Stage 1 and Mets
Comments
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Okay, that link worked, but I'd have to buy a subscription to log on! That ain't going to happen...sigh.
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Barbe I didn't buy a subscription! Why not try again to register. I registered a few months ago. Perhaps they will update the patient guide shortly. What did you want to know?
Janet -- The changes from 2010 to 2011 for Mucinous and Tubular was that adjuvant endocrine therapy was not indicated for ER + tumors less than 1 cm that were node negative or less than 2mm in one or more lymph node. For tumors between 1cm and 2.9 they said to consider adjuvant endocrine therapy and for tumors over 3cm - adjuvant hormone therapy + adjuvant chemotherapy.
In 2010 they were recommending more aggressive therapy. I also noticed for 2011 that they included using the oncotype DX score for the more traditional ER + tumors. That's a first. However, they didn't include using the Oncotype DX score for mucinous and tubular tumors. Hmmm...
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oh - Janet -- for those mucinous and tubular ER + less than 1cm, there was a footnote that said you could consider adjuvant endocrine therapy for "risk reduction and to diminish the small risk of disease recurrence." So, one sentence said you don't need it...but at the very end of the sentence it puts a footnote that says you could consider it. I guess that's why we need an experienced oncologist to sort these guidelines out. And often we need the opinion of a second or third doctor.
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Thank you voracious for the correction - didn't realize mucinous/tubular was so different -- learned something new. My apologies Dee!!!
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Voraciousreader...thank you for the links! It looks like my onc followed somewhat standard procedure, but it 'does' say that adjuvant endocrine therapy could be considered for risk reduction....will be checking into that with much more assertiveness!
Thank you Barbe and Janet for responding also. I will be searching the forum for the mucinous threads.
Happy New Year to each of you...may this be the year of the cure....
Dee
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When you are diagnosed with breast cancer, you can never be sure it is totally gone. It has been estimated that a patient with invasive breast cancer must be followed up for at least 25 years before cure can be implied.
Most of the prognoses we are given are for 5 year survival rates, and some are based on 7 and 10 years, and these look very good - something like 87% Overall Survival rate for Stage I & 75% for Stage II. Then we get stats from Adjuvant that indicate that after treatment, the 10 year survival rates can be as much as 92% for Stage I.
But then I found the following statements on CancerMonthly. It does not have a reference to show what study it came from:
"Nearly half of all patients who are treated for apparently localized breast cancer develop metastatic disease. And half of all initial cancer recurrences occur more than 5 years after initial therapy. Although a very small number of these patients can enjoy long remissions when treated with combinations of systemic and local therapy, most eventually succumb to their cancer. http://www.cancermonthly.com/cancer_basics/breast.asp
That shocked me - half develop metastatic disease?! So, does this mean then that the 5-10 year stats look very good, but decline after that? I think most of us are under the impression that the 92% stats we are given from the onc hold true longer than the 5-10 year mark, but apparently that is not the case. I do know that they just don't have reliable studies much beyond the 10 year mark, but this was a wake-up call to me.
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nannadee-
I think, since pure tubular and pure mucinous breast cancers are classified as "favorable," the logic for recommending adjuvant endocrine therapy is geared more at preventing cancer in the other breast in addition to preventing the small risk of distant recurrence. I would bring that up with your physician when you see him/her.
Based on the newest 2011 NCCN guidelines, it appears that I'm being overtreated. But since I haven't had any side effects so far from adjuvant endocrine therapy, I'm going to continue the course. What disappoints me about the new guidelines is that the Oncotype DX test isn't being recommended for those of us with ER + tubular or mucinous breast cancers. I really have to think this one through.
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Remember, Oncotype testing is done ONLY if you are going to take Tamoxifen for at least 5 years. That is what their numbers are based on....treatment WITH Tamoxifen. I am post-menopausal and didn't get Tamoxifen.
