Diagnosed with invasive ductal Carcinoma 2.2mm. Er/HER2 +3 positive
I was originally diagnosed with DCIS in two ducts. After lumpechtomy, the pathology report showed a 2.2mm tumor attached in one duct. It was diagnosed as invasive ductal Carcinoma-Estrogen positive, progesterone positive but weak & HER2 positive at a +3. All was removed and have clear margins. Had 2 lymph nodes removed, all negative. However, because of the tumor being HER2 positive and grade 3. The Oncologist is stating that I should consider chemotherapy for 3 months & then HER2 inhibitor infusions 1 year to increase the probability of the cancer returning. I am scared to death of chemo. He said if I chose not to have it, research shows a 80% life expectancy at 15 years. With chemo and the inhibitor it increases to 97% at 8 years. I want to give my self the best outcome but chemotherapy has so many bad side effects. Please I need advice from experienced survivors.
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Thanks Rubyslippers for the research & knowledge. This is all new to me as I was just diagnosed on Nov 2023 and was informed that I had DCIS stage O and would need a lumpectomy and then 3 weeks of radiation because they caught it so early. No one wants to hear they have cancer, but they said for me thus was tge best situation I could ask for, so I wrapped my head around surgery & sone radiation. No big deal! Then after surgery on March 25th, my pathology report showed thzt one small 2.2mm tumor that was not picked up by the needle biopsy and it was invasive. Changed things for me, now because of that tiny tumor that was removed. I am looking at chemo. I just need all the info and knowledge that I can get, to wrap my head around if going through the side effects of chemo is worth it for such a small tumor. So, thank you again for thr info thzt I can ask my doctor.
Thanks resort. I am glad to hear that your side effects were mild. It gives me hope. God bless you too!
Yes chemo was fine just started to bother me last 2 weeks of it. I would go on a Friday then work part time every Tues,Wed and Thursday.It was worth it for sure all of it . Always try , you ll know if it’s too much .🙏You got this!💕
You can choose the "cold cap" treatment before each chemo session. It seems pretty effective in preventing hair loss. I didn't bother - just wore a cap when I went out. My hair grew back pretty much the same as before. I didn't feel sick. Had a bit of mild "chemo rash". Main problem was fatigue.
I also am triple positive, with a smaller IDC tumor. I’m doing the exact regime recommended to you. To prevent peripheral neuropathy, my onc team recommended taking l-glutamine the day before, day of, and day after chemo. I also ordered the cold gloves and slippers, although I haven’t used them yet. I’ve had two Taxol/Herceptin treatments with just a little fatigue as side effect. I’m 81, but otherwise healthy. Not looking forward to hair loss, but have a couple wigs. Good luck to you!
Thanks Turbo mom for the suggestions. At least the wigs of today look more natural. Good luck in your journey as well. God bless!
Hello lnw...
Our diagnosis is very similar, as is our age except I was diagnosed 4 years ago. Similar size of tumor as well but I had one lymph node involvement. I did the full adjuvent therapy (chemo first, surgery second, radiation third). I did six rounds of chemo every 21 days. While there were a few days around day 5 after chemo where I didn't feel the best, I managed to get through those and the remaining days were good. I would say one thing, if you doctor prescribes you with anti-nausea, or something to relax, take it, whether you feel like you need it or not! I kind of learned that the hard way. I tried to maintain some moderate exercise (walking mostly) and ate as best I could. Honestly, I know looking back is easier than being in the midst, but I feel like I got through it quite well. I used the foot and hand mitts with ice and I made sure to chew on ice the entire time I was receiving chemo to reduce mouth sores (it really does work). I'm almost 5 years out and I've taken Anastrazole since that time and while I have some joint pain I feel like if it is doing what it is supposed to do, it is worth it. Again, though, I try to stay as active as possible and I think that helps. Good luck and I hope you can get through it with as few bumps as possible.
When I started chemo about two and a half years ago, the hospital pharmacist gave me a large box of drugs for most of the possible side effects. Turned out I didn't need any of them. I did get chemo rash - it brings out all the sunspots in your arms etc. Looked ugly but wasn't too itchy. (It wasn't on my hands or face - probably due to my having been made to wear gloves and a hat in high school.)
Main effect was fatigue. I could have chosen the cold cap treatment to keep my hair, but it meant spending an extra hour each time and I couldn't be bothered. From what I could tell from other patients, it does seem to work. I do have peripheral neuropathy though - but at least it's not painful. Oncologists seem to be just guessing when trying to assess the risk of permanent peripheral neuropathy- not enough research as been done.
I now wish I had opted for a preventative mastectomy after my first brush with breast cancer. Then I wouldn't be having to cope with peripheral neuropathy and the effects of anastrozole. Plus the impact on my family.
When I was 60 I had DCIS on one side. Mastectomy but no other treatment necessary.
Annual mammograms and ultrasound on the other side. Technicans used to say I had a "dense" breast - wish I had taken more notice!
I found a female surgeon willing to rid me of the remaining breast but I didn't go through with it. Seriously bad move.
It came back with a vengeance when I was 74. Out of the ducts this time. Hiding behind the nipple so I couldn't feel it. Only a small tumour but diagnosed as aggressive grade 3 estrogen -fed - although PET scan showed it hadn't spread.
So chemo, radio, now anastrozole for another 3 years.
Was your dcis invasive or not? And do you remember what stage it was?