DCIS...some thoughts...

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  • afield
    afield Member Posts: 22
    edited July 2011

    DeeLJ - welcome to the other side.  Hope the rest of your recovery goes smoothly and look forward to seeing more of your thoughts as you move through this process.

  • Kristi_in_MO
    Kristi_in_MO Member Posts: 42
    edited July 2011

    Jen42 - You are not a Debbie Downer!  That does pull at your emotions.  My best friend and I have always had jokes in looking back at old pictures that we wish we'd have appreciated what we had when we had it!!!!!!

  • AnneWisc
    AnneWisc Member Posts: 476
    edited July 2011

    I'm telling people "I'm cured - until the next time."

    Right now I am seeing a specialist OT for lymphedema.  It's not from cancer treatment.  I have had several other surgeries and my worst symptoms are in my legs and feet.  So I don't actually feel I fit in on the Lymphedema forums here, where they are all talking about arms and hands.  

    But the amount of STUFF I will have to do with all the bandaging, massaging, spanx, rewinding bandages, washing all these items ... has me a little overwhelmed.  It does improve the swelling and make me feel a little better, but I'm overwhelmed and discouraged that I have this new set of rules to live by.

    When I see people opting for BMX for a small case of DCIS, I wonder if they know the whole picture.  The amount of tissue removal with potential for scarring, infection, and the very extensive disruption of the lymphatic system, these are reasons to consider a more conservative surgery.  You only have to read the posts from women who went through a reconstruction, had problems, finally giving up and having the whole thing taken out and opting for flat ... when you realize it's not a sure thing at all.  

  • DeeLJ
    DeeLJ Member Posts: 182
    edited July 2011

    Anne, I hear what you are saying and lymphedema is nothing to shake your tail at. I am sorry you are dealing with so much of it!

    In my case, the docs didn't need to take any nodes so they told me that my risk of lymphedema is pretty low in relation to others who have had nodes removed. They did have the band on my right arm (which is the side where the dcis was) and said that they just want to avoid using it but they didn't do any lymph node removal.

  • DeeLJ
    DeeLJ Member Posts: 182
    edited July 2011

    OK Im a survivor.

    My patho. report from my mastectomy just came back. No new cancer (PHEW) but my affected breast was 'loaded' with precancerous cells...and they were all through my unaffected breast too but less than on the right.

    So it would have come back, and maybe with a vengeance. The doc just told me we absolutely did the right thing.

  • julianna51
    julianna51 Member Posts: 438
    edited July 2011

    DeeLJ - That affirmation of having done the right thing is always so good and you're not left with the questions in your mind of if you did made the right choice or not.   I know that many think a BMX is overkill for DCIS but those of us that have done it have our reasons and and comforted in the knowledge of that.

  • DeeLJ
    DeeLJ Member Posts: 182
    edited August 2011

    Julianna you are so right. I would be happy even if both of my breasts came back squeaky clean but now I have a sense of peace that maybe I wouldn't have found..and maybe wouldn't have been looking for anyway but still..

  • Jen42
    Jen42 Member Posts: 246
    edited August 2011

    DeeLJ -- wow, you must be so relieved you went with BMX, considering your path report. WHEW. That's the tricky thing about breast cancer...doctors can't know what's really going on in there...

    Regarding lymphedema comments...I'm same as DeeLJ, no nodes were taken so my risk of that complication was very low. And I had no complications of any sort after surgery, very lucky -- all these "little things" help one feel validated in their choice, I think. Deciding on BMX for early-stage cancer is such a huge decision, there are so many pros and cons to weigh...my angst at that time between diagnosis and surgery is still fresh in my mind. But, as I've said before, I don't regret my decision -- I regret having had to make any decisions regarding cancer at all.

    Ann -- so sorry to hear what you are going thru...the lymphedema of the lower extremeties (not breast cancer-related). Now you have to deal with that -- I would be overwhelmed and discouraged, too! -- and then you feel like you don't really fit on the LE threads. Come here and vent anytime !

  • afield
    afield Member Posts: 22
    edited August 2011

    DeeLJ - wow, glad there was no new cancer, and also glad that you are able to see what a big  bullet you dodged.  I felt the same way about my path report - although I guess I was even a bit more glad to have had proof that my UMX was the right choice.   If it had come back cleaner than expected, I think I might not have been quite as fully at peace as you.  It sounds awful to wish bad things on yourself, and I don't really, but I still felt better.

  • mybee333
    mybee333 Member Posts: 1,189
    edited August 2011

    I just read through this whole thread.  Wonderful.  So much of this I could have written myself.  I  had a rt. MX w/ TE's - no chemo. no rads. And yet how traumatic so much of this has been! The worry, the decision making, the heartbreaking loss of my breast and my fears re: the AI I know MUST take and the potential for side effects,the potential for a recurrence.  And outwardly - I am told how good I look.  This is very comforting, yes, but few really know the true emotional and physical impact of this surgery and diagnosis. I am grateful too that my BC was found early, was highly treatable and that we have the option of reconstruction, so recently unavailable to women in the past who had disfiguring and debilitating mastectomies.  But recognizing the positives does not negate the overall impact.  BC.org has been such a wonderful support for me as I have gone and continue to go through this process. 

