Anyone out there decline taking Tamoxifen?

Options
2»

Comments

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

    Sian65:  According to the staging section on this site, IBC is split into 3B, 3C and Stage 4.  Whereas IDC consists of Stage 0, 1, 2A, 2B, 3A, B, C and Stage 4.  I hate putting women into stages, no one has a crystal ball with how well we will do after treatment.  Interestingly, they always stress diet, exercise, and their importance for the best prognosis.  I was in great shape, not overweight, and ate a more balanced healthful diet when I was diagnosed.  Kinda perplexing, but now find having to keep weight off more because of the tamoxifen. 

    So hoping for the best that you won't have mets as you say is a possibility.  ((((0))))) shelly

  • 3jaysmom
    3jaysmom Member Posts: 4,266
    edited May 2012
    yes, it scared me, i was 11 b: then suddenly 11 (something) i still stick to 11b.. its a mind game for me, i think.......3jays
  • patti13
    patti13 Member Posts: 89
    edited May 2012

    thank you all for your info.  Sian65 - will be thinking of you - let's hope for no bone involvment - please let us know how you are doing.....big hug.  I see that you are still in treatment - what a lonely road this is - will be checking and hoping for GOOD tests.

  • Linda-n3
    Linda-n3 Member Posts: 2,439
    edited June 2012

    tmetz, I tried tamoxifen twice, once after surgery + chemo (had NED on PET scan after chemo) for 3 months, went off for horrible SEs, had recurrence 3 months later, had more surgery and tried tamoxifen again for another 4 months and had horrible SEs.  I don't trust it, don't trust the docs, don't trust any of the meds, and am not willing to do anything else at this point that will prolong a low quality of life.  I know some here would recommend doing EVERYTHING possible to extend a life (including my own mother, who is an 18-year survivor), but I now have fewer physical and mental issues related to the tamoxifen, and don't hate every waking moment as I did while I was on it.  It took over 10 weeks to feel better after discontinuing the tamoxifen, and I am still not back to anything near normal (part of that is probably still chemo SEs according to my MO - it has been 18 months since I finished chemo - still have severe fatigue and neuropathy, so it gets a little confusing as to which SEs came from which treatment).

    I know there was some research some years back that seemed to indicate that those women who had more hot flashes and SEs were more likely to be getting benefit from tamoxifen, but that has been disproven in the past year or two - basically, there is no correlation between the two at all.

    Response to chemo, surgery, radiation, and hormonal therapy vary considerably between individuals, depending on tumor (and now it has been shown that breast cancer is actually at least 10 different diseases, according to a study just published by some English researchers!).  It is a crap shoot.  And I no longer trust that any of these has worked for me as well as the MO and BS led me to believe, but I know that it works for some women. I am glad I at least tried it, and am comfortable with my decision to discontinue, but I was not comfortable making that decision without at least trying it.  Seems like you also gave it a good try.  If you really want to continue it, you might consider seeing an integrative oncologist (only a few of them out there - we don't have one here), and think about adding complementary care to deal with SEs as some of the others have suggested.  Best wishes, and don't beat yourself up, whichever way you choose.

  • mclark55
    mclark55 Member Posts: 168
    edited June 2012

    Hey Linda - glad you posted that response.  It takes a lot of guts to go against what the doctors press you to do.  You are in charge of your body and you could see what the drugs were doing to you - good for you for being strong enough to say "no".  Have you heard about DIM?  I have a page about it on my website: http://marnieclark.com/breast-health/what-is-dim/

    Some info about it: DIM creates "good estrogen" in the body and less of the bad sort of estrogen. It turns on tumor suppression genes, it decreases tumor cell adhesion (the stickiness that tumor cells need to be able to rapidly grow or proliferate), it prevents tumors from separating and invading surrounding tissue and it assists with tumor cell death.

    I've been on it for years and highly recommend it.  

    Best wishes to you and to each person in this wonderful forum - hope you all find some healing in your breast cancer journey.

  • financegirl
    financegirl Member Posts: 114
    edited June 2012

    Celtic Spirit - I could have written your post.  My mother died of BC in 1976 at the age of 47.  As horrible as this damn disease is and as horrible as treatment is, I can honestly say "we seriously have come a long way baby".   Our sisters before us (at least in 70s) had few choices.  I remember my mother going into surgery for a biopsy and back then if it was positive, they performed a mastectomy on the spot and you never knew till you woke up.  My mom was sicker than a dog ALL the time from chemo and no receptor testing, no hormonal drugs, etc. 

    A year ago I got same dx, had surgery and chemo and the drugs given for nausea allowed me to go on with my life relatively normally.  Then I had rads which sucked but again meds got me thru that.  Now, I am on Arimidex and I have joint and bone pain but I have always chosen to believe as you - the SEs mean its working and I too thank God every day I swallow that tiny white pill.  I think each of us has to make the best decisions for us so why I never ask what someone else may or may not do since each of our dx, our treatments, our grade of tumor, etc is different.  My tumor was tiny and very aggressive so I am thankful for anything that may fight back a recurrence. 

