Ordering Oncotype test for DCIS- Frustrated!
My oncologist wont see me before surgery......and wont order test before she sees me.......and cant get in any sooner. Her scheduler said they can still test the tissue months later......because its frozen. wonder how accurate this will be?
Is there anyone else that can order this test? Or does it HAVE to be an oncologist?? Can my primary doc order it?? My Breast Cancer Surgeon wont order it either......neither will my Radiologist Doc.
Add to it the fact that these doctors are an hour and 1/2 away.......
Really frustrated! There are 2 other Oncs near me.....but two friends who had BC saw both of them once, and I did not like what I heard back from them.......
Comments
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According to my MO - they only order the test on node negative patients after surgery (and she was the one who ordered the test). It was done a few weeks after surgery (they send the tissue in from the surgery). I did see my MO before surgery, but only because I already knew her and this was a secondary cancer. Typically she first sees new BC patients 3 weeks after their surgery. It sounds like your oncologist's plan is pretty typical.
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I know waht you mean Shayne.
Knowing what the treatment will be after surgery and rads would have a bearing on whether or not to have rads or not. I would like to know what kind of hormonals they want to put me on. what dosage. I would like a complete picture, not piece by piece as we go through each procedure.
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Well......im not taking ANY pills until the results of this test come back. The doc will just have to bite me. Im so frustrated!
And will have to go thru rads before the results are in - mostly bc of my schedule with childcare etc that is already in place.
Is it true it takes 2 weeks to get the results back??
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I'm having my onco-dcis test run right now. Yes, it does take two weeks for the results. I probably won't hear anything until after Memorial Day weekend. It is worth the wait for the kind of information it promises though. My results could mean the difference between more surgery or just radiation. I hate waiting but I'll endure somehow.
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guess i shouldnt get my panties in a wad about it.......It just gets so freakin' frustrating!
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My oncologist just called me - ive havent met her yet, but I left a message about getting the test ordered.
She said she has never ordered the test for DCIS before, Id be the first. She didnt have enough info about it, and was reluctant to order it, but she wasnt opposed to the idea. I told her I looked on it as another tool in making decisions about my treatment, not the be all end all answer to everything. She said we would have to wait for my path report after surgery. She also was going over my biopsy path report and was saying one of my two lesions was invasive, why arent they taking nodes? - yet when I looked at the copy I have, it said NOT INVASIVE on both lesions........?? Not sure what she was looking at. Kinda scared me..... Really hoping I am not going to be at the mercy of this doc in getting this test. I did tell her I was not at all sure of taking hormones.....and she told me it was my decision, and its not ALWAYS recommended in every case.....so not to worry right now.
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the more i think about this......the more I wonder WHY she wouldnt want to order this test......when it gives us information on the chance of reccurrance???
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Shayne,
You might want to check the Oncotype Dx website about the test -- from my reading the test can't be ordered until after surgery and the pathology test is completed.
http://www.oncotypedx.com/en-US/Breast/PatientsCaregiversDCIS
Hope this helps answer some questions.
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I completely understand that it has to be done then. Just dont understand her hestitation in ordering it at all.
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Shayne, Dear Shayne, may I kindly suggest untwisting your panties and taking a breath?
There's a first for everything (ordering the test for DCIS). After all, the doctor is working for you, not the other way around. I think you are right on the mark to ask for the Oncotype test; however, a little patience now will be helpful in the long run.
My understanding of DCIS is "in situ" means the cancer is containted. Difficult to understand why a path report would state invasive.
"have to go through rads" ~ how about considering rearranging your childcare & radiation schedule until there's more definitive information. I know childcare arrangements can be difficult to rearrange; however, this is your life you're talking about. Radiation (or not) is a significant choice, not to be hurried in my opinion.
Perhaps a face-to-face meeting with your oncologist is appropriate before making life-lasting choices.
I am hoping and praying for your healing and thriving - in the midst of all of the chaos that goes with a breast cancer diagnosis & surgery (which I've experienced twice in 15 years) you will give yourself some time to gather information and consider your options. Namaste, CMG
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yes i have dcis - but the oncotype test is for DCIS. No it is not invasive, but the path report AFTEr surgery will tell that for sure. I was told to prepare for possible surprises with the path report......mri, us, mammos - sometimes dont tell the whole story.
My MO wont see me until after the path report from surgery comes in - and my schedule and hers does not alllow for an earlier appt. My health care is not taking place in the town I live - but a good hr and a half away. I scheduled my rads bc I am doing INTERNAL rads, which need to be done within 10days of surgery. My 11 yo daughter has non refundable plane tickets for the weeks ill be getting rad therapy - so its kind of set up - i dont have family near me to help with child care. Then there are dog, cat and house sitters that are in place -as well as my husbands scheduled time off and all that goes with setting that up. So as far as my surgery and rads and childcare - its kind of set in stone right now.
