TRIPLE POSITIVE GROUP

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  • Cherry-sw
    Cherry-sw Member Posts: 997
    edited August 2017

    Hi ElaineTherese, I probably put it wrong a bit, mastectomy is offered when lumpectomy is not possible at all, for the obvious reasons. One can also be offered mastectomy in case of recurrence or even prophilactically if it is proved that bc is hereditary. I could not opt for that in any clinic though because mine is not even in the breast itself but in the tissue above the breast. Well, Sweden is a small country and the system is what it is but the treatment is the same as far as I can see. In US you have another health insurance system and the country this large and diversed it is hard to compare, not exactly the same scale when it comes to research t ex. Cherry

  • ElaineTherese
    ElaineTherese Member Posts: 3,328
    edited August 2017

    Yes, the treatment does seem very similar. Kattis (also from Sweden) had access to the latest treatments (e.g., Perjeta) when she posted on this site. Every country is a little different (e.g., it's harder to get Perjeta in Canada). However, there is more worry about how to pay for treatment in the US.

  • debiann
    debiann Member Posts: 1,200
    edited August 2017

    I agree HapB. If I had to choose between losing a leg or getting rads, I would have taken the rads. I need my leg to walk. However if I had cancer in the my ear lobe and was given the same options, perhaps I would rather remove part of my ear than radiate. The point being, it should be my choice. Patients should be given all the facts to be able to make an informed decision. We all have our own opinions on what is "least" or "more" aggressive". To you "more" means a more involved surgery, to me it means rads. If I would have needed them, I would have done them, but I had a way out and my doctor should have been the one to explain that to me.

    My reconstructed breast are much nicer than the diseased ones they took off, but I seriously considered not reconstructing at all. I much admire women who comfortable going flat. In hindsight, I probably didn't need to reconstruct because the Arimidex has taken away any interest in sex. So I have pretty new boobs and I don't even feel like showing them to my husband. Oh well, that's a whole other rant.

    You are right, Cherry, I have heard of others have tumors in what we would consider to be outside the breast area. No one ever told me to check those areas during my monthly self exams and I don't remember a doctor ever checking those areas during a yearly breast exam. I do check out the whole chest area now because I know that even though I had a BMX. there is always some breast tissue remaining and I could have a recurrence.


  • coachvicky
    coachvicky Member Posts: 1,057
    edited August 2017

    About the decision to have or not have a bilateral mastectomy...

    My Surgeon recommended a bilateral mastectomy from the beginning. At that time he / we only knew about cancer in the left breast. An MRI later showed lobular cancer in the right breast.

    He did tell me, when we only knew of the left breast cancer, he would remove as much tissue as needed to get to clear margins.

    The choice was mine to make.

    I loved my breasts. I cried and cried about having them removed.

    And then ... I realized they were going to kill me. I finally got to the point when I wanted them gone. It was hard but I have no regrets. Had I known I would have liked my new breasts this much, I probably would have considered cosmetic surgery earlier in my life.

    This is just my story. I was glad I had choices.

    Vicky

  • Suburbs
    Suburbs Member Posts: 429
    edited August 2017

    I object to the bias I perceive in articles about women choosing mastectomies and prophylactic mastectomies. I do not accept the notion that certain women woman are ill informed, less educated or living anywhere but on the two coasts and accordingly are predisposed to less informed decisions. I could make an equally pejorative statement that Lumpectomies are encouraged by doctors because the surgery is less costly.

    Mammograms are not an effective detection tool for women with dense breasts, a fact of which I was unaware until I was diagnosed with a nice size IDC tumor and DCIS. Twenty plus years of callbacks and anxiety from mammograms. Goodbye to all that and good riddance.
  • coachvicky
    coachvicky Member Posts: 1,057
    edited August 2017

    Suburbs ...

    Oh how I hear you!!!

    My husband and I went back to the imagining center that has done my mammograms for years.

    The Radiologist put up my films and said to my husband, her cancerd do not show up. Only a suspicious lesion showed up in the left breast.

