk is cut in half from a relative point of view but it isn't impressive when you look at how many actual women from 100 are saved from a non lethal local recurrence.
Again, this is just a hypothetical figure to make the point on how the calculate relative risk.
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