Im ok with seeing my MO in mid June. Its just how it is - the Oncotype for DCIS will get ordered - and if i have to change oncologists, I will do that if i need to so that this test gets ordered. Ill just have to wait. Im learning to be patient. Waiting and waiting and waiting. Itll happen. For whatever reason, ive been given this time to reconcile my dx, my treatment and ways in which I want to change my life. It gives me time to do meditation, meet with a naturopath that specializes in cancer, read some amazing books, and meet some incredible people along the way. Im enjoying my daughters last days of 5th grade and exercising my ass off, losing weight and getting in the best possible shape.
Im good......ive taken my panties off.....let the wild rumpus start!!!
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Shayne, they roared their terrible roars and gnashed their terrible teeth and rolled their terrible eyes...
I was originally dx with DCIS. Had a lumpectomy and 2 tumors were discovered (neither showed up on mammo's?) Path report from that surgery indicated IDC, DCIS and I came back Er/Pr+. My Med Onc requested the OncoType due to the weird things going on and I gave the doc's more reasons to scratch their heads. One of the tumors came in Her2- and the other came in, you guessed it, Her2+. My Onco came in at 51, which is pretty high.
Keep up with the doc's but really, you almost have to learn to chill; so much of this is hurry up...now wait. Hurry up...now wait.
Blessings
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That is the truth! it just add to the rollercoaster I am on......but im breathing thru it.
Your story with your path report is v interesting. Did you have contrast dye breast MRI?
Its interesting how they put you thru a battle of tests.....biopsies, etc......and still they cannot be sure until it is out of the body what is really going on in there.
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Shayne,
A lot of folks get surprised with the final pathology report. Some things don't show up on the pre surgery tests. I had micromet in my nodes and LVI, both of which were too small to show up on PET/CT or MRI with contrast, or the premliniary path during surgery. At the time these made me ineligible for for the oncotype test. That added chemo to the treatment plan of radiation and hormone therapy.
My surgeon was very good at explaining what the expected treatment plan was, but made sure that I understood that nothing was set in stone until the final path report was in.
You're right that it feels like a rollercoaster when we're waiting for things to get sorted out for a treatment plan. It's kind of like an obstacle course where extra challenges get added along the way. In that spirit, you may want to check that if your insurance covers the oncotype test, and if so what hoops need to be jumped through.
A book I found really helpful in dealing with the unexpected twists in life is Pema Choron's When Things Fall Apart: Heart Advice for Difficult Times
All the best,
Meg
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Hey Meg - I have that book and it has been v helpful.
Insurance covers the test......no hoops involved. YAY!
this whole experience has been so many incredible lessons......
staying open with patience knowing that what is right for me will happen.....
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Shayne - when my left nipple bled spontaneously one day, my PCP immediately got me in to see the breast surgeon. She reassured me that it was probably a papilloma, but just to be on the safe side, she ordered some more diagnostic testing.
Well, I had seven different procedures (diagnostic mammos, ultrasounds, a ductogram, and two ultrasound-guided core needle biopsies.) For the first five or six procedures, the results came back pure DCIS.
However, on the last (I think) core-needle biopsy, there was evidence of a microinvasion of IDC (invasive ductal cancer).
I was offered a lumpectomy with radiation, but since I had multi-focal cancer (in two different places) the surgeon said I might not be happy with the results, and recommended a UMX.
I had three months to consider my options, because my surgery got rescheduled twice.
I made the decision to have a BMX with immediate reconstruction, and had my surgery on December 5th.
Like most all other women who go through surgery, I was waiting for the other shoe to drop. We get as much information as we can through biopsies and procedures, but ultimately, it's the final pathology report that gives the Oncologist the information he or she needs to determine any treatment for us. They have to have all the facts first. I didn't see my Oncologist until December 30th.
I was fortunate. My margins were all clear, and there was no node involvement. The BMX was my treatment, except for 5 years of Arimidex which I will start in the fall. I never had the Oncotype test, nor did I have the BRCA test. My MO didn't think I needed either one.
I do understand how frustrating all of this is for you. I am wishing you the best!!!
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Thx Meg!
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Shayne,
I asked my BS about oncotype testing. He did not think it would be worthwhile for me based on my youthfulness
and high grade of DCIS.... my risk of recurrence is high enough to automatically warrant rads. He said if I was grade 1, or older, then oncotype testing could help with the decision making process. FWIW.
Hope you're feeling at peace as your surgery day approaches. Take care!
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well.....it can also tell what your percentage of recurrence is as well - not just if rads are warranted. Im already going to do rads, even tho my dcis is stage 0 and my lesion is 12mm.
Cant wait for friday to get here........
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