What treatment did you get from your doctor?

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hlya
hlya Member Posts: 484

I am asking this question on behalf of a woman living in a third world country and doesn't understand English.  She really wants to know what kind of treatments the women living in advanced countries get when you have the same/similar situation. 

The following is her dx,  and we would like to hear from you if you have the same dx, it will help her to make decisions: 

 55 yo, post-menopausal

IDC, grade 3, stage 1, tumor 2cm x 2cm,   many DCIS found at the dx with IDC,   0/23

ER 50%, PR 30%, HER2 negative (1+)

Thank you

Comments

  • dogeyed
    dogeyed Member Posts: 884
    edited July 2011

    Please visiit our own website's information on suggested treatment for your friend's type of breast cancer, it is in the menu across the very top of this page for "Treatment & Side Effects," it will give you the most reliable information.  "Symptoms & Diagnosis" might be good to read, too.  Anyhow, the treatment section has a good introductory page, and then you choose from various menus the areas you want to see more info on.  Just in case it's hard to find this info, here is the link to the treatment section:

    http://www.breastcancer.org/treatment/

    My diagnosis is at the bottom of my post, as it is for many others who post.  I cannot comment on the ER, PR, or HER part.  But I have a similar diagnosis to your friend, and I'm 60 years old, and this is the treatment my cancer surgeon arrranged for me: 

    1.  Five months of chemotherapy, which included four infusions of Adriamycin (doxorubicin) and Cytoxan (cyclophosphamide), each three weeks apart; then twelve infusions of Taxol (paclitaxel), each one week apart. 

    2.  Surgery, which I agreed to a mastectomy, is surgical removal of the affected breast, as well as enlarged/cancerous lymph nodes on up into the armpit.

    3.  Six weeks of DAILY radiation, which is directed to the affected area where the breast was.

    Many years ago, and depending on the diagnosis, surgery would come before chemo.  In today's time, chemotherapy first can provide the best chance for survival, but again it depends on the diagnosis.  Chemotherapy can be hard on a person, but there are medicines typically used to assist with things like pain control, tranquilizers for nerves, anti-nausea medicine, and shots to increase blood cell counts that are depleted with chemotherapy.  I hope your friend can get some sort of successful treatment for her cancer, and I hope she gets well soon.  GG 

  • voraciousreader
    voraciousreader Member Posts: 7,496
    edited July 2011

    Look at the 2011 NCCN breast cancer treatment guidelines....

    She's also a candidate for the OncotypeDX test....which has been recently written into the NCCN guidelines for cases like hers.

  • hlya
    hlya Member Posts: 484
    edited July 2011

     dogeyed

     Thank you very much for the post!
    Actually she wants me to ask couple of women (real person) what treaments they got instead of reading stas. Thank you for sharing your treatment. I will let her know.

     voraciousreader

    May I know where/what is NCCN?

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