Aromatase Inhibitors: Did you decide to go on them or not?
Nanaloves: I’m about to start arimidex and just feel that the contraindications , bone issues etc. are overwhelming. I’m 70 years old, dodged a bullet I feel with zero stage DCIS but the follow up is pretty much no different then if it was more aggressive. I’ve just done 33 treatments of radiation and now they advise arimidex as a preventative. I’m not sure with the beginnings of arthritis and lower back. sensitivity already that I should take it. Anyone not take it and not have a recurrence within the 5 years.
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I too would like to know how that regimen works!
Hello,
I see this post is from 2019.
But if you get this ,I’d like to know how every 3rd day taking the AI worked. And if you had less side effects.
I saw an article the other day where some oncologists are also recommending against post-lumpectomy radiation for women over 60 who had early stage cancers excised.
There is a lot of reexamining possible 'over-treatment' of early-stage cancers now that more are being detected. At least among older women whose breast cancers are often less aggressive and slower-growing than the same cancer in a younger woman. [And then, on a more cynical note, insurance companies save money. There's a lot of policy pressure to spend less on elder health in general. ]
The way an oncologist explained it to me is that whatever conditions in one's body that allowed a cancer to develop in the first place remain unchanged. So one argument for the drugs is to hopefully eliminate estrogen if that's already