    My husband said, "how can we see another universe and you can't see her cancers?"

    The Radiologist apologizing and shaking his head said the mammogram was only part of breast awareness. Monthly exams and physical exams by a doctor were the other parts. Well, 2 doctors missed the 4cm lobular carcinoma in the right breast!

    Had it not been for something telling me to get in early and pain in my left breast, I would probably be dead.

    It is scary that a mammogram is at best correct 50% of the time.

    Vicky

  • Anonymous
    Anonymous Member Posts: 1,376
    edited August 2017

    Debiann, we have the same diagnosis. Six years ago, my breast specialist said I fell in the gray area. While survival rate was the about the same for either, recurrence rate was a little less with mx. She also said that assuming there was no node involvement, (snl was done during the bmx), I should not need to have radiation. I then met with the radiologist and had a conversation with him and he said the same thing.

    What they all said however, was that it basically boiled down to my choice. With my diagnosis, there was no great difference in my choice.

    My plastic surgeon recommended a bmx from esthectic reasons. My breast specialist liked the bmx idea (or unx) idea just because she thought rads was a good thing to keep in my pocket if there were to be a recurrence.

    Ultimately, I chose BMX for the following reasons...I was 55. If I had been younger with perky firm breasts, I might have thought otherwise. I didn't want to have to worry about mri's and mammorgrams on the other side every six months. I had always been smaller until after my second child then I was pretty big. I never learned how to adjust to that. I wanted a smaller more athletic look (although I am not at all athletic lol).

    So, ultimately, I decided on the BMX. Still happy I did, although, I ended up with a pseudomona infection, had to have the expanders removed, then replaced, tons of antibiotics, iv and otherwise, which led to an allergy to sulfa now. But, once all that was resolved, they have been fine. I will say, I miss the sensation when we are fooling around, a lot.

    I had thought about some cosmetic improvements as there have been some small chages over the last six years. Then I followed along with Special K's story on her updates and decided enough was enough. I saw my PS a couple months ago and he said don't tempt fate lol.


  • Cherry-sw
    Cherry-sw Member Posts: 997
    edited August 2017

    ElaineTherese, public health care means everybody gets the same treatment. You can though purchase an additional private health insurance allowing you treatments outside the country, those are expensive and probably are more common among people with really high income or big fortune, otherwise the public health care here has high standard. Sometimes when you are a high rank executive you can negotiate a private health insurance through you employer, I actually work with this kind of agreements but never considered any such solution for myself. We also do pay o lot of taxes to afford public health care but it is just an idea that everybody has to be able to receive health care when needed even those who cannot provide for themselves. The downside is probably the savings the clinics are trying to achieve. One will not have much choice as you said, everything is done if absolutely necessary. Right now I am not even upset because of that but because they still cannot make the larger progress in the areas of diagnostics, treatments and follow-up. Until symptomatic no one has a chance to know whether it will come back or not. It makes me so stressed.

  • Cherry-sw
    Cherry-sw Member Posts: 997
    edited August 2017

    Debiann, I had an extensive exam in January, not only an mammogram but also US. Now I understand that they could not get this tumor into the machine but they even missed it in US. I remember the doctor sitting there with a bored face and just moving the handle looking in the screen. Then she stopped and told me that she cannot see anything and the pain I was experiencing before must have been hormonal, I was free to go. I do not remember exactly if she moved the handle as high up as my armpit, I did not think about it. Otherwise she would have not missed a mass that by the end of June was 1,5 cm large. When I was diagnosed my clinic checked this US picture series and they did not see anything either. I did not asked about the pictures' location, when I tried to ask the doctor she told me, well, what can I say, we have looked at those and did not find anything. Is it possible for tumors to grow so fast, I don't know.

