Feeling "fooled"...

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  • DivineMrsM
    DivineMrsM Member Posts: 9,620
    edited January 2012

    LittleMelons, there doesn't seem to be any prior information about Charla Krupp's bc on the internet.  Apparently, she never made any public announcement either when first diagnosed at stage i or later when she became stage iv.  

    I started a thread yesterday when I learned she passed away of bc:

    Breast Cancer Topic: Charla Krupp-Fashion author & commentator-Dies of bc

    Here is a link to the Today show segment honoring her memory:

    TODAY: Remembering TODAY friend Charla Krupp

  • DivineMrsM
    DivineMrsM Member Posts: 9,620
    edited January 2012

    I can't seem to get the link to the bc.org thread I started to work, but if you wanted to read the comments you can look up the thread in the search engine here:

    Charla Krupp-Fashion author & commentator-Dies of bc 

  • LittleMelons
    LittleMelons Member Posts: 273
    edited January 2012

    TheDivineMrsM - Thank you very much for providing me with the links.  I watched the video and remember her from the Today show.  She looked amazing for her age.  Very sad.  I googled using a lot of different key words and couldn't find any more background information about her bc on the web.

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

    Heather, I thought the initial diagnosis appt went well.  What struck me was the appt to discuss my options.  The tone was far more serious, after they'd pinpointed the type.

  • 37antiques
    37antiques Member Posts: 643
    edited January 2012

    Goodness yes!  I was told by the BS that she was 99.9% certain I did not have cancer at all, I was 37 and had no risk factors or family history.  After surgery I had DCIS and IDC with her apologies.  When I asked my onc what the percentages were for someone like me having a recurrence or not, he told me he did not see patients like me, I was the youngest he ever had.

    I was never staged, but was told that if I passed 10 years without any recurrence I was cured.  If I listened to them I'd be floating in LaLa land declaring how cured I am.

    Yep, I was fooled, again and again, thank goodness for BCO!!

  • LtotheK
    LtotheK Member Posts: 2,095
    edited January 2012

    This is a really interesting discussion for me.  My opinion is, I think we fool ourselves to some degree when we accept our staging as totally correct.  The medical field admits the staging system is outmoded.  Oncotype has been a step in the right direction--it is certainly throwing a wrench into the general understanding of grade status, for starters.

    This is scary for those of us who have had all the treatments including chemo, too.  All you have to do is a little reading to find out that studies suggest chemo only works when timed appropriately, and they aren't quite sure what that timing is, exactly.  

    The statistics are clear that Stage 1 and 2 have better prognosis than later stage cancers.  But I think what is also becoming clearer is there are many shades of grey in the early stage cancers, many things left to uncover.  I'm not inclined to dig into Ms. Krupp's history, because I have truly accepted that while I have moved forward, I am never safe.  I probably won't die in the next five years--the statistics for Stage IV are not comforting and I think it's a disservice to our sisters to pretend I'm at the same risk as later stage patients--but I accept that anything could happen. 

    Can someone pipe in here:  I have read on these boards you don't jump from your original stage to Stage IV, that you remain stage at diagnosis with mets.  Any clarification on that? 

  • barbe1958
    barbe1958 Member Posts: 19,757
    edited January 2012

    LtotheK, you most certainly DO jump to stage iv if you present with mets. Why wouldn't you? Some ladies do post both diagnoses on their tage line to show their progression to stage iv. A local recurrence isn't classified as stage iv though.

    And you are right about chemo. It's only worthwhile if the cancer is actually growing at the time you get the chemo. As an ER+ patient, which is considered slow growing, I didn't receive chemo. I still don't know what GRADE it was, it's not noted anywhere in my files! An aggressive grade 3, ER+ would probably get chemo as the grade 3 is an aggressive growing cancer. So maybe I should have gotten chemo. Too late now!!

  • IllinoisNancy
    IllinoisNancy Member Posts: 722
    edited January 2012

    Hi,

    I was fooled to believe that my Stage I was not coming back but it did in about 4 years.  I had clear nodes and still do.  My ILC came back to the same breast and even popped thru the skin.  My BS says I'm stage 3 but my onc said it is 4.  Now I spend every day and night looking at my skin trying to see if its back.  It is exactly the same kind as I had in 2006, PILC and very ER++.  I have changed my life choices now and don't drink any alcohol,  eat very little meat and maintain a weight of 130 for a height of 5'6".  Everyone has always told me that I look so healthy.  I have had 2 genetic tests and they both came back negative.  BC is sneaky and once you have it, you need to alway watch for it to return.  I went thru a very depressed stage but now I'm enjoying each day and looking forward to many more.  Afterall, no one knows how long they will live.  At least we know what is chasing us, ha ha .

