Newly DX with IDC 3cm tumor
Comments
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I was diagnosed with DCI 3/08. Then after I had a lumpectomy on 4/2/08, my doctor discovered a tumor 3cm in size. He told me I now have IDC. I am having another surgery to check the lymphnodes in a week. Is it reasonable to say that I will need Chemotherapy, now that is has spread from its site of origin? And then radiation to follow?
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Mary ~ much of your treatment depends on the pathology of your bc. do you know if it is estrogen/progesterone positive? do you know the HER2 status? Do you have a copy of your pathology report? It's possible you will need chemotherapy and or radiation ~ but nothing will be definate until they do the lymph node biopsy and get a "whole picture" of your situation. I'm sorry that you have to go back in ~ I know all too well how stressful it all is and I will send positive vibes your way that all goes well for you. Let me know if there is anything I can to to ease the anxiety that comes with all of this...
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I no longer have the pathology report, but my doctor told me I was not a candidate for Tamoxifen. If I recall correctly, my estro/prog were negative. Yes, I know I have to wait for the lymph node biopsy results, but I am trying to get a handle on this, for me and for my kids sake, as far as preparing for Chemo, if necessary. Thank You for the info, and your positive vibes! Its nice to hear from someone who has actually gone/going through this - other than family members - who are always trying to find the right thing to say to me.......
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Hi MaryO,
I was just diagnosed a couple months with IDC, when you get you lymph node status back if you are negative, then the medical oncologist will show you the options of chemotherapy and how it may lessen your chance of recurrence in the future. If your lymph nodes are positive, they will encourage chemotherapy to catch cancer that may have spread. they may also run other body scans to see if any other cancerous tumors are in other organs. there is a lot of info on the web about breast cancer and from what i understand most is pretty accurate. There are thousands of women newly diagnosed yearly and the research is remarkable. We have a lot of hope and options.
Hang in there and May the Lord Jesus protect and guide you.
Amber
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Hi Mary,
I am a 2 1/2 year survivor of IDC, 4 cm tumour and 3 positive lymph nodes. I had to write this post to give you HOPE as it does exist!
Your medical team will be able to stage you once you have your lymph node surgery to determine whether or not there is any spread to them. Please dont panic if any of the nodes come out positive, it just means that your treatment will be that much more aggressive to get you back to good health again!
I had a lumpectomy with the removal of 23 lymph nodes, 6 months of chemo (8 treatments) and 5 1/2 weeks of radiation, on hormonals due to er/pr+ status.
Your cancer sounds like it is estrogen negative, hormonals will not be a part of your treatment plan. Chemo and perhaps radiation will more than likely be a part of your treatment due to the size of your tumour and the fact that it is invasive. You dont say whether or not your HER2 status is + or -, if it is + Herceptin is a drug which is given by IV for a year.
You will also most likely have baseline scans of your chest, liver/abdomen and bones to further stage your cancer. It is nerve wracking waiting on the results. I had a 4 cm tumour, 3 positive nodes and my scans were clear, thankfully...
I wish you the best in your recovery from surgery and as you are about to begin treatment. This is a long hard physically and emotionally challenging road but YOU CAN DO THIS, I'm proof that you can come out the other side of treatment and live life beyond bc.
Your bc sister
Michele
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I'm going to pipe up here and echo Michele's encouragement Mary. With surgery ahead of you and the likelihood of chemo I very much recall how scared and hopeless I felt in similar circumstances last year. I made it through multiple surgeries, several chemotherapies, radiation treatment and here I am. Feeling pretty healthy and getting my life back in order. It all seems so daunting and hopeless at the beginning of the journey but, please believe me when I tell you, you can do this. You will do what has to be done (surgeries, chemotherapy) to get the cancer out of your body and to live a long a happy life. Come back when you need us.
t
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Hi Mary!
I just want to ditto everything above and welcome you to this site. I was diagnosed on 1/15 with the 2.2 cm IDC and DCIS was found later - it seems like a lot of women end up with both. I am also ER-/PR-, and since I am Her2+, I am getting Herceptin. Like Twink said, it's all so terrifying right now, but I've had surgery, began chemo today, and feel really good physically and emotionally knowing that I'm doing everything to prevent this from coming back. Take it one step at a time, try not to stress too much over the tests, and please let us know any time you have a question or just want to vent.
Sue
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Hi Mary, I was dx with IDC in Oct,07, and I am almost through taxol treatments. You can get through this, just take it one day and one test at a time. I had a partial mastectomy with positive nodes, all of my scans were clear of cancer. Just keep coming here and ask any questions that you may have, these ladies are so helpful. Good luck
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Hi, I'm newly diagnosed with IDC. ER/PR positive and HER2 negative 3cm tumor . Having a masectomy in 7 days. Surgeon says she's pretty sure the sentinel node will come back positive. I'm terrified. -
It is easy to say take it one step at a time, but it is true. have you had an ONCODX test done yet? I am over 13 years out with almost same DX Take a deep breath. The hard part is getting the treatment plan in place and you need the after surgery pathology report to do that. Be sure to have Doctor also plan PT rehab for after surgery to get you healed up. Sending hugs
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Hi Slauriano,
I have a very familiar similar diagnosis, 3 cm tumor, 2 positive nodes, ER+, Her2 -
I have already had my mastectomy with reconstruction, don't be terrified you will get through it. Step by step it really does get better. The first two days after surgery are a bit rough, you will feel weird, not like yourself but you will be so surprised how quickly you will be able to do regular things. I am waiting now to start chemo, a bit scared but I've accepted it's just what needs to happen. This is my life for a year...we can't change it, just have to make the in between days better. -
while I was in kinda of an limbo during treatment, I couldn't leave the house due to complications so I taught myself the computer, digital photography and geneaology...at a very slow pace...many years ago now...it also took my mind off of so many things..
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