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Barbe1958 --
The latest NCCN 2011 Guidelines, not including the Oncotype DX test simply does not make sense to me for people like myself who have mucinous or tubular breast cancer that is ER +. I know that the test isn't validated as well for our type of cancer as it is for more "traditional" breast cancer. However, the folks that designed the Oncotype DX test did some post-marketing survey of the rare "favorable" breast cancers and the results were as follows:
Genomic Signatures in
Pathologically Favorable Breast Cancer Subtypes
"Baehner and colleagues[10] reported the postmarketing experience regarding
the Oncotype DX RS in patients with favorable histologic breast cancer
subtypes. Of the 25,475 tumors tested over nearly a 2-year period and reviewed
by academic breast pathologists, about 80% were pure ductal histology: most
(94.5%) were either ductal, lobular, or mixed histologies and about 5% were
less common subtypes. Compared with the median RS for ductal carcinoma (18.2),
median RS was significantly lower for classic lobular (17.5), solid/alveolar
lobular (16.1), mixed ductal/lobular (17.4), tubular (15.2), cribiform (13.7),
mucinous (16.6), and papillary (7.8) subtypes. It was higher for the medullary-like
(33.1) subtype. RS ranged in most subtypes from a low of < 10 (usually ≤ 3)
to a high of approximately 60 to 90 in most subtypes, except tubular cancers,
which rarely had high RS. Although tubular cancers exhibited somewhat lower
median quantitative ER expression than ductal cancers (9.2 vs 9.7), their
proliferation scores were substantially lower (4.3 vs 5.3). This report
provides some insight into the biologic characteristics of less common breast
cancer subtypes"From looking at those data, it would seem to me with those average "low" scores, patients would still benefit taking the Oncotype DX test AND having adjuvant endocrine therapy.
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Meg, those cancer monthly statistics look wrong to me. If there were 216,000 Invasive BC cases in 2004 then since over 5 years have passed, there should be around 100,000 deaths each year. The death rate has stabilised at about 40,000. In similar countries, UK, Canada and Australia there are consistently around 4 to 5 diagnosed cases to every death each year.
If more elderly women get it than younger then there may be a percentage of women dying from other causes after getting mets which would upset the statistics, but surely not by such a huge amount.
One in 4 or 5 looks much more likely and a lot less scary.
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Meg that was always my understanding that although you are given a 5 or 10 year range of NED there is no cure. Those stats are not completely accurate depending on your specific case and what you choose for therapy. It also appears that once hormone negative cancers pass the 3-5 year mark their risk of recurrence is much lower than ER+ cancers.
Here are some other links that might help out with understanding risk/recurrence. Thing is you don't know what medical science will do in the next 5-10 years. Best to do what you can to keep your recurrence risk down and live your life.
Breast Cancer Recurrence | Background Information
http://www.gaeainitiative.eu/word_page/BC_Recurrence.htm
Lists risk factors for recurrance.Breast cancer recurrence seen as low after 5 years
http://www.reuters.com/article/idUSN1248209720080812
The study found that women who had tumors known as estrogen receptor positive, in which the hormone estrogen is driving the tumor, had a higher risk of these late recurrences compared to women whose tumors were not this type.Women who had low-grade, or less aggressive, tumors, actually had a higher risk of late recurrence than women who had higher grade tumors, Brewster said. "That was certainly a finding that we were surprised to see,"
Risk of Recurrence in Early Breast Cancer
http://www.lifeabc.org/risk_recurrence_more.html------------------------------------------
All I can do is take a chance the therapy will work and hope the odds (for a change) are in my favor for long survival. I may have no nodes or LVI but I do have high grade, ER+, large tumor, high proliferation rate and HER2+. Not good but I'm still not going to spend the rest of my life no matter how long/little I have worrying about it unless it happens.
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voraciousreader, with regard to the use of the Oncotype test, it appears that the authors of the guidelines do not feel that there are sufficient clinicial trial results yet to recommend it's use more broadly. Additionally, they say that Oncotype scores should be used "for decision-making only in the context of other elements of risk stratification for an individual patient". See their explanation on page 84. Their recommendation on the use of the Oncotype test is a "Category 2A" recommendation, which means that there is uniform consensus among the all the doctors who author the guidelines, based on lower-level evidence (i.e. validated research results but not randomized clinical trials). While Category 1 recommendations are ideal (uniform consensus based on high-level evidence, i.e. randomized clinical trials), as a rule they aim for at least Category 2A recommendations (see page 64). My guess is that the Oncotype results you quoted for those with more rare types of BC simply haven't met the burden of proof for enough of the doctors to reach "uniform consensus".
For anyone who is new to using the NCCN Guidelines, you will notice that they use the terms "recommend" and "consider" a lot. When they say "recommend", it means that they believe that the treatment should be given, i.e. they've assessed that the benefits outweigh the risks for patients who fit the criteria. When they say "consider", it means that patients who fit the criteria fall into the grey zone with regard to risk/benefit and decisions on whether or not to have the treatment need to be individualized. When a treatment simply isn't noted for a particular group, it means that they've assessed that the risks outweigh the benefits for that group.
By the way, if you bookmark the link, you will get the latest version of the guidelines whenever they are updated. So you don't have to worry about having an outdated link. Recently the guide changed from Version 1-2011 to 2-2011. Also, note that near the beginning of the document, starting on page 4, there is an explanation of changes made in 2011 vs. 2010.
