Diagnosed with DCIS: How do I decide on treatment?
I was diagnosed with DCIS. I have to go in for a breast MRI with contrast tomorrow to see how active the cancer is. If it’s contained and not very active, do I have to have a lumpectomy?
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The primary tumor can promote metastasis by inducing the creation of a permissive microenvironment in a secondary organ site, termed the pre-metastatic niche (15,16). The alteration of bone health associated with osteoporosis may provide fertile soil for the activation of the metastatic cascade, from the seeding of tumor cells to the activation of indolent micrometastases and finally to the expansion of bone lesions
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6256706/
Thank you! That’s good information on the radiation technique! I will research further in the event I find I need radiation. My Radiology Oncologist told me that they use the mega dose radiation on the entire breast 5 days a week for 4 weeks. She didn’t mention any other type of radiation to choose from. After researching I’ve seen that there are a lot more side effects from the mega doses of radiation. Since there was nothing found after my lumpectomy clean margins are not applicable to me to help decide. I can’t believe that doctors are not telling women that in most cases if something comes back in the same breast after already having radiation their only choice is mastectomy. My own surgeon didn’t tell me, I asked her after seeing it several times during my “uneducated” research. I think this should be in every doctors discussion with patients. By seeing responses in several groups it seems the opposite. I think a lot of doctors just go with “standard care” & aren’t looking outside the box for treatment options specific to an individuals case. Women need to be their own advocate when it comes to treatments. Maybe it’s because I’m from Missouri, the “show me” state, lol. Or it’s as my mother used to say “I won’t do anything unless I think it’s my idea”. 🙂 I took what the doctors said & expanded on that by extensive research at the major cancer sites. Breast cancer is one hell of a journey. What you decide today could greatly impact you later. Wishing us ALL the BEST!
Thanks for mentioning the other Oncotype test as well. It's hard to stay current on the genomic tests as new ones are being developed all the time but I hope that all oncologists stay up to date and educate patients about choices among them.
One factor is whether facilities have new state-of-the-art technology. Those that don't can't offer it. This argues just one benefit for trying to get care at the larger well-funded medical institutions. Also many, like Cleveland Clinic where I go prohibit physicians from receiving 'incentives' from pharmaceutical or medical equipment suppliers. [I think Mayo has the same policy.] I find it reassuring that my physician isn't subject to a conflict of interest in my medical care.
Thank you, I have a family history of osteo. My aunt took Foxamax (back in the day, lol) and my Mom took another type for bone strength. They both had side effects, so I’ll just see what my Oncologist suggests. I suppose all meds have something. 🤗
That is encouraging. As so many others have said, seems that many Docs prescribe standard protocols, not individualized. Praying my Doc actually sees “me”, not another statistic. Tnx for your response🤗
Hmmm, physicians incentives wasn’t even on my radar. It would be a good question to ask. In Missouri we have Siteman Cancer which is a larger institution & ranked #10 in the country. I’m not currently going there but I may switch if for no other reason than to get a 2nd opinion regarding if I absolutely need radiation or not. Thanks!
Food for thought on doctors' ratings online, which I never trust.
I’m Also One of America’s “Top Doctors.”
https://www.google.com/amp/s/www.propublica.org/article/top-doctors-award-journalist/amp
The non-profit Pro Publica has myriad articles on financial and other incentives paid to doctors but not reported to patients. I've checked every doctor I use and not one accepts these 'incentives.' A friend nearly died from a drug his cardiologist pushed only to find out later that he was, unbeknownst to him, 'in a study' for the drug. For which his cardio received over $300,000 in undisclosed incentives. Worse, the drug failed FDA approval because some "participants" in the study died from side effects.
Caveat emptor!
DOLLARS FOR DOCTORS
How Industry Money Reaches Physicians
https://www.propublica.org/series/dollars-for-docs
Hi everyone. Thank you for all the helpful information. I’m really going to need it.
I got my surgery date today - October 24th. (But, honestly, I think I’m more nervous about all the decisions that go with the aftercare. 😱)
You’ll be hearing from me a lot! Thanks again.