Why can't I get herceptin without chemo?

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Blythers
Blythers Member Posts: 15

This is my first post and I don't know if I am doing this right. It seems like you all have acronyms and abbreviations that I don't understand. Here goes:

I had a partial mastectomy on March 6 with a follow-up on April 2 to clean up the anterior margin. Three lymph nodes were removed and all were clear, no evidence of metastatic OR micrometastasis carcinoma. The tumor was .9 cm, Stage One (tT1B, TM0,MO) invasive ductal carcinoma, moderately differentiated. Estrogen and progesteren positive and Her2/neu amplified at 3.01.

Two oncs (from my medical group) say I need chemo in order to get the herceptin which is what I really need. Without the Her2/neu, no one would be recommending chemo. I saw in another forum that some oncs are offering herceptin without chemo. My second opinion onc did offer the herceptin without chemo but my insurance denied my appeal to see him as he's 'not in my group". Does anyone have ideas about getting what I need? My group onc so much as told me that herceptin without checmo would be considered experimental. That just seems crazy. How can I find a clinical trial. All the ones on line that I have found are for Stage 4 patients.

Comments

  • NWArtLady
    NWArtLady Member Posts: 360
    edited May 2012

    Hi Blythers,

    I am also triple positive like you and also stage 1.  My oncologist had me do surgery (partial mastectomy), chemo, radiation, and now I am doing herceptin and tamoxifen.  My cancer was an aggressive form (Her2 positive and grade 3), so we treated it aggressively.

    Hope this helps.  There is a triple positive forum filled with experienced ladies in our situation; if you were to post this question there, you would get even more answers.

    Hope this helps!

  • Blythers
    Blythers Member Posts: 15
    edited May 2012

    Where do I find that triple positive forum? The list only has a Triple Negative showing. I'm new on this. I can"t find stuff.

  • Joanne58
    Joanne58 Member Posts: 1,117
    edited May 2012

    There was a woman getting Herceptin, only, at Kaiser Permanente (my health care provider).  She refused chemo, but wanted Herceptin and received it--no problem.  I guess it depends on your insurance. I had chemo first, then Herceptin alone, which is not the standard of care.  I hope you receive what you believe is best for your case.  Good luck!

  • NWArtLady
    NWArtLady Member Posts: 360
    edited May 2012
  • Blythers
    Blythers Member Posts: 15
    edited May 2012

    Thank you. That's awesome. I am in California and I needed to see that! I can wait till November: Open season.

  • Joanne58
    Joanne58 Member Posts: 1,117
    edited May 2012

    The "TRIPLE POSITIVE GROUP" is in this same forum (Her2) that you've posted in :)

  • Hindsfeet
    Hindsfeet Member Posts: 2,456
    edited May 2012

    I am stage 1a, and chose herceptin only. My oncologist highly advised chemo, and hormonal therapy. Because my oncologist feared I would do nothing she gave me herceptin only. Whatever the oncologist recommends pretty much is what the insurance company will do. If your doctors says they strongly recommended both ar none then perhaps your insurance will to. For example, my insurance said they only approve 2 mastectomy surgeries. I've already had two and will definately need one more to improve my new or do something to give me simetry. I called my insurance company and they said it is the surgeon who must make that call that is if I need another surgery. They will order it giving reason for it and if it's good enough they approve. So..get a surgeon who is fighting for what you want.

    One of my breast cancer surgeons said there were very few oncologist she knew who had good bed side manners. I don't know if this is true or not, but I would shop around for someone who will listen to your wishes. It's your life, and you are the one who will live with it.

  • Blythers
    Blythers Member Posts: 15
    edited May 2012

    The second opinion onc is marvelous. I am not even his patient and he answered my email in less than 12 hours and the CALLED me with more explanation and told me to ask my onc to get a mammaprint. He said they can even figure out if my particular her2/neu is the kind that responds to hormone therapy. I might be able to switch to his PPO during open season. After reading some of these posts it seems I don't have to anything this minute. Relief.

  • Sassa
    Sassa Member Posts: 1,588
    edited May 2012

    Blythers,

    Let me put this in straight language.  You are HER2+, that makes your cancer aggressive.  HER2+ breast cancer  can also spread through the blood and not go through the lymph nodes.

    You can not wait until November to change your insurance.  If you do, you a chance ( 1 in 4 or 25%) of finding out that your cancer has metastasized outside the breast.  In that case, you will face a lot rougher treatment in the hopes of possibly extending your life for a few more years.

