The one that got away?
Hello,
I've been reading many of the posts here at Breastcancer.org for quite a while now and i have learned a lot about bc in general. This is an awesome forum for support as well as information.
I was diagnosed with DCIS and I chose to have a MX. My BS told me i had no node involment and I had nice clear wide margins. She told me it was a good outcome...back then I needed to know that because I had no clue about margins etc. If you all look back it may have been the same for you...the shock and the numbness kind of makes it all a blurr. Now that I'm a year and a half on I am able to step back and try to sort out a few things that have been niggling at me for a long time.
I have read a lot of the information on here about DCIS....Beesie deserves a mention here...I take my hat off to you for your amazing collaboration to this forum.
I was told by my oncologist and my bs that I have been 98% cured. The reason why they cannot say I'm 100% cured is because a cell may have got away and travelled via my bloodstream to lodge to some other site where it could possibly develop into mets.
I have been worrying about what they said for a very long time and it has now become an obsession. I am progressively getting more and more depressed about it. I have this constant fear and I don't know if it is irrational or not. I also feel intense guilt because I know I shouldn't be so weak about it. I spend way too much time on the internet reading anything I can find on bc.
From what information I have read here, I came to understand that DCIS is contained within the milk ducts and that it's a very slow growing cancer. I was told mine was very slow growing by my onc. What is this about a cell that could have escaped? . My onco then told me I should ok since I had the mx and my Dcis was very slow growing and I had wide margins etc. My GP,BS and MO know about my history of anxiety...why on earth would they worry like this? It's like they created this visual in my mind that I can't get rid of....this one tiny cell running around in my body trying to find a place to take root and cause havoc.
I am usually a positive and happy person but I have cycles where I go into a dark place....I'm there now. Is there anyone here with a similar experience or with a little advice? Thanks
Comments
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Bettylovestrees,
I'm so sorry you are in a dark place. You aren't alone with the ups and downs following diagnosis/surgery. By protecting themselves, the doctors' have created extra anxiety that you don't need. My advice, first and foremost is, if you need to research-do it here. Don't trust Dr. Google. These forums are the best place to come for comfort and reassurance. You may want to consider therapy, if your obsession is affecting your quality of life.
You are so right that it takes awhile to sort everything out. I'm still working on it, I'm only a year out.
I know there will be others respond to you soon. Please take care.
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Hello Bettylovestrees!
I had conflicting info told to me. I also had Pure DCIS, and was told that it wasn't actually capable of being anything other than that. If there had been seeding during surgery, that DCIS, in itself is non invasive, so couldn't actually become an invasive cancer anywhere else.
When I got my final pathology, my surgeon actually said "you are effectively cured, because of the decision to have the Mx, everything was removed!" I had very clear margins.
I hope Beesie sees this and ventures in, I trust her knowledge on this subect, totally.
I wouldn't normally say this, but I really hope I am right on this one!
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Betty, with breast cancer, there is nothing that is 100% certain. And I'm guessing that is why your doctor said that you were 98% cured, not 100% cured. Compared to all breast cancer patients he sees, you have the lowest possible risk, so he probably thought that he was reassuring you when he said "98%". What he should have said is that "your chance of being cured now is as close to 100% as it can possibly be".
So here is what's most important to know about DCIS: Pure DCIS can not metastasize. So to say that "a cell may have got away and travelled via (the) bloodstream to lodge to some other site where it could possibly develop into mets" is simply not a possibility with pure DCIS.
What this means is that if your diagnosis was truly pure DCIS, and if your surgery successfully removed all of the DCIS cells in your breast, then you are in fact 100% cured. DCIS is the only type of breast cancer for which this can be said.
Now, about those "ifs". It's the "ifs" that drop the 100% cure rate down a bit.
First "if": "if your diagnosis was truly pure DCIS" It's possible, when the breast tissue is being examined under the microscope, that a very tiny microinvasion of IDC could be missed. Consider however that microinvasions that are only 1mm in size - and many even smaller - are routinely found. So if something is missed, it's likely to be very very small. And what are the chances that this happened? Betty, I don't know how large your area of DCIS was, or what the grade was, but you do say that your DCIS was very slow growing. It's rare that a slow growing DCIS would include a microinvasion. So the odds of this are small.
