Lobular Breast Cancer: Let's share and support each other
Since lobular breast cancer is only 10-15% of all breast cancer diagnoses and now understood to be a unique subset of breast cancer as a whole with different characteristics than ductal breast cancer necessitating different treatments and inherently different risks, I would like to see a separate category under the breast cancer forum so that the most appropriate info is being disseminated for this specific subset of BC. Just a thought.
Interested in more discussions like this? Go to the Breast Cancer Support Group.
After about 2 years of lumpectomies had an MRI that helped inform the decision to have bilateral mastectomy which was ILC stage 1
7 tumors on R
9 tumors on L (invasive )
10 lymph’s
I am doing well but for esophagitis with erosion.
Walk often & meditation too
Thanks
@mjay, you really got something started here. I hope you've seen all the new messages from new and old members with lobular breast cancer. Thank you and well done!
Like others on here I had bilateral mastectomies (no MRI's being done), and my doc doesn't do blood work. I am on Tymlos for osteoporosis after AI's for 5 years, and like many my age (71) have osteoarthritis, spinal stenosis etc. etc. so I am just not sure how metastasis would be detected.
Wishing the best for everyone!
1.5 to 2 mm is so tiny that it's impressive that it was detected. The cancer I had was estimated at 5 mm by mammo and ultrasound. And totally undetectable by physical exam. Thanks to the increases in precision technology that are saving lives.
Were the false positives MRIs? I ask because I've only had mammograms and ultrasounds and reading that some others dealing with breast cancer are having MRIs made me wonder if I should lobby for an MRI instead.
Yes, they were breast MRIs. The first was during my initial diagnosis. The breast MRI detected something suspicious in my healthy breast. After an ultrasound biopsy, the suspicious area proved benign.
The 2nd breast MRI came midway through my chemo treatment to see if there was improvement in my tumor size. Again the MRI saw suspicious activity in my healthy breast.
We immediately followed up with a mammogram and ultrasound but both couldn’t detect anything so I had a breast MRI biopsy which came back negative.
Breast MRIs are useful especially if one has dense breast tissue which I do not but they have a tendency to pick up everything which can be a problem.
I then decided to pass on having a yearly MRI. My breast surgeon and I agreed to having yearly 3D mammograms along with bloodwork and physical exams every six months.
It’s now been three years with no problems. ♥️
Understand your perspective, however, I’ve had ALH, then a DCIS with a combined IDC/ILC. So I actually like that it’s all in one place under breast cancer. I wonder if I am unique, or if there are others like me.
Oh boy. I think I had that really wrong. Not mm, cm. Bit of a difference 🙄🤦🏼♀️🤦🏼♀️
Wow Susan. That is hard to wrap my brain around. So glad that MRI technology is around! A walking meditation is the best!!
Thanks, Colleen. I feel we lobsters are a little bit of a unique group and the more specifics we can share, the better for all of us in the ILC category.
As for myself, I was on Letrazole for nearly a year and the joint pains were problematic. I also had concerns about becoming resistant to the Letrazole and have heard that Letrazole can bring back recurrences that are more difficult to treat...although I'm not sure of the accuracy of that statement. So I've just been switched to Tamoxifen, which is mostly for premenopausal women, which I am post, and which is not the preferred drug for ILC, so now I have new worries if I'm on the right drug. In addition, my genetic test showed a genetic risk for uterine/endometrial and ovarian cancer, which can be a side effect of Tamoxifen, albeit small, but I don't sleep easily knowing that. From what I've read, it takes about two years on Tamoxifen for uterine cancer to show up so hopefully this will just be a short-lived stint for me and then back to an AI. I'm 3 years out from lumpectomy and radiation, ILC Stage 1, Grade 3 pleomorphic, the trickiest of the tricky.