    Get into treatment now and you will probably be a long term NED (no evidence of disease) breast cancer patient.

  • Letlet
    Letlet Member Posts: 1,053
    edited May 2012

    I think it was around 30 years ago that when you found out that your tumor was HER2+, it was really, really NOT good news. It meant that the tumor was aggressive and fast growing. I read somewhere that Herceptin reduces the rate of recurrence by 50%!!! One of my chemo nurses when she found out that I was diagnosed, she asked me if I was HER2 pos, and she was actually glad that I was because I can receive Herceptin.

    Please don't wait till November (? is that when your open enrollment is?) to start treatment - that's a whole 6 months.

  • AlaskaAngel
    AlaskaAngel Member Posts: 1,836
    edited May 2012

    Hi Blythers,

    Until trastuzumab (Herceptin) was used, HER2 positive used to be one of the worse types of breast cancer to have. Those who not only are HER2 positive but also hormone receptor negative (like Sassa) are helped by Herceptin but not endocrine therapy, so they have a more dangerous form of breast cancer than those who are ER/PR positive. Sassa is right about her form of the cancer.

    Your question is a very good one, Blythers.  Whether or not a therapy is very useful, many people tend to think the more toxic (awful) a treatment is, the more effective it is, which is not accurate, but it does make them feel like and believe they are at least using something to try to beat the disease. There is nothing wrong with that, other than it is important to understand that chemotherapy in general is given to a huge number of people with early stage breast cancer, most of whom get no benefit from it and many of whom have side effects from it.

    You will hear some say that when Herceptin is given with chemo, it makes the chemo more effective. However, that is not yet certain. The reason is not yet certain is because the trials that were done with chemo and Herceptin did not include stage I breast cancer patients, and also did not test whether or not Herceptin used alone was as effective, more effective, or less effective than chemo plus Herceptin.

    So it is more accurate to say instead that chemo plus Herceptin works better than chemo used alone.

    Initially, it was easier to get trastuzumab without chemo, but once the trial results were used for approval by the government based on the use of chemo plus trastuzumab, insurance companies tended to go along with that. 

    Again, those who are triple negative have good reason to focus on the use of chemotherapy as part of the treatment.  The stardard recommendation even for those who are not triple negative is for chemo plus trastuzumab.

    I did chemotherapy myself because my oncologist was not honest with me about the value of it for triple positive patients. At the time I did treatment, trastuzumab had not yet been approved and was still in trials.  I asked specifically about participating in any clinical trials, and he failed to tell me that there was a trial for trastuzumab that I would have been eligible to participate in. At the time I did treatment, the only treatments available to me were radiation, Adriamycin/Cytoxan/5-FU, and tamoxifen. The aromatase inhibitors were not yet available to those like me who did not have mets. So I did rads, CAFx6, and some tamoxifen.

    At present, there is a clinical trial being done that uses trastuzumab alone for bc patients over age 70. Hopefully that will provide better information about the use of trastuzumab alone.

    You should not postpone treatment very long. If the unknowns of using trastuzumab alone for early stage triple positive bc are preferable to you, you should know that others have refused chemo and have been prescribed trastuzumab.

    A.A.

  • BonnieBee
    BonnieBee Member Posts: 26
    edited May 2012

    Didd you have an oncotype? I had a some what similiar daignosis( not Her postive) and my onco recommend CMF..chemo.

    Its not the worst thing and I get a 5% reduction of metastatic disease. Worth it to me..and my two babies!

  • Sassa
    Sassa Member Posts: 1,588
    edited May 2012

    I would like to point out that my post about HER2+ cancer spreading through the blood is entirely about the HER2+ component of breast cancer.  DO NOT let a naysayer tell you I am speaking from being ER/PR negative.  While that may have factored into the aggressiveness of my BC, it was the HER2+ component which caused the worry about metastasizing even though I was node negative.

  • Sassa
    Sassa Member Posts: 1,588
    edited May 2012

    BonnieBee,

    The oncotype test is not done on HER2+ BC as the HER2+ component is known to raise the oncotype score into the chemo needed range.

  • BonnieBee
    BonnieBee Member Posts: 26
    edited May 2012

    THanks for the info girls! Learning more every day.

