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@bcwarrior

Callaloo,

I just found this site and am thrilled! Your 1st paragraph almost made me fall off my chair : ) I had a lumpectomy in 2007. I was stage 1 with clear margins and a clean node. My oncologist was telling me to set an appt. to be seen in 6 months. Luckily I had a breast cancer chat room mentor tell me to ask for the OncotypeDX genomic testing to be done. Unfortunately back then the insurance did not pay for it. It cost us just under $5,000.00. My tumor test results put me in the mid-range for recurrence. I was in Red Devil chemo within the week.

I also opted for what was new then for my radiation called MammoSite High-Dose Rate (HDR) Radiation Therapy. It works from inside the breast, directly targeting the area where cancer is most likely to recur. Radiation seeds are delivered via a MammoSite balloon catheter as directed by the treatment plan. After each twice-daily treatment, the seeds are removed. No radiation remains in the breast in between treatments.

MammoSite spares healthy tissue and organs from the effects of radiation and allows treatment to be completed in just five days instead of five to seven weeks.
They implanted it at the same time as lumpectomy surgery 01/17/2007. I had to keep my arm under my breast to support the weight of it. My chemo was completed 05/30/2007. The radiation wasn’t started for another month so I was still carrying my girl around. The delay was due to the Neulasta shots to build my blood counts back up. What they didn’t know then was my breast would look like Extreme sunburn with my nipple cracking and bleeding. After it cooked me from the inside they removed the saline, deflated it, and ripped it out of me skin and all with no pain medication or numbing.

I did 10 years of Arimidex, 3-hour diagnostic mammos every 6 months with no recurrence. I thought cancer was in the rearview mirror. I had 2 blissful years with screenings only before they detected the breast cancer was back. This time it hadn’t been detected as early because of the 2-inch ball of scar tissue from radiation.

Don’t ask how my very recent double mastectomy went or should I say how it is still going since May 25, 2022. All I know is I’m lucky to be alive and it’s always a great day when I wake up. AND I don’t have to carry my girl any longer LOL! Praying for Blessings to all, Lynne

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Replies to "Callaloo, I just found this site and am thrilled! Your 1st paragraph almost made me fall..."

Lynne, it sounds as if the OncotypeDX helped a lot as it triggered a more comprehensive treatment plan. Do I have that right?

I'm awfully sorry to read that the wily cancer for resurfaced but at least you threw everything available at it and will do so again. Recurrence is a haunting thought but the flip side of that is the ten years that it took for it to do so. I keep reminding myself of the cancer success statistics of even forty years ago versus today. In a sense, a lot of recurrences only happen because we're able to live long enough. And have better weapons. An irony of sorts but we're here to ponder it and, if need be, fight again!