  • Celtic_Spirit
    Celtic_Spirit Member Posts: 748
    edited June 2012

    financegirl - I'm sorry that you had to experience the tragic death of your mother from bc. It's not pretty, is it? I don't know if my mom was diagnosed stage IV or perhaps stage III and then had a recurrence; such things were not shared with children in those days. My mom had a unilateral mastectomy and then radiation...lots of radiation, because that was basically all they had to offer back then. She tried to shield me from her illness, but I remember catching a glimpse of her chest one day...it was an oozing, purple and red mess of dying, radiated tissue. She wore Kotex pads over her chest because the drainage was so severe, regular gauze could not absorb it all. Like your mom, mine was sick all the time. Sitting on the couch in severe pain every day, all day, was all she could manage. She had to give herself an enema daily in order to relieve herself. At the very end, when she was at a nursing home, they had her on heroin to relieve the pain.

    Right now, Arimidex is playing hell with my knees from the hike I took last weekend. But that's okay. I would swallow battery acid every day if it mean't I wouldn't have a recurrence and/or die like she did.

  • mclark55
    mclark55 Member Posts: 168
    edited June 2012

    To Celtic Spirit & financegirl:  Your last posts made me remember my mother and my grandmother, who both died from BC.  You are so right about how lucky we are that treatments have progressed such a long way from when they were diagnosed and treated.  Love your fighting spirits! xoxox

  • CancerStinks
    CancerStinks Member Posts: 84
    edited October 2012

    I have declined Tamoxifen too, though my diagnosis is very different from yours, as was my treatment. I haven't seen anyone mention weight. Fat stores estrogen as well as makes it and if you can get and keep your BMI below 25 that also decreases chances of recurrence. I avoid soy protein and take supplements, but there still is some doubt: what if? I try to concentrate on what I have done and not on what I haven't. Good luck. It is a tough decision.

  • CherylinOhio
    CherylinOhio Member Posts: 623
    edited October 2012

    Hello all.  I am fortunate to have little in the way of SE's from the tammy. I do have some bone and joint achiness but I would gladly tolerate it to keep the bc at bay for as long as possible.  I had a obgyn appt last Friday to discuss ovary removal and he mentioned that Evista is supposed to be a better drug then tamoxifen. I have not done any research on it nor have i asked my onc yet but I plan on it.  I figure after ovaries come out in December that I will be on another drug.  I have heard that the drug that you take when your post menopausal is even worse than the tammy. I can't think of the name of it right now but we shall see.  I applaud you on your choice and I would look into something holistic to help keep the bc at bay!! There are holistic threads on this site, check them out. ((HUGS))

  • Momine
    Momine Member Posts: 7,859
    edited October 2012

    Yes, I declined tamoxifen. My aunt has endometrial cancer and I already had some giant fibroids and other gunk in my uterus. I was also seriously afraid of the thrombosis risk with tammy.

    Instead I had a hysterectomy (to get rid of the gunk and put me into menopause), and have been taking an AI after that.

    I am also minding my diet to keep my BMI low (right now it is a bit too low, but I am aiming for around 20 or so), my cholesterol low and my glucose steady.

  • New-girl
    New-girl Member Posts: 358
    edited October 2012

    I too declined Tamoxifen.  My MO went through all the positives and negatives and for me the negatives clearly outweighed the positives.  My onco score was 8 so my risk is very low.  I absolutely lost faith in my BS after she failed to be honest with me about my lymph node removal and she strongly got in my face about the Tamoxifen which further made me not do it.  Haven't been back to see her and will just see my MO from here on out.  I did order DIM today and will start taking that.  I am in good health, haven't gotten back to exercising enought, but stay within decent weight ranges.  So I will choose a healthy lifestyle and no SE.  I'm giving my poor body a rest from a traumatic year.

  • DCMom
    DCMom Member Posts: 624
    edited October 2012

    tmetz

    I think before I gave up on tamoxifen I'd definitely consider the stages of the women saying they declined.  At stage 1 or 0 the statistics are certainly already in their favor....

  • momof3boys
    momof3boys Member Posts: 896
    edited October 2012

    Also, your Oncotype score assumes you will be taking Tamoxifin.

  • Bugs
    Bugs Member Posts: 1,719
    edited October 2012

    I happily took that little pill everyday.  Antihormonals are huge ammo for hormone postiive bc.  You were stage 3b in your 30's.  Talk to your dr about side effects and what your options are before throwing in the towel.  The first few months were the hardest for me with side effects, then they started easing up.  Exercise helps the aches and pains, LOTS.  Quality of life is important, yes, but think hard before saying no to the antihormonals.

  • Mardibra
    Mardibra Member Posts: 1,111
    edited October 2012

    I just started taking Tamoxifen in July.  I had some minor bone/joint pain in my feet for about the first month but then that disappeared.  So, im only left with hot flashes.  Bad ones!  So, I was hoping they would disappear too but I couldnt take it any longer.  So, I started taking Effexor.  Works like a charm!  No more hot flashes.  So, im 3 months in and I have no SE's.  But, even if I did there is no way I would stop taking it.  It cuts my recurrence risk by 50%.  In my case, its a no brainer.

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

    Mardibra:  Are you sure you heard tamox cuts your risk by 50%?  My onc has never said that.  Beware also of effexor.  She put me on that for hot flashes and failed to tell me it wreaks havoc on bones.  I quit the effexor and a couple others which were to reduce flashes because I'd rather not risk bone health after menopause.  And for ER/PR positive gals, Evista is not the right drug either. 

Categories