  • Laurie123
    Laurie123 Member Posts: 4
    edited August 2017

    I had triple positive BC 6 years ago, with bilateral mastectomy, chemo & herceptin.... I just had a chest X-ray as part of pre-op testing for an unrelated issue and it showed a "shadow" on my right side (the cancer side), high up near clavicle.... my primary is sending me for a CT scan next week, and said not to worry (yea right, I'm freaking out)..... what could it be besides cancer? Scar tissue from where my port used to be? A lymph node?.... I feel physically sick just thinking about this... has anyone ever heard of something like this that wasn't cancer? Thank you for any replies.

  • Cherry-sw
    Cherry-sw Member Posts: 997
    edited August 2017

    Hi Laurie,

    Now I am so new to this and I am sorry that you have to deal with that years after your diagnosis. I do not know what it may be but there is a number of benign conditions as well. My suggestion for you is to write a post under Not Diagnosed but Concerned, it will probably result in more answers for a separate thread. I really hope it will go well for you, hugs, Cherry

  • Tresjoli2
    Tresjoli2 Member Posts: 868
    edited August 2017

    HapB birth control pills are made up of estrogen and progesterone. So after the birth of my second child, I went back on the pill. Which Fed my cancer everyday. I always imagine Pac man for some reason. I had no idea I was fertilizing my cancer. My gp first said...I am sorry it is cancer. And the second thing she said was...i need you to stop your birth control immediately....

  • PoseyGirl
    PoseyGirl Member Posts: 359
    edited August 2017

    Hi Hapb, it was my understanding from my surgeon that is is not yet confirmed that the bc pills cause cancer. We know they'd feed an estrogen positive cancer. But cause it? Not sure. And apparently low dose pills don't seem to raise risk (which most women are on). I'm just writing this as I think it would be so easy for many of us to feel guilty about being on the pill. I believe it needs to be a cocktail of factors, as the better part of western society is on birth control and women with huge risk factors are breast cancer free

    If it is a cause, then wow does that upset me. Funny, as when I was taking my last two year round of pills, I had this little voice inside questioning whether or not I should. I've always had this niggling worry about that right side.

    Very dense breasts raise breast cancer risk 4-5 times. Every woman out there has a one in 8 chance, so think about our risks being dense breasted - massive. I am off the charts dense breasted. So, I think that, along with other factors (my age having my first child, several failed pregnancies, bc pill, etc) colluded.

    I still have haunted thoughts about what I would have changed. But I realize that is absolutely not fair to myself....

  • Taco1946
    Taco1946 Member Posts: 645
    edited August 2017

    Hap - you are 4-5 months behind me. My Lx was in Dec. and I started chemo in Feb. (brachytherapy in between). So I'm not surprised that you haven't gotten any bills. I just saw my April Medicare one which came with several previous months. So far, I have paid NOTHING for my treatment, just co-pays for medication.

    Teva is a manufacturer of a generic AI. I know Walgreens carries it but I had to ask for it. My first 90 days also gotten at Walgreens was manufactured by a company called "Accord." Several on the AI site have noted that they have experienced fewer side effects than with other generics because of the different "fillers" used by each company. That makes sense to me. My neurologist wouldn't let me take a generic of a particular seizure medicine I was on because of the fillers. After he switched my medications, he was perfectly comfortable with my taking a generic (and was it a huge savings!) As I recall, I paid under $30.00, $28.00 maybe, for 3 month supply of Teva with my drug plan issued by AARP with United Health. I don't remember what I paid for the first 90 days so it couldn't have been much. I have felt better during the second 90 days but obviously can't be certain it is the drug switch or that my body was getting used to the drug or that I was farther out from surgery, rads, and chemo. If you haven't been there, check out the AI thread. (I must admit I don't always remember who I meet where as I am on several threads here and my chemo class established their own private Facebook group.)

    Have a good weekend, everyone. Still over 100 with lows in the 80's here in Phoenix but at least for this week "it's a dry heat."