    Hugs to all of you,

    Molly

  • dancetrancer
    dancetrancer Member Posts: 4,039
    edited August 2011

    Just read through this entire thread as well.  So many things rang true for me.  I don't have much to say as I feel kind of emotionally "spent" right now, except for thank you for sharing your thoughts.  So helpful to know I'm not alone with all these feelings.  

  • mybee333
    mybee333 Member Posts: 1,189
    edited August 2011

    The waiting is one of the hardest parts.  Good luck to you as you wait for results and try to have patience.  If I had to do it over again, I would spend much more time staying busy.  In the end much was decided for me by a competent medical team and my medical test results and individual situation.  The internet searching made me informed but I spent a lot of time reasearching things that ultimately didn't apply to me.  This site, though has been very helpful for the support. My best to you.  The first few weeks are tough.

  • kathyob
    kathyob Member Posts: 36
    edited September 2011

    I have an odd question, or I think it may be anyway:) I saw my oncologist and I asked him about my future odds. He said that a woman who has never had breast cancer has a 1 in 8 chance...and after surgery, radiation and tamoxifen, a woman with DCIS has about a 10 % chance. Can that be that our chances are better than someone who has never had it? I am confused...thank you in advance!!

  • LisaAlissa
    LisaAlissa Member Posts: 1,092
    edited September 2011

    kathyob,

    Interesting question.  That 1 in 8 statistic (12.5% risk) is a little misleading.  That lifetime risk number takes into account both the much smaller risk for younger women (for example, 1 in 233 or .43% for women aged 30-39) as well as risking probabilities for older women.

    Because age affects risk at any particular moment, I'd check w/ your oncologist to see if the risk number he gave you was a lifetime risk number or a number specifically for you after those treatments.

    LisaAlissa 

  • mom3band1g
    mom3band1g Member Posts: 817
    edited September 2011

    I have heard that after treatment for DCIS most women end up with about a 1-2% chance of recurrence.

  • Beesie
    Beesie Member Posts: 12,240
    edited September 2011

    kathyob,

    First, there are two risks that have to be considered - recurrence risk (a recurrence of the original cancer) and the risk of a new primary cancer. These are completely different.  The 1 in 8 stat refers to new cancer risk so I assume that this is what your oncologist was talking about.  

    What my oncologist told me is that someone who has been diagnosed with breast cancer, whether it was DCIS or invasive breast cancer, has approx. double the chance of the 'average woman her age' to get breast cancer again (a new diagnosis, not a recurrence of the original cancer).  

    So building on LisaAlissa's comment, I was diagnosed at the age of 49. The average 49 year old has an 11% (or 1 in 9) of chance of getting breast cancer through the remainder of her life (to age 90).  This meant that my risk was about 22%.  The good news is that for every year we are not diagnosed, our risk goes down.  This is a concept called "leaving risk behind".  This isn't often well explained but I was lucky that my oncologist explained it to me. As LisaAlissa explained, BC risk increases with age. That's true - our annual risk does go up. When you are young, your annual risk to get BC is less than 0.1% per year. By the time you are in your 70s, your annual risk is more than 0.3% per year, triple that of a much younger woman. But as you age, because you have fewer years left until you turn 90 (the assumed age of a "natural" death), your lifetime risk goes down. Think of it this way: you can't face a risk for something that has already happened.  Lifetime breast cancer risk covers all the years of your life; as you age, you leave behind the risk for the years that you've already lived.  So although my lifetime risk to get BC again was 22% when I was diagnosed at the age of 49 six years ago, today, having not been diagnosed over these past 6 years, my lifetime risk is down to about 19%. Every year that I'm not diagnosed, my risk continues to drop.

    Of course for each of us our own personal health history and family history needs to be taken into account; this could increase or lower your personal risk. But "double the average" is the general rule that my oncologist told me and one that I've heard over the years from others here who've had this discussion with their oncologists.  Then there are oncologists like yours who say something completely different. I'd rather than your oncologist be right but I suspect that there's more truth in our having more risk (than the average woman) now that we've been diagnosed, rather than less risk.  