  • CharB22
    CharB22 Member Posts: 310
    edited January 2012
    IllinoisNancy - why are you considered stage 3b if there are no nodes involved and the size is 1cm?
  • IllinoisNancy
    IllinoisNancy Member Posts: 722
    edited January 2012

    Good question....I asked my onc and he said that any recurrence to the skin makes it 4.  I'm going with my breast surgeon who said that the skin made it 3.  My oncologist is a glass half empty type of guy.  I have never had my PILC show up anywhere except in the left breast.  I have had PET scans, MRI's, CAT's, Ultrasounds, Mammograms, etc and it only shows up in the left side.  Thanks for asking!

  • LtotheK
    LtotheK Member Posts: 2,095
    edited January 2012

    "An aggressive grade 3, ER+ would probably get chemo as the grade 3 is an aggressive growing cancer"

    Barbe, this is less true with the advent of Oncotype.  For instance, my grade 3 was actually low recurrence!  But my hospital is NCI ranked and they weren't willing to take chances, so I went ahead with the chemo.  Grade is still one of their determining factors, they don't feel Oncotype trumps all.  Many hospitals now do, more research pends.

  • barbe1958
    barbe1958 Member Posts: 19,757
    edited January 2012

    The Oncotype testing is only done in the US at present, so the rest of the world relies on grade. The grade is the SPEED at which it grows, not the recurrence rate. There is no recurrence rate, it's all a crap shoot!

    What was your Oncotype? THAT is what determines whether you do chemo or not if your team uses it as standard protocol.

  • CharB22
    CharB22 Member Posts: 310
    edited January 2012

    How do I find out Oncotype? No one has mentioned this to me. Is it because I'm TN?

  • IllinoisNancy
    IllinoisNancy Member Posts: 722
    edited January 2012

    My oncotype was only a 9 and I had a recurrence.  It's all a crap shoot!

  • LtotheK
    LtotheK Member Posts: 2,095
    edited January 2012

    The way it was explained to me:  there are wide variations within grade.  Grade 3 is understood to be a fast moving, as well as unpredictable type.  My Oncotype was 12.  I was also grade 3.  Now, why my grade 3 was low score when most grade 3s are high score...the only explanation they could give me is that grade 3 is a bucket within which there is a lot of variation that they can't really parse fully yet.

    In Oncotype, the score is based on the percentage chance of distance recurrence. For me, 12 was approximately 16% chance of recurrence without hormonals, 8% with hormonals.

    Yes, it's a crap shoot.  In order to move on mentally, I had to accept that.  But, statistics are at least some governing factor.  This is why some hospitals now use the Oncotype as the determining factor for chemo.  Of the three hospitals that gave me opinions, I got "yes", "no" (the "no" based that opinion on my Oncotype alone) and "maybe" (from one of the best research hospitals in the country).  I went with yes.  And at the "yes" hospital, they felt the Oncotype is less predictive in the grade 3 environment, despite my low number.

    I hope that makes some sense...thanks, everyone!

    Oncotype is only for ER+ patients, usually node negative.  Though, they are starting to give it to node-positive patients with one or two positive nodes.

  • TonLee
    TonLee Member Posts: 2,626
    edited January 2012

    LtotheK,

    You are right....

    I think for the sake of brevity on this site women stage themselves 4 but officially that is incorrect unless the ORIGINAL diagnosis was a 4. Otherwise you're the original stage with bone mets, or liver mets, or whatever.

    "An important point some people have trouble understanding is that the stage of a cancer does not change over time, even if the cancer progresses. A cancer that comes back or spreads is still referred to by the stage it was given when it was first found and diagnosed, only information about the current extent of the cancer is added."

    http://www.cancer.org/Treatment/UnderstandingYourDiagnosis/staging

    (This matches everything I've found in the literature as well.)