  • PoseyGirl
    PoseyGirl Member Posts: 359
    edited August 2017

    Hapb, I drank alcohol. So it's easy to make a list of 'sins' and be hard on myself. But while hormones are of course at the foundation of this cancer, I can't believe that taking a low dose pill on its own did this. I guess what I'm saying is that it's very complicated, we all have a unique genetic map, and there are so many factors. For the lifetime smoker who gets lung cancer, three is thar direct link to smoking. I don't believe it is that way with breast cancer

  • debiann
    debiann Member Posts: 1,200
    edited August 2017

    I do believe in the "perfect storm" reasoning. A combination of factors set the stage that allows cancer to grow. My dx came a couple years following a stressful period at work, the death of my father and a miserable menopause. Just like some bc is related to the hormones of pregnancy, I think mine was related to some wacky hormones during menopause. At one point, my ob-gyn had my estrogen level tested and it was off the chart high, then a month later back in normal range. I also had a breast injury in the exact area of my tumor a few years before dx. Is it all related or just coincidence? Who knows.

  • Tresjoli2
    Tresjoli2 Member Posts: 868
    edited August 2017

    posey...i just want to clarify my post. I wasn't saying that my BC pills caused my cancer. I just meant that my hormone positive cancer was being fed by them. I just wanted to clarify. No one should feel guilty about anything they have done! It's just bad stupid luck :-( I hope I didn't upset anyone....

  • PoseyGirl
    PoseyGirl Member Posts: 359
    edited August 2017

    Tresjoli,

    Nope! I understood you perfectly! I know you said it fuelled your cancer and I agree with this reasoning. We have a similar background in some ways...

    My strong belief is that it's a combo of things and -yes- absolute crap luck!


  • Tresjoli2
    Tresjoli2 Member Posts: 868
    edited August 2017
  • ElaineTherese
    ElaineTherese Member Posts: 3,328
    edited August 2017

    I don't believe in "should-haves," "would-haves," and "could-haves." Since 2014, breast cancer became my new reality and that's what I have to cope with NOW. There's no sense in beating ourselves up about prior behavior or choices that might have contributed to breast cancer.

    All I can change is how I react to breast cancer NOW. I can't change what I might have done to get in this situation in the first place. So, that's what I focus on.

  • Cherry-sw
    Cherry-sw Member Posts: 997
    edited August 2017

    I keep following your discussion on this subject regarding the pills and postpartum bc. Now I also red on the web about it, I had no idea that the risk was so high, no one ever told me that, I never googled it before either when I was trying to conceive after 40, I just thought I could do it because I did not have any problems to conceive earlier. It also says that prognosis for postpartum is not good. I know there is no point but I do blame myself, I wish I would had let it go, sometimes I even did say to myself it was enough, I had my two children, but I always came back to that I just badly wanted another one. I also got prescribed birth control pills in December but saw that bc was one of the risks and decided not to take those. If I had, I would have now thought that it was the reason behind my bc. However I was pregnant and developed this lump within 1-2 years of my pregnancy, which one of them caused it I do not know.

  • SpecialK
    SpecialK Member Posts: 16,486
    edited August 2017

    Here is some info regarding breast cancer risk and oral contraceptives. I don't think any of us should assume that we know what has caused our breast cancer, it is too simple to draw a straight line between one possibility and one result.

    http://www.breastcancer.org/research-news/study-qu...

    https://www.cancer.gov/about-cancer/causes-prevent...


  • Cherry-sw
    Cherry-sw Member Posts: 997
    edited August 2017

    I have been thinking about this a lot since I got my diagnosis and started to read about bc and all possible cause. I know it is pointless but some part of me wants to understand, I do not know why, maybe my mind is trying to cope with bc or any other problem in this way in order to get some closure. I just wonder (did not find on the internet though) if ER levels during the early pregnancy and those while taking birth control pills are the same? Is it possible that I had still got Her2 positive but hormone negative cancer if it was not for those pregnancies or if I just could avoided the whole thing. On the other hand I used to read a lot on the forums where women over 40 were trying to conceive over time, some taking ovulation pills, some going through the fertility treatments, all possible kind of supplements. Some of them had several miscarriages behind them. None of them had ever came back to the forum and said now I got bc. It is bad luck as my onc said.

