Concerned about the side effects of anastrozole
I completed all treatments for breast cancer but now I am supposed to take hormone blocker, named anastrozole. im concerned about the side effects. Has anyone here taken it and did anyone have hair loss?
Interested in more discussions like this? Go to the Breast Cancer Support Group.
I am horrified by your experience. You did not have a doctor you had a narciss. In Hine sight you should have changed Oncologist when he did not do the oncatype.
Can you name the doctor so no one else has your experience?
I pray that the radiation worked and you have good health.
I can't with full confidence say why doctors prescribe Anastrozole before Exemestane. What I do know is that when one of my oncologists (I'm now on my 4th) prescribed Exemestane, my pharmacy (chain) did not carry it, had to call around to find it, and charge retail as my insurance Wellcare, did not cover it. I was able to find a GoodRX coupon to make the cost bearable. I recently discovered that the Mark Cuban drug site carries it at an affordable cost.
I find this blog so helpful. Thank you all for sharing. I have been on anastrozole for about 2 years. Immediately when I started taking it I had debilitating anxiety and brain fog. I did not think I could continue. My Oncologist is great, she believes in alternative medicine. What has worked best for me is acupuncture. It relieved the anxiety and severe joint pain in my hands and shoulders.
I stopped the acupuncture for about 2 months and suffered extremely painful joint pain and edema in my arm. I was surprised that all the symptoms you all have described I started having 2 years in.
I am now back with the acupuncture and Lymphatic massages. The joint pain and the edema is better. The insomnia and extreme fatigue is still here. But so happy for the pain relief I will deal with it.
I usually just read and do not participate in the blog. But I had to write because you all let me know I'm am not crazy and that this is real
Thank you so much! ❤️
With AI's I don't see how cutting the pill (inconsistencies) would matter as it is an accumulated effect. With my oncologists approval I took 1/2 dosage with a choice of split pills every day or full tablet every other day. You're still getting the same dose every other day. Also, as others have mentioned, 20% dose still maintains acceptable levels. My oncologist also approved drug free vacations - 6 months on and 1 month off. There's another study I found showing satisfactory results with 9 months on and 3 drug free.
https://www.annalsofoncology.org/article/S0923-7534(21)02492-3/fulltext
einnoc...Oh my Gosh, you have been through so much. I am so sorry. It's very concerning that doctors can get by with such unkind, and dangerous behavior. And I think that it's difficult to speak out to a doctor because it could be noted on your health record and then other doctors could be leary of you.
I don't know yet if my oncologist will put me on exemestane but after what you have said I am really concerned. I have had 3 knee surgeries, a wrist surgery, a hip surgery, a finger joint surgery and a L3 fracture so if this drug inflames previously injured joints, I will be in for it. Hopefully, I will be one of the lucky ones that can tolerate it if my doctor wants me to try it.
I was on anastrozole for 2 1/2 months. I had SO many side effects. I think the worst 5 were depression, brain fog, hair loss, daily headaches and constipation.
I declined taking exemestane because aromatase inhibitors would only decrease my chances of recurrence by 5 or 6%. I was told that the side effects can be treated with more drugs, but I was concerned about the potential of more drugs causing even more side effects and an even poorer quality of life. I was not convinced that taking numerous drugs at age 70 would increase my overall survival.
These decisions are not made easily. I truly understand that the choices are even harder for breast cancer patients with higher chances of recurrence or at a different stage of life.
I wish you all well and peace with your decisions.
I agree that speaking out to a doctor causes you to run the risk of being blacklisted as "a complainer." I grew up totally trusting in the doctor's judgment, so learning that modern medicine requires one to speak up and become a forceful advocate is new to me. I am a writer, so I wrote everything down and I have given each of my current doctors the full story of my treatment(s). (I actually heard the Texas group discussing it out in the hall through the door, that was ajar, and they were appalled.) I will gladly tell any patient, privately, the name of the offending oncologist who apparently did not spend even a minute finding out about my participation in the MOST study for over 20 years and put me on drugs almost guaranteed to cause inflammation of previously injured joints. When I went to Iowa City and met with the man who is now my Midwestern oncologist, that was his comment: that A.I. pills (not Tamoxifen, but Anastrozole, Laetrozole and Exemestane) will cause inflammation of previously injured or arthritic joints. I am not a doctor and it is simply something that I agonized through, firsthand, for 7 months, with little concern showed by the oncologist's office about any of my side effects. I also was not given the truth when I inquired about side effects, and had to find out on my own from blogs like this #ne. I sincerely hope that you do not have the extreme off-the-chart bone and joint pain that I experienced, because I was 76 years old at the time, had given birth to two children (one a 9-lb. boy) and had 3 major surgeries and it was the worst pain I have ever experienced, bar none---and that includes the $12,000 of dental work I am currently undergoing with dental implants, crowns, root canals, etc. Good luck! Don't suffer in silence for months, like I did.
Hopeful, I have refrained from publicizing the oncologist's name, although, when asked in private, I do not hesitate to name names. At the outset of my journey, I had NO family history (or friends) with b.c and thought that his dismissive attitude towards the ordering of an oncotype was based on the fact that, on the surface, my presentation seemed relatively positive: small tumor (11 mm) caught early, no spread, good margins, 95% estrogen positive. I did not know that the onco score would be used not just to plan treatment but also would give a % of recurrence rate for later, which became my chief concern as time went by. I have blamed myself for not insisting on the oncotype, but I am a child of the forties and an English teacher does not claim superiority over the wisdom and training of an oncologist in the world I grew up in. I didn't know (then) that the Modern Medical Mantra has become YOYO (You're On Your Own) It was only after all of my treatment (surgery, radiation, one full year of pills) that I began to study up.
The blessing is you have learned and your story will help so many ✨️
Thank you again for sharing love ❤️
I did not have much joint pain with letrozole. Hot flashes the first month. I could not do bone meds (Reclast) because the doc didn't order it due to concern about afib, now discounted. Three of my friends have had no problems at all. Just posting for balance.
I started with generic anastrazole, then generic letrozole then brand name letrozole. I had immediate reactions to fillers, which is different from a "side effect." I spent money on brand name and then the last month found a generic I could tolerate. Oh well!