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Beesie - Your logic is duly noted. Without a doubt, I agree that the clinicians have a hard time figuring out a treatment plan for the rarer breast cancers simply because aren't enough clinical trials for our type of cancers. I'm just happy that there are a few researchers who have taken on the joy of studying rare favorable breast cancers so they can help guide clinicians. I now look forward to seeing the 2012 NCCN Guidelines...to be continued!
Happy New Year!
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Beesie --- One other thought. As you probably recall my husband has a rare "orphan" illness. I want to bring attention to the logic that the physicians use in coming up with treatment plans when there are only a handful of people to treat. The threshold used is quite different. We work closely with the FDA and are always looking for ANY statistical significance within our tiny group to guide treatment. It's very complicated how to treat people when there are fewer than 1000 people WORLDWIDE diagnosed with a disorder. That's why when I look at the rigors of the NCCN guidelines and there are tens of thousands of women with rare breast cancers, I can't understand why there is so little consensus. Just like with our "orphan" illnesses, there needs to be a better way of getting a handle on the statistics to guide treatment plans for the rarer breast cancers.
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http://www.rarediseases.org/news/speeches/workshop_ultraorph_gen_disease
Beesie - When you have a moment, read the link above, so you will understand what I'm talking about. Thanks!
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Iago those were GREAT links and validated what I've been saying! There is a higher recurrence rate in lower stage women than grade 3s. There is more risk AFTER the 5 year mark for ER+ women. Very cool to see both those facts in one article!!! It gave me a chance of recurrance rate after 5 years of 32.4%. I am on no hormonals......they did not consider micromets to nodes either, so I don't know if that increases my odds even more!
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Barbe there are so many factors that increase or decrease our risk. Here are a few that certainly effect that 5+/10+ recurrence risk:
* Larger tumor* High tumor grade
* Node involvement
* High mitotic rate
* LVI
* HER2+
* ER+/PR+ (long term risk)I'm not putting my head in the sand since I have 5 of those above factors but again I can only live my life and do what I need to do to remain healthy… and of course hope I have some luck for a change or medical science finds a cure before I have issues. I'm only 49 and otherwise in perfect health. Statistically a good chance I will live long enough to get it again but that doesn't mean I will.
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Iago, I'm only 52 with 2 new grandbabies (3 mos old - different daughters) and another on the way in March. 3 Grandsons in 6 months. I am far too stubborn to die! I have kept up with the bone mets ladies as that's where I believe it will recur if it does as I am already compromised by horrendous arthritis (which, as we know, is an immune system issue). My liver was compromised by Tylenol poisoning for years before I got a better doctor who wasn't afraid to prescribe narcotics. I don't drink so I hope my liver is healing. I don't smoke either but I have trouble with the exercise as I am bad enough with the arthritis to use a cane and even wheelchair. I need to lose weight. That is my albatross.
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Barbe, I very rarely drink (can count the number of glasses of wine in a year on one hand). I have put on a few since chemo and the onc is not concerned. I was in excellent shape when I started this journey, eating right, lots of exercise both stregnth and aerobic. The docs kept telling me how thin I was. (Actually healthy weight not thin). I quit smoking over 5 years ago. I'm 49 almost 50.
Weight loss is hard. It took me 6 months just to lose the last 6lbs with both diet and exercise. Just be patient and don't give up. It is easier for some and harder for others. I've never really been overweight so I know I have it easier plus don't have the added issue you have… but every little bit helps. You don't need to be skinny just healthy.
We do the best we can do. I was leading a very healthy life style. I was told my cancer started abotu 4 years ago ( fast grower). Yes that would mean it started after I quit smoking. I was in 2 really stressful jobs but still didn't pick up smoking again. Guess stress can really do a job on our systems. My point, it's not just about physical health but mental health too.
I know I have to die some day I just don't want it to be by cancer. I given the choice it would be firing squad and not for quite some time yet ;-)… and Barbe I know you get my humor.
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Sheila - I agree - those stats look too high, and since they have not provided supporting documentation I am going to ignore them.
Iago - thanks for those links. I agree, they were great. I need some time to process the information since for some reason, this morning I do not want to think about it. :-) Thank you for providing the links.
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Thanks lago, voracious & others for those links. I guess the best we can hope for is that a breakthrough will occur before the 5 yr end of tamox, AI & other treatments that can continue to prevent recurrence at that point. I don't believe the hormonal therapies make you more likely to have a recurrence once you stop the treatment (which some people tend to imply) -- I think the bounce in stats mean they have just been delaying the onset of a recurrence. In my opinion, the breast cancer awareness movement carries some responsibility making most people believe that '5 year survival' somehow means you're home free. I heard an ad for the spring Avon walk & at least their marketing centers around ending this 'deadly disease.'
