Chances of getting cancer in healthy breast not removed?

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I had a mastectomy done on my right side 5.5 years ago. I have been so busy with living my life that I haven't really had time to think about the possibility of getting cancer on my other side.

I am 42, was estrogen pos but HER neg...and my BRACA test came back negative. I am faithful with my yearly mammos and do monthly self breast exams. Should I be concerned? Anyone know percentages? I won't see my oncologist until the spring and really don't want to bother him with just this one question. Thanks in advance for any info you can send my way!

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  • bak94
    bak94 Member Posts: 1,846
    edited September 2012

     I do know that having the brca gene ups the chances considerably, I think it was something like 20% or higher chance of another breast cancer within 5 years, but since you are not brca, I am not sure of the chance. Sorry I am not more helpful! hopefully someone will have an answer for you.

  • KP1970
    KP1970 Member Posts: 192
    edited September 2012

    Thanks bak94. Anyone else? :)

  • liefie
    liefie Member Posts: 2,440
    edited September 2012

    Can the moderators perhaps weigh in here? It is a question I have wondered about myself.

  • kathleen1966
    kathleen1966 Member Posts: 793
    edited September 2012

    I have wondered this myself as a "one breaster" I will ask my oncologist next week about it. I haven't looked into the percentages. I had a lot of cancer in my left breast and often wonder how I could have that much cancer in the one and nothing in the other.  I am "suspicious".  I only get a mammogram on the one yearly and that's it.  Nothing on the other side.  I think I should be getting a yearly MRI and mammograms every six months. I have mentioned this but always get the same response, that it is not needed. I sometimes worry (ok I always worry but not about this worry) that there could have been a small cancer in the right side that was obliterated by chemo and that it could grow back and get large if I am not monitored more closely. And that one year would be a nice long time for a tiny cancer that was never actually removed to shrink to nothing than grow....and that my yearly mammogram from last year would never show it. WOW, I hope I have just not caused worry with that remark!!! My next mammogram is October 18th!

  • mamabee
    mamabee Member Posts: 546
    edited September 2012

    My MO told me the chance is about 1% per year, so after 10 years, you will have a 10% chance of having cancer in the other breast.

    I also had a UMX and I'm still considering having my "good" breast done when I do my reconstruction next year.  

  • KP1970
    KP1970 Member Posts: 192
    edited September 2012

    Thanks everyone. I will see my oncologist in November right after my yearly mammo, and will ask about this then (why hadn't I thought to think about this in the last 5 years???)

    kathleen1966, would you mind reporting back what your oncologist said after you see him? :)

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

    My oncologist told me that my risk was about double that of the average woman my age.  I was diagnosed at 49 and the average 49 year has an 11% remaining lifetime risk, so that put my remaining lifetime risk at about 22%.  At 49, with 41 years till I reached 90 (my oncologist told me that most risk estimates these days go to age 90), that averaged to just over 0.5% per year.

    Here's the important thing to understand.... your total risk goes down over time. If you don't get BC this year, you don't add this year's risk to next year's risk. Instead, you forget about this year's risk - it didn't happen so you don't have to worry about it anymore. It's a concept called "leaving risk behind".  The way to think of it is that you can't have an accident today for something you did yesterday.  So your risk level in your 40s is your risk level in your 40s, and once you reach your 50s, you no longer have to consider your risk from your 40s, you only have to be concerned about your risk level for being in your 50s.  The way this works is that for me, now being age 56, my remaining lifetime risk has dropped to about 18%. This is simply because I have fewer years left in my remaining lifetime (to age 90) and I've 'left behind' 7 years of risk.  

    Another thing to understand is that risk increases for all women as we age.  So my average 0.5% risk per year is actually less than that each year when I'm younger, and more than that when I'm older.  The following article talks about breast cancer risk by age:

    Probability of Breast Cancer in American Women

    You can see that the average woman has a 1.45% chance of getting breast cancer during the 10 years of her 40s.  That's 0.145% per year, so for someone who's had BC, the risk might be closer to 0.29% per year.  Once this average woman is in her 60s, her 10 year risk is 3.45%, or 0.345% per year.  That would mean that someone who's had BC might have an annual risk of around 0.69%.

    And this article talks about what contralateral mastectomies and what the contralateral risk really is for the average woman (i.e. someone who is not BRCA positive or doesn't have extraordinary risk factors):  Contralateral Prophylactic Mastectomy: What Do We Know and What Do Our Patients Know? 

  • KP1970
    KP1970 Member Posts: 192
    edited September 2012

    Thank you so much Beesie, for that info...I appreciate it! :)

  • dogsandjogs
    dogsandjogs Member Posts: 1,907
    edited September 2012

    Not sure of the percentages, but I had a mastectomy at age 46. Then 28 years later I discovered a lump in the other breast. The onc said it was a new primary; not a recurrence. This time I had a lumpectomy.  

  • TectonicShift
    TectonicShift Member Posts: 752
    edited July 2020
  • KorynH
    KorynH Member Posts: 301
    edited November 2012

    There are a lot of factors that scew the stats given. For instance, did your menstrual cycles return after chemo and raise the chances of feeding a lingering er+ cancer cell? Were you lobular? (30% greater odds of developing in other breast), were you node positive? Etc. Etc.



    4 years after my unilateral mastectomy I began having pain on the outer side of my left (non-cancer side) breast and arm pit area. I began to feel a jelly like ball in my arm pit and the pain didn't go away for 3 months so I went for a 3D ultrasound of the breast. A hypo echoic mass with angulated margins sand spiculations was found, about .9cm in size. I am having additional ultrasound imaging of it next Monday.



    The surgeon asked me last week if I have considered a preventive MX on this side. I told him I have but am not ready to do that. He pointed out that all of this surveillance will not prevent cancer from occurring, which I guess I know in my mind, but always wanted to believe it wouldn't happen. Now I am scared and second guessing everything I chose 4 years ago.

  • fightinhrd123
    fightinhrd123 Member Posts: 633
    edited November 2012

    Im four years out and only had a masectomy on one side.  I thought i was the only one in my family to have breast cancer, and my BRCA test was neg.  Since then my cousin has got it and ive found our my second cousin and two great aunts all have it, so every generation on my dads side for the last three generations and I am considering getting it done - sigh!  I suck too, i havent had mamos or anything!  Gotta get it together!

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