And if did happen, if there was a tiny area of invasion that wasn't found when your pathology was done, what does that mean? In most cases, it means nothing. It was a small area of invasion, and it was removed along with all the DCIS, and once it's gone, it can't hurt you. The only risk from this sort of an occult invasion is if, prior to your surgery, one or a few of the cells broke off and moved into the nodes or the bloodstream and from there, into the body. And those few rogue cells would have to survive this process and take hold and thrive. With a very tiny amount of invasion, and so few cancer cells, the odds of this happening is very very low.
So let me throw out some numbers. Maybe there was a risk of 10% that a small area of invasive cancer was hidden in the middle of your DCIS and missed by the pathologist. Maybe there was a 10% risk that one or a few of those invasive cells moved into the nodes or the bloodstream (this is supported by research; there is a 10% risk of nodal involvement from a microinvasion). And maybe there was a 30% risk that those rogue invasive cells actually survived and moved into the body and eventually took hold somewhere, developing into mets (I doubt the risk is that high). That all works out to a 0.3% risk. Less than 1/3 a percent.
Second "if": "if your surgery successfully removed all of the DCIS cells in your breast" The biggest risk from a diagnosis of DCIS is that all the DCIS is not surgically removed and/or killed off, and some of the remaining cells continue to develop and eventually become invasive. This leads to a local recurrence which is invasive cancer rather than DCIS (approx. 50% of DCIS recurrences are not found until they are invasive). Once someone has invasive cancer, there is the possiblity of mets. So what are the odds of this happening? Many studies have confirmed that after a MX for DCIS, if the margins are adequate, the recurrence rate is in the range of 1% to 2%. So let's say it's 2% (although with a slow growing DCIS, your risk is probably closer to the 1% rather than the 2%). Approx. 1/2 of all recurrence are invasive. So this means that your risk of developing an invasive recurrence is at most 1%. Most invasive cancers are early stage and never develop into mets. I believe that the overall risk of mets from invasive cancer is about 30%. So this means that the risk of developing mets as a result of an invasive recurrence after a MX is about 0.3%, or less than 1/3 of a percent.
So your doctor is right that he can't say that you are 100% cured. But the risks you face are very very small - and not something that you should live your life worrying about. Remember that before you were diagnosed, you faced approx. a 12% risk to develop breast cancer at some point during your life (assuming you were average risk). Did you think about this every day? Or did you go on with your life and never think about it, except for those days when you were having your annual mammos? The risk you face now from this diagnosis of DCIS is just a fraction of that risk, and it's probably smaller than other health risks that you face that you never even think about. So don't obsess about it. Try to not even think about it. At first that is hard; I know that. I remember having those same fears (and I had a known microinvasion, so my risk is a bit higher). But in time you'll find that the fear will fade.
Edited to add: Betty, I've also responded to the other thread that I think may have been fueling some of your concerns. http://community.breastcancer.org/forum/16/topic/801702?page=1#idx_11 I hope that helps clarify a few things.
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Ariom
Your imput is very important to me so I find comfort in reading your posts..thank you. I'm pretty sure my dx is very similar to yours Ariom. The words my BS used to describe my DCIS were: "Yours is the most common type of bc."
I was only dx with DCIS and my BS told me that my sisters didn't need to worry because it wasn't a hereditary bc I guess.
2011, DCIS, <1cm, Stage 0, Grade 1, 0/0 nodes, ER+/PR-, HER2-
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Beesie,
Thank you for an awesome explanation....I don't expect anything less from you. I've gone back to my profile settings and made sure my dx was set on public view...it shows up now.
I don't think doctors realise how confusing the whole bc thing can be at first. The information is out there but there's a process one needs to go through as a novice before one is even navigating in the right direction. At least that is what it was like for me. It's taken me a year and a half to get a descent answer and to find genuine emotional support.
My intention here is to use this information and support to help me snap out of this depression I'm in. I felt stuck in a negative cycle because I just didn't have any positive feedback to hold onto. I'm going to write some positive affirmation cards and cut down my time that I spend thinking and worrying about bc.
On a final note, I hadn't realised how much of a negaive impact that posthttp://community.breastcancer.org/forum/16/topic/801702?page=1#idx_11 I read had on me. It was not long after reading it that I began to get more and more anxious about my dx. I'm amazed that you were able to pick up on that.
Beesie, you're a trusty navigator in this labyrinth of bc information. Thanks for your guidance.
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