  • TonLee
    TonLee Member Posts: 2,626
    edited January 2012

    As for feeling fooled.  I get so angry with the whole staging/prognosis thing.  There isn't a reliable test for BC in the blood.  Her2+ travels, it is just what it does....I've sat next to too many Stage 1 with mets women in the chemo room to EVER believe one stage of cancer is any less deadly than another.

    Cancer is cancer.

    Vigilance is key.

  • barbe1958
    barbe1958 Member Posts: 19,757
    edited January 2012

    Incredible link!!! Who knew???????

  • SeasideMemories
    SeasideMemories Member Posts: 3,194
    edited January 2012

    TonLee,



    Thanks for the link... Did not know that information about staging not changing as I am sure many people didn't... Very interesting!

  • LtotheK
    LtotheK Member Posts: 2,095
    edited January 2012

    Yes, that is fascinating and thank you so much for the clarification.  I'd seen it mentioned here, and was confused.

    I get a little bored when my oncologist always reminds me how "excellent" my prognosis is.  After all, my prognosis was excellent BEFORE I got BC.  No family history, young age...my only real risk factor was dense breasts.  I still probably had a less than 2% chance of getting it when I did.   When I compare that to the 8% chance I have of recurrence over 10 years, well, like I said:  I live my life to the fullest, and don't make any false bargains with stats.

  • MJLToday
    MJLToday Member Posts: 2,068
    edited January 2012

    I think  one problem is with surgeons who like to brag they "got it all".

     #1, surgeons are by nature arrogant people.  It takes a lot of chutzpah to go after people with a sharp knife, and to expect them to feel grateful LOL.  

    #2, they just don't see people months and years after their original diagnosis, when distant recurrence happens.  Even though surgeons are smart, well-read people, it's just a blind spot in all medical doctors' vision of the world -- if I didn't see it, it didn't happen.  Sigh. 

    #3 Most post-menopausal, node-negative, hormone positive, small tumor BC patients who go through conventional treatment (surgery +/- rads and anti-hormonal tx) ARE "cured" (aka die of something else) on an individual basis.  

    But, having said that, invasive breast cancer is currently incurable.  Despite all the hoopla about early detection, screening, improved treatments, 98% 5 yr survival (note that overall survival NOT disease-free survival), blah, blah, it is still incurable.  

     PS I really am grateful to my original breast surgeon, she was a peach.  So mostly joking about the arrogance.  Mostly.  

  • LittleMelons
    LittleMelons Member Posts: 273
    edited January 2012

    MJLToday - That's so funny about doctors' egos. Many years ago I went out with a guy who broke my heart and later became a doctor.  I looked him up recently on Facebook and there he was in his photo astride a huge motorcycle wearing scrubs and flexing his biceps.  What does that tell you about his ego.  I notice he didn't have many friends.

     In my case I think I projected my "I am cured" wish upon my doctors who didn't actually say anything like that.  I just assumed it, but now I know different.

  • gentianviolet
    gentianviolet Member Posts: 316
    edited January 2012

    The first onc I had said in a very authoritarian voice, "You had breast cancer and now you don't.  Remember this and you will do just fine."  So imagine how depressed I was once the initial shock wore off and I began reading BCO, only to realize that it was a lie.  I felt betrayed.

  • LtotheK
    LtotheK Member Posts: 2,095
    edited January 2012

    I think what a lot of folks overlook is the fact our chances of a secondary primary are rather huge over the long haul.  I've heard estimates of 1% cumulatively per year, give or take.  This is vastly larger than my risk of recurrence over the next 20, for instance.

    With each new cancer comes a new challenge.  No one promises that my next cancer will be node-negative, ER+, etc., etc.

    It is for this reason that the concept of "cured" just seems silly to me.  Cured would be eliminating my risk of fatal recurrence in the old tumor, and any new tumors.

  • Momhelper
    Momhelper Member Posts: 11
    edited January 2012

    Great thread!

    The midia, friends, family, and even doctors talk about BC as if it is a walk in the park thanks to the advances in medicine.Little they know.My mom's surgeons were all celebrating they took it all. BS. She had a IDC, but the post surgery biopsy found more: 1 DCIS and few pre-cancer on her breasts, even in the "healthy" one she took out against the doctor's will. She was a cadidate for lumpectomy + rads. She chose to go for the overkill, double mastectomy. Now the doctors are glad she did it. But they are afraid some of the pre-cancer was to close to the skin. Even with the limph nodes negative, BS was spreading like mad in both breasts.I don't even bother to explain to people anymore. Everyone is so afraid of BC that they stick to the myth that once the tumor is out they are cured!