  • kathyob
    kathyob Member Posts: 36
    edited September 2011

    Thank you all very much. I so appreciate your help with this subject. I knew that couldn't be right, and sometimes with my oncologist I feel a bit put off. He seems nice enough so I don't know if it's me not being forward enough with my questions, or him. I sometimes feel as if I have "cancer lite" where he is concerned. He mentioned several times that if I want to go off tamoxifen it's reallky no big deal because my condition wasn't life threatening. I don't even know what to think about that because I thought part of the reason I'm on it is because I am such a higher risk for a new BC and that that cuts that risk. Thanks again guys:)

  • Beesie
    Beesie Member Posts: 12,240
    edited September 2011

    kathyob,  you are right about Tamoxifen being helpful to you because you have a higher risk of getting a new BC, but your oncologist is also right that Tamoxifen is optional for you particularly because you had DCIS and DCIS isn't life threatening.  In fact Tamoxifen has 3 benefits:

    1) It reduces, by about 45%, the risk of a local recurrence, i.e. a recurrence in the breast.  For someone who has high grade DCIS who has a lumpectomy with narrow margins, the risk of a local recurrence, even after radiation, could be quite high.  If the risk is 20%, then Tamoxifen can bring the risk down to 11%.  On the other hand, for someone who has low grade DCIS and has a lumpectomy with good margins, the risk of local recurrence, maybe even without radiation, might be very low.  If the risk is 6%, then Tamoxifen can bring the risk down to 3.3%.  As for those who have a mastectomy, unless the margins are very close, generally the recurrence risk without any other treatment is about 1% - 2%.  So here the 45% recurrence risk reduction from Tamoxifen would work out to be less than 1%, at most.

    2) It reduces the risk of the development of new breast cancer. This is the benefit that you mentioned. As above, the benefit is about a 45% risk reduction but the math isn't quite as simple as in the previous example.  Tamoxifen is taken for 5 years. Last I checked, the studies had shown that it retains it's full benefit for at least 10 years and maybe as long as 15 years but studies have also shown that eventually the benefit wears off. Most local recurrences happen with the first 5 years and the vast majority happen within 10 - 15 years and for this reason it's fair to calculate the 45% recurrence risk reduction against your full recurrence risk. But the risk of the development of a new BC is different - this risk is spread over the rest of your life, which for most of us covers a much longer period.  My 22% risk to develop BC again (referenced in my earlier post) was spread over 41 years, from age 49 to age 90. If I assume that I'd get the full 45% risk reduction for 15 years and 1/2 of that benefit for the next 5 years, this works out to only about a 4% reduction in risk, from 22% to 18%.  Of course all of the risk reduction benefit is within the next 20 years so this is not insignificant.  And for someone with a higher risk level, the benefit would be greater.  But still, the amount that Tamoxifen reduces the risk of a new breast cancer is not a great as most women think (and as many doctors imply when they recommend Tamox. to their patients) because the benefit doesn't cover your full lifetime risk.

    3) It reduces the risk of a distant recurrence, i.e. metastasis.  This is the most important benefit and this is the one that your doctor was referring to. Anyone who's had invasive cancer has a risk of mets. For those who have only a small amount of invasive cancer - my case with a microinvasion, for example - the risk is very low, maybe only 1%.  But for those who have larger areas of invasive cancer and/or nodal involvement, the risk might be quite high.  Even a small reduction in the risk of mets is important to most women.  However for those diagnosed with DCIS, there is virtually no risk of mets.  I say "virtually" only because there are rare cases where a microinvasion is missed in the pathology, but assuming that not to be the case, those with pure DCIS face zero chance of mets. This means that the most significant benefit of Tamoxifen simply doesn't apply. And that's why your oncologist said what he did.  

    What it comes down to is that everyone who is deciding on Tamoxifen should consider each of these three areas of risk reduction and determine, with their oncologist, what the benefit is for them in each of the three areas. This benefit should be weighed against the risks that come from taking Tamoxifen - like all drugs, Tamoxifen comes with the risk of some serious side effects, although the percent of people affected is quite low.  Tamoxifen also has quality of life side effects, and these can influence the decision as well.  For someone who had a lumpectomy and who had a large invasive cancer and/or nodal involvement, taking Tamoxifen (or an AI) might be a pretty easy decision.  For someone with DCIS, as you can see, the decision is not always as obvious.  

  • 2Nan
    2Nan Member Posts: 45
    edited October 2011

    Hello Ladies, I had a BMX 1 year ago because of extensive DCIS and I can't believe the minimalized attitudes of some people.  I may not have had to go through chemo or radiation or take tamoxifen but having my breasts removed was no small incident.  DCIS is cancer and it is just as traumatic as any other type of cancer.  The whole should I feel bad or not issue is strictly up to the individual.  My sister died from cancer, she had paget's and she treated herself for 25 years before she died.  She believed in holistic treatment.  She died at the age of 65.  Every person who has had cancer deals with it in their own way.  There should not be any minimalization of any type of cancer. CANCER IS CANCER!!!  I am happy to be able to do the things I can do.  Every day is still a struggle, I still have pain and swelling and sadness, but I also enjoy the good things and try to make every day a better one.  Having said that, I wish you all wellness and peace.

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