Radiation/chemo
So on July 3rd I was diagnosed with invasive ductile carcinoma, stage I grade 3. On July 27th I had a lumpectomy with sentinel node removal. I'm doing great. On August 7th the Dr called me with my results. Stage 1 grade 2 Her 2+++, ER + 8mm tumor removed, node was negative and all margins cleared. My question is why would I have to go thru any type of radiation or chemo if I am now cancer free? I don't mean to sound ignorant but if all margins are clear and the tumor has been removed, why would I want to have radiation, herceptin or tomaxifin? Thank you in advance for your help, I'm so confused.
Comments
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Hi chevygirl,
Invasive cancer cells can escape the tumor through the bloodstream. Even with clear lymph nodes and clear margins, one of the cancer cells that may have escaped can come back in a different part of the patient's body (or metastasizes). This happened to my mother. Even with a very small Stage I tumor, no lymph node involvement and clear margins, the cancer came back in her bones. This is why you need chemo - it is a systemic treatment that prevents cancer from coming back both in your remaining breasts, as well as somewhere else in your body (although, of course, there are no guarantees even with systemic treatment). The radiation is necessary to kill off any stray cells left in the breast after a lumpectomy, as the chance of stray cancer cells remaining in the breast is higher with a lumpectomy than a mastectomy. (A lumpectomy and a mastectomy are equivalent only when radiation is added to a lumpectomy; otherwise, a mastectomy would be performed. Also, to avoid confusion, some mastectomy patients must still have radiation in certain circumstances). I hope this helps.
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Also, in your case, you have HER2 positive cancer, which can unfortunately be particularly aggressive. Herceptin is viewed as the "miracle" treatment in HER2 positive cancer, which has literally changed the prognosis for HER2 positive cancer for many cancer patients; and therefore, it would be very important for you to receive it.
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Thank you for your advice.
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