  • Beesie
    Beesie Member Posts: 12,240
    edited January 2012

    "our chances of a secondary primary are rather huge over the long haul. I've heard estimates of 1% cumulatively per year, give or take. "

    Yes and No.  For many of us - possibly for most of us - the risk of a new primary breast cancer is greater than our risk of recurrence.  Anyone diagnosed with BC one time is considered to be higher risk (than the average women her age) to be diagnosed again.  What that risk is depends on the individual. In my case, with a diagnosis of BC at the age of 49 and with a bit of family history of BC and related cancers, my oncologist told me that my risk was about double the average of someone my age. Right now I'm 55; the average 55 year has about a 9% - 10% lifetime risk, so my risk is about 18% - 20%. This is my risk for the rest of my life, through to the age of 90.  It works out to be a risk of just over 0.5% per year.  Of course, for all women, breast cancer risk increases as we get older, so that 0.5% annual risk actually is a bit lower now and every year it increases slightly. However my average annual risk over all 35 years of my expected remaining lifetime is still just over 0.5%. And the 18% - 20% risk that I face today will never increase - it will actually go down every year. The reason is simple.  For every year I live, I have one fewer year left in my 'remaining lifetime'.  So using that 0.5% average risk per year, it means that for every year I live, my lifetime risk goes down by 0.5%.  The idea that breast cancer risk increases cumulatively as we age is something that is repeated on this board all the time, but it's simply not true. 

    As for whether or not early stage BC can be cured, I agree with what otter said a couple of pages back. Most women with early stage BC are 'cured' but unfortunately because the risk of recurrence remains with us for life and there is no way to predict who will recur and who won't, there is no way that we can ever know for sure whether or not we've been cured, at least not until we die (at the age of 90 in our beds with smiles on our faces) of something else. But the way I see it, if you have BC, that BC is treated and you never have a recurrence, you were cured. Developing a new primary BC is different and separate. You can be cured of one diagnosis but still get a second diagnosis.  If you want something that not only cures your current diagnosis but eliminates any further diagnoses, then you aren't looking for just a cure, you are looking for the elimination of the disease. That's a whole different ballgame.   

  • gentianviolet
    gentianviolet Member Posts: 316
    edited January 2012

    Beesie, you always make so much sense.........I want your brain!  Thanks for your valued critique of information.

  • isa143528
    isa143528 Member Posts: 14
    edited January 2012
    IllinoisNancy, Oncotype's score is about Average Rate of Distant Recurrence.  You are always at high risk to develop a new BC.
  • wenweb
    wenweb Member Posts: 1,107
    edited January 2012

    Hi Everyone.  I just found this thread, and it's great.  I want to make a comment on the original post because I think it sheds some light on the general protocol of (? American) cancer medicine.  Any kind of cancer is followed for 5 years after DX.  I work for a eyelid plastic surgen (ophthalmologist) who removes many skin cancers.  These pts are followed every 6 months for the first 2 years, and then yearly until they hit the magic 5 year mark.  Just as with BC this is by no means a guarantee or a non-guarantee of recurrence.  

  • LtotheK
    LtotheK Member Posts: 2,095
    edited January 2012

    Beesie, that is very helpful!  That statistic, 1% per year, was straight out of my radiation oncologist's mouth.  Not that our doctors aren't misinformed!  I talked to my doc yesterday about the fact that I have high circulating estrogen, and that put me at greater risk down the road.  She said, "Tamoxifen takes care of that."  Well, not entirely.  The studies show it means I have a larger chance of recurrence.

    I guess at the end, you just can't worry about every little detail, we are not in control.

    Interesting semantics re: cure, and good to think about.  Yes, to me a cure means elimination of the disease. A cure, by definition, is a treatment that cures the disease or condition.  I guess I subscribe to the idea that those who don't recur/get secondary primaries are "in remission"--my doctors refer to cancer in this manner.  Which means I am absolutely not cured, even of my first cancer.

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