“5 year survival” starts at diagnosis or when therapy ends?
My surgeon said I had an “82%” chance of surviving 5 years. I was so blown away I didn’t ask when does that 5 years start? At diagnosis? Surgery?after radiation and chemo? I plan on many more than five 😉
Interested in more discussions like this? Go to the Breast Cancer Support Group.
For hormonal cancers, risk continues to go up, past 5 years, unfortunately.
Aw....you "know me" well enough to know I try not to think about that kind of stuff!! LOL Hope you are doing well...
How interesting. My oncologist refused to do the BCI test - unless I promised to do another 5 years of Exemestane, which I refused, I hit my 5 year mark of the Drug on 11/1/2023 - and said I was done. I wanted the BCI test - but they said no. Then said another 5 years of AI would probably decrease my reoccurrence rate by < 3%. I just could not do another 5 years! But why refuse me the test? Very frustrating. I was stage 1 grade 3B, no lymph nodes involved, Onco was 22, No chemo, lumpectomy with 21 radiation treatments, 5 years of AI.
It's in the NCCN guidelines. Maybe if you do the legwork, print out the paperwork, contact the lab that stored your specimens and then present the last page for MD to sign!
Find another doctor, get a second opinion. Good doctors won't mind. Stick to your guns if you feel a medication isn't for you. It sounds crazy for less than 3% chance.
https://breast.predict.nhs.uk/tool
This is a tool doctors use to get your survival rate
You can put in different answers to see what addition benefit you might have to doing various treatments.
I would be careful about conclusions on survival rate using online predictors that don't include ER, PR. HER2 and genomic test results (Oncotype, Mammaprint, Breast Cancer Index, Prosigna). My "predict" survival rate is lower than that given to me by those various tests based on my actual tumor pathology specimens. Still online programs like this can give a ballpark. Just don't go by them.
I’ll go by however many days my good Lord gives me. It’s a tool, one of several that can be used for guidance. I personally use prayer more for guidance.
We have better tests then ever, like the genomic Oncotype, that enable some of us who would have had chemo, to avoid it. And the Breast Cancer Index allowed me to avoid further aromatase inhibitor treatment after 5 years. It is important to know what affects risk and what doesn't.
Every three months I have a Signatera blood test to see if I have any cancer cells in my blood. I find this very helpful. I am 2 1/2 years in with anastrozole. 2 1/2 more to go and I’ll take the index test.