  • Cherry-sw
    Cherry-sw Member Posts: 997
    edited August 2017

    Just added my post, my grammar is terrible, I am not a native speaker and have to read through several times before I post. Have also a tendency to express myself in a stream of consciousness manner

  • knmtwins
    knmtwins Member Posts: 598
    edited August 2017

    I've been off this page for a long time, so I hope my question hasn't already been answered, is anyone on the new (FDA approved July 17) Her2, post Herceptin drug Nerlynx (neratinib)? My MO thinks I should try it and I have a ten year old and 13 year old twins, so they need me, but the side effects sound like chemo and I do not want to go through that again (Nausea, Diarrhea, Nail issues, fatigue, etc). But, I also don't want my cancer to come back, because if it did I'd be back in full chemo. I'm very conflicted right now.

    Also, can you do a search within a specific board? I would have done that, but I don't see that option. I searched on the home page and just got all the articles from Treatments and Side Effects, nothing from the forums.

  • Tresjoli2
    Tresjoli2 Member Posts: 868
    edited August 2017

    I am going to ask my MO about nerlynx when I see her in September. Not sure if it's worth it.

    I really am sorry about my earlier post everyone. I in no way think that anyone does something that gives themself cancer. It's just bad luck, a mutation that can happen to anyone. I was just trying to relate my hypothesis about my own personal situation. I do believe I had PPBC and so does my MO. But it's a hypothesis only, based on a very unusual set of circumstances, with no solid research to back it up (research is just emerging).

    I love all of you on this board dearly and find this place one of comfort and support. I didn't mean to take us off track with our discussions. I don't ever want anyone on this board to think for even one second that they did something to cause their cancer. No way...

    Hugs!

    Pamela

  • PoseyGirl
    PoseyGirl Member Posts: 359
    edited August 2017

    KNM, interesting. I haven't heard of this new drug! I'm in Canada and that means we'll be behind on this, but if I were a candidate, I'd get my butt down to the US and get it. I personally have zero conflict over it. It's such a personal decision, but my own view on treatments is 'balls to the wall' ;)

    Re: our postpartum discussion...I think it's pretty clear that our hormones are responsible for the cancer, but like SpecialK says, it's very complicated. As a good friend of mine said (who has not had cancer) said: "look at me. I have several risk factors. I'm turning 50, am overweight, I drink, I smoke, I've never had children, and have a bad diet right now with little exercise".

    Bottom line is that it's so natural for us to run down the list and fixate on the past. I still get caught in that zone and it just stabs me in my heart. But I also realize there is no point to this. Most women have a few of the risk factors. And I know many women who started having kids in their late 30's to early 40's. It's so damn easy to walk this path. But 50 percent of people will get a cancer.

    Elainethere, your message is vital, and I need to focus on that. None of us did anything wrong. We just need to do our best now.

    And Cherry, a quick clarification re: postpartum bc...it's a more poor prognosis if the cancer has spread. The theory - I believe - is that in that pregnancy and postpartum period, hormones are so elevated and cancer cells can quickly disperse from the original tumour. Looks like you are extremely early stage

  • PoseyGirl
    PoseyGirl Member Posts: 359
    edited August 2017

    tresjoli, stop!!! ;) you did NOTHING! I am the one that took a tangent!! You never suggested that we caused our cancer!! I just spoke of my demons on that.

    And as for a conversation going off track, there is no 'off track' I thought. I feel welcome to say whatever is on my mind and know I'm in good, caring, resourceful company here.

    So stop it, you!! ;

  • Tresjoli2
    Tresjoli2 Member Posts: 868
    edited August 2017
  • Tresjoli2
    Tresjoli2 Member Posts: 868
    edited August 2017

    Posey I see my MO on 9/8 And I'll let you k ow what she says about this new drug Neratinib (Nerlynx). It go approved in the US in July and I believe is available in september.

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