What keeps me up at night is Dr.Klaus Pantel presentation at San Antonio - that 36% of women with treated early breast cancer and no clinical signs of disease have circulating tumor cells in their bone marrow and that they are different from the original tumor! I have not seen anyone post on bco that they had a bone marrow test at an early stage - how did they know about all these women!!!??
http://www.knowbreastcancer.org/news-research/news/advocate-reports-from-sabcs-2010.html
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Janet, my mastectomy samples had Isolated Tumour Cells in them which is also a conern. If they were in my breasts they were probably other places. I have heard though, that we ALL have cancer cells circulating in our bodies and it's just when they get "turned on" that the problems start.
I hate when I hear women applauding themselves that the cancer wasn't in their nodes. They think they're home free or something. I would like to have known that my nodes were doing what they were supposed to do! How do those women not realize that the cells can travel by the blood stream instead and never be caught by the lymph nodes. Much scarier.
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voraciousreader, thanks for that link. Very interesting.
The issue of how to deal with orphan diseases is complicated because so few people have these diseases and therefore it is impossible to set up clinical trials or research studies under "normal" conditions and with "normal" criteria. I understand that issue but I don't think that rare breast cancers fall into the same category. Breast cancer is such a common disease that even "rare" breast cancers are actually quite common. Approx. 1.3 million women are diagnosed with breast cancer every year worldwide; this means that a rare form of breast cancer found in only 1% of women with breast cancer will still affect 13,000 women per year. Given this, I can appreciate why the medical community would not want to change their standards or lower their burden of proof before recommending changes to the treatment plan for rare breast cancers.
I think the real issue is that there are not enough breast cancer researchers who are consciously choosing to include women with these rare cancers in their studies. The fact is that when you develop a research study, you get to decide who you want to include in the study. A particular type of rare BC may only be found in 1% of women with BC however there is no reason why researchers can't choose to oversample in order to ensure that there are enough women in their study with this particular type of BC, so that the results at least stand a chance of being significant and hitting the "burden of proof" standards.
As for the NCCN Guidelines, you have to keep in mind that these are only guidelines, the base from which an individual's treatment plan should start to be developed. I've been referring to the NCCN guidelines for years; I like the guide because it represents "standard of care" guidelines against which we can compare our own treatment plans. But because they represent "standard of care", I've never considered them to be leading edge, nor do I think that they should be. The fact is that I've read lots of really interesting research studies over the past few years with results that are not yet incorporated into the NCCN guidelines. This is where individual doctor's judgements need to come into play, and where individual patient's interests and preferences need to come into play. There are situations where it makes sense for doctors to apply the latest findings to the treatment plan, and situations where that's not necessary and/or advisable. As an example, the Oncotype test just this year is making it into the guidelines however many doctors have been basing their chemo recommendations on the Oncotype test for several years now. Perhaps in a year or two, when more research results are available, the guidelines will be changed to include the Oncotype test for some of the more rare BCs. In the meantime, there is no reason why an individual doctor can't refer to the study that you referenced and use that to adjust a patient's treatment plan.
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I posted this on the tamoxifen thread about the 'father of tamoxifen,' Dr. Jordan, and what he is researching now. Has relevance here as good discussion about after 5 yrs on hormone therapy & how to keep one step ahead of cancer. He is definitely a researcher to watch in terms of the next breakthrough.
http://www2.georgetown.edu/gumc/lombardi/magazine/89327.html
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Beesie - Baehner and colleagues work for the folks who make the Oncotype DX test. I worry that their continued postmarketing surveillance will be hindered because now insurance companies will be less inclined to cover the cost of the test for people with mucinous and tubular breast cancers since it was sidelined in the 2011 NCCN guidelines. I know that when I had the test, initially, my insurance company didn't want to cover the cost. Thankfully, it was appealed and paid. I've read through other insurance companies guidelines and many of them single out mucinous and tubular and do not want to cover the cost.
I've been in touch with one of the blessed researchers of rare breast cancers. She echoes the sentiments of a number of the researchers that I have come to know on my husband's journey. Very little money for research and even fewer researchers and clinicians interested in making a career out of "rare" disorders.
We'll see what the new year brings. Hopefully, one day, there will be a cure.
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I do know that I was told to consider my Papillary Carcinoma as IDC so that's the way I was treated.
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