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

    Hi there,

    I'm going to be getting Herceptin alone with no chemo.  FDA has approved this monotherapy for early stage HER2 posiitive BC and my Onc assured me my insurance wouldn't balk.  He said as long as you acknowledge that we have looked into each other's eyes and you understand that this is not the typical protocol, I will agree to give it to you alone every three weeks for 17 treatments.  I have a history of kidney disease and neuralgia from recurring shingles already at age 39, so I figured chemo might finish me off right quick.   I'm pretty sure you can do just the Herceptin/Tamoxifen tx regimen if you demand it.  I know my body and what it can and can't handle and my Onc seems to respect that. 

  • AlaskaAngel
    AlaskaAngel Member Posts: 1,836
    edited July 2012

    Hi westiemommy,

    I'm glad you have given consideration to your options, and have found an onc who supports your decision.

    It also allows you one MORE option for the future, in that those who choose chemotherapy the first time around have less reason to chose the same chemo again if they recur.

    I hope you will update from time to time, in support of others who may be faced with a similar basis for their choice.

    A.A.

  • Hindsfeet
    Hindsfeet Member Posts: 2,456
    edited July 2012

    wrestiemommy, yes, for those especially who are early stage I think it's a good choice. If you are stage 1, 75% likely the surgery took care of your cancer. We take the Herceptin for possible micro cells that might have escaped. Do keep us posted. I feel a lone and unliked here for my choice. It would be good to have ladies like you in this camp to support others who choose herceptin only or who struggle due to it's side effects.

  • Robin1234
    Robin1234 Member Posts: 45
    edited March 2017

    is anyone still on this thread I'm wanted to see.how everyone is doing on herceptin only. I'm her2 positive with a 2.5mm and 1.5mm and I'm not want to do chemo and herceptin. My doctor did offer me herceptin only.

  • Robin1234
    Robin1234 Member Posts: 45
    edited March 2017

    Hi KB870 how are you doing with chemo and herceptin?

  • NotVeryBrave
    NotVeryBrave Member Posts: 1,287
    edited March 2017

    I just wanted to chime in with my treatment. I was prescribed TCHP x 6 rounds for HER2 positive IDC. Because of some concerning SE's, I was seriously considering quitting after the 3rd round. One of the options that I was given was to continue with only the Herceptin and Perjeta - so that is sometimes done.

    In the end, I opted to continue with the treatment plan and only substituted Neupogen for the Neulasta I had been receiving. I figured I would be very upset with myself if the cancer came back and I had not done what was recommended (even though there's no guarantees on anything). I have one round left now.

  • Alert2017
    Alert2017 Member Posts: 14
    edited March 2017

    I have invasive papillary (VERY rare and slow growing ) and Triple + , unheard of to have Her2+ with papillary. I'm getting taxol + heceptin , 12 weekly treatments, then radiation, 6 weeks, and herceptin alone to complete a full year. Of course no one wants chemo but from my reading and what i was told at major cancer centers, that is the best way to ensure you are handling the HER2+. My cancer is slow enough that I could have just had radiation but HER2+ trumps all. Taxol + Herceptin is "chemo light" compared to some of the other combinations. I was told they would monitor and work w/ me if I had really bad reaction to taxol. I have had 2 treatments and my reaction has been to the pre-med steroids- reflux and queasy, all being managed by a variety of medications. I happy to have these options available to me. Personally, I would do the chemo and herceptin and see how it works.

  • Reikion
    Reikion Member Posts: 50
    edited March 2017

    I had asked for herceptin only from my onc at Kaiser since I was Stage 1 and was refused. Glad to hear Kaiser is allowing this for some patients.

    I did not want to do the TCH regimen recommended, so I was glad to be offered a clinical trial that I got approved for through secondary insurance. The randomized trial offered Taxol + Herceptin (25% of participants) and TDM1(Kadcyla) to the other 75%. TDM1 is Herceptin with 1 molecule of Emtanzine (Chemo). I got assigned to TDM1, have done well on it and am approaching the end of my 1 year on the drug.

    I wish you the best and hope that you find an oncologist that you feel comfortable with --- it makes all the difference.


  • Drained6513
    Drained6513 Member Posts: 82
    edited April 2017

    I am in Canada and they will not give you Herceptin alone.  Then my Oncologist said if I want to go down to the States and pay for just Herceptin?  Of course I cannot.  I've done my 12 Taxols, but the toll it took on me.  Loss of hair, my skin looks like an 80 year old man's.  I've gained 20 lbs from the steroids etc.  It's only been 5 weeks since my last taxol, but it makes you anxious to see yourself like this, and how long is it going to take me to look like myself again?  And will I ever?  So, having the choice for the Herceptin alone, would be nice to have as an option.  Cause to do nothing is not an option, thus the Taxol..

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