How many of you have family history?

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  • DocBabs
    DocBabs Member Posts: 775
    edited January 2011

    No first degree cancer BUT multiple first cousins, all on my mother's side..breast and bladder cancer in cousin diagnosed before age 50, uterine cancer , now with mets also diagnosed before age 50, 2 males with bladder cancer.I have ALH and LCIS and Barretts esophogus.I have no idea what's going on in my father's side!

  • Gitane
    Gitane Member Posts: 1,885
    edited January 2011

    I recently found out that there is some breast cancer on my father's side.  He had 5 brothers.  Of the 6 boys, 3 of them had daughters.  3 daughters from 3 different brothers were diagnosed with BC.  We didn't discover this until recently as I was the first diagnosis.  The other 2 were diagnosed under age 50, me at age 57.  I was tested for BRCA and was negative.  Makes you wonder, though.

  • sgreenarch
    sgreenarch Member Posts: 528
    edited February 2011

    I tested neg for BRCA 1 & 2 despite having 8 cousins descended from grandmother's mother's family, all Slovakian, Ashkenazi Jewish who've had BC, four of them were tested and all were neg. for these known genes. Because of this I decided someone had to do the extended gene sequencing test (not covered by ins.) I did it and they found 2 mutations on the BRCA 2 gene but said that at this time they are not known in any databases to be harmful mutations, but that I should keep in touch with them in the future. I don't have any immediate relatives with BC (though Mom had lung cancer and Dad had leukemia and prostate cancer - both long term survivors by the way, YAY!) Also, my Mom took DES through the first trimester of her pregnancy with me, so could be environmental in my case and not genetic altogether. I just wanted to know, though, as I have a daughter. I guess we all want to know what caused this and we may not know, at least in our generation.

  • GabbyCal
    GabbyCal Member Posts: 277
    edited March 2011

    No cancer (breast or other) anywhere in my family. Everyone lives into their 90's. So I'm the first.

  • erika70
    erika70 Member Posts: 3
    edited May 2011

    My family history

    - maternal grandmother died from breast cancer at 61

    - mother dx uterine cancer at 52, died at 56

    - my younger sister dx ovarian cancer at 67

  • Sunrisesunset
    Sunrisesunset Member Posts: 1
    edited July 2011

     Hello , I'm a worrier at this point , the DR has found a lump 2 inches long and 1 in. wide in my rt. breast.Rectangle shaped.  What upsets me so much is that I have told the DR. about this several times and she finally decides to do blood work and testing on the 28th of this month. Everyone in my family has died of CA. , I'm 53 years old , Just lost my baby brother two years ago.. all3 of my brothers were told they had CA on the same month. Maybe I'm worry too much at this time. I'm just trying to relax and it's so hard.

  • Gitane
    Gitane Member Posts: 1,885
    edited July 2011

    Hello Sunrisesunset,  How hard it must be to wait for information about this.  Cancer strikes many families, which makes it even more difficult. We know much more about the disease and we are more vulnerable to the emotions.  There is almost a kind of survivor's guilt.  I'm sorry you are going through this.  I hope you can hold on to the thought that this might not be serious, and that you are healthy.  Hoping for the best,  G.

  • elmcity69
    elmcity69 Member Posts: 998
    edited July 2011

    hi sunrisesunset,

    i'm so sorry you're going through this - and frustration with the doctor is adding to it. it is hard to relax - it's normal to worry and ruminate on things both past and present.

    gitane is right - hold on to the thought that this could be benign, and that many lumps are.

    most of all, try to remember there is lots of support and caring on this board - just check in and let us know how you are. you're on my prayer list!

  • xanadu925
    xanadu925 Member Posts: 1
    edited September 2011

    Ugly family history--I'm a fourth generation breast cancer victim. My mother died at the ripe old age of 41 from breast cancer, my dad had a mastectomy at 71, maternal aunt, maternal first cousin, my youngest sister. I've been genetically tested twice--it was negative--so they just haven't found my mutant gene. I had stage 1 ER+ ductal carcinoma in 1998, lumpectomy, radiation, tamoxifen. In June I was diagnosed with triple negative, grade 3, stage 1b. Bilateral mastectomies a few weeks ago, chemo starts in the next few weeks.

  • Lissa123
    Lissa123 Member Posts: 10
    edited November 2011

    Hello, I am new to the Forum.

     My mum had b/c 20 years ago.  she had a lump which was 1.8cm, it turned out to be a G3.  The surgeon did a quadrantectomy, he removed 5cm of tissue. She then had r/t 6 weeks and zoladex which was an injection in your ovaries for 14 months,  no tamoxifen.  at the time there was no sentinel biopsy so they removed all her lymph-nodes but they were all negative, hence no need for chemio. Twenty years later she is doing well.  the surgery was in italy as i am Italian.

  • Galsal
    Galsal Member Posts: 1,886
    edited January 2012

    Mother had breast cancer in 1999, still alive.  Her Sister died of colon cancer.  Her Father had prostate cancer.  His Brother died of leukemia and his Mother died of some kind of cancer.  None known of on my Father's side, but his Father died when he was five so very little is known.

  • beth1965
    beth1965 Member Posts: 455
    edited June 2012

    Hi- i am the only one in my family with breast cancer.

    Cancer has not effected much of any of my family the only one i can find is my grandmothers  sister had ovarian cancer -thats it

  • Anonymous
    Anonymous Member Posts: 1,376
    edited June 2012

    I am also the first in my family.  After talking with the docs and finding out the percentage of patients that do not have a history, I was curious to know why they even bother to put that question on the medical history sheets!  It would have been more important for them to know that I am prone to staff infections after surgery and that was no where on the list.  When I went in for my port the general surgeon had to treat the infection from the mastectomy too!  He said it is very important to know if you have a history of staff so they give you the right antibiotics during surgery.

  • Ellie1959
    Ellie1959 Member Posts: 316
    edited June 2012

    My Mom is an 18 year survivor of Lobular BC - I know this because we had the same surgeon - and I am 6.5 years out - !!!

  • Momine
    Momine Member Posts: 7,859
    edited June 2012

    My father has had skin and prostate cancer, and lost a kidney last year with a pre-cancerous giant tumor on it.



    My father's twin has had testicle, skin, bowel and bladder cancer.



    My father's sister died from skin cancer in her eye.



    Their mother died from bladder cancer, and everyone almost in her family died from some sort of cancer, including breast cancer in one of her sisters.



    My mother had ovarian cancer 5 years ago.



    My mother's sister had uterine, breast and lung cancer diagnosed 18 months ago. They were 3 separate cancers, but one of them metastasized 6 months ago, so she and I were doing taxotere at the same time.



    My mother and aunt both test negative for BRCA. A few months after my DX, a study came out linking lobular breast cancer to prostate and/or testicle and/or bladder and/or skin and/or bowel cancer in the father. Since the twins have every cancer on that list, I figure that is the genetic link.

    I always figured i would get cancer, given the family history, but I thought it would wait till my 60s like it has done for everyone else. Instead I got slammed while still in my 40s. Oh well!

  • mary625
    mary625 Member Posts: 1,056
    edited June 2012

    Conversely, how many of us don't have family history? Neither my mother nor father had cancer.  My sister does not have it.  My father's brother had colon cancer.  My mother's mother had uterine cancer and died from it at age 44, but I am told that it is not related to breast cancer.  None of my mother's siblings had cancer.  One first cousin on that side recently was diagnosed with a form of leukemia.  I tested negative for BRCA1 and BRCA2.  It never crossed my mind that I would get this disease.  Nonetheless, I was at the doctor and the mammo every year.  However, my ILC escaped detection.  Same old story. 

  • Chocolaterocks
    Chocolaterocks Member Posts: 364
    edited June 2012

    My mom had breast cancer at age 62 -ductal, lcis and more,my aunt has breast cancer at 71, my greatgrandmother had bc....nothing else known. My other grandmother had bc in her 80/s.

    I had every every brca test and they are all negative....

    I am an Ashekanzi Jew as well.

    I do worry about my daughter.

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