Bilateral mastectomy: how to decide on hormone therapy or not?
My wife, 39 yo, was diagnosed with DCIS non invasive. We did a bilateral mastectomy for both breasts (dcis in 1 breast). Should she take anti hormones pills or no. We had different feedbacks from several ancologists.
Thank u.
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Good for you. Sometimes you just have to find a way to make them listen. Glad you are getting some relief from this.
@charbelghafari, how are you and your wife doing with your treatment decision making? Have you sought a second opinion?
You are absolutely right. They treat with a one size fits all “standard of treatment” and scare you into compliance. You have to e your own advocate and not only listen to the doctors but balance it with what your body is telling you.
Hello, we re better now. I had an appointment with a second oncologist. He said that she doesnt need hormone treatment following a bilateral mastectomy (for DCIS) even if she s hormone positive. Few days ago, I sent her file to a well know oncologist in the usa to confirm again. I'm still waiting for his reply.
Thanks for asking
As I read your blog it seems I am currently in the same spot you as you when you had DCIS. How did you do on tamoxifen
@vit05 I did ok on Tamoxifen. Did not have any side effects the first 3 1/2 years. Then, I thought, it was affecting my hair. It was getting dry & brittle. It would break off. None of it was dramatic, but I color my hair and so work at not having it damaged. My oncologist said ‘okay, take a break from or fir a month or so. If hair improves then discontinue. If it remains the same then finish out the 5 years. My hair improved, so I just stopped the Tamoxifen. I was lucky not to have any side affects. Blessings
Honestly this sounds like such an unacceptable treatment and the researchers need to get on the ball and start looking for safer ways to treat cancer patients this is ridiculous at this point
Sadly, this is what we have, although things are getting better all the time. My grandmother had a Halstead mastectomy. My treatments were less and I had what we called slash, poison, and burn. Today thankfully, many women can avoid most or all of those things. There just isn’t always an easy fix. Did you have breast cancer treatment? Problems with radiation?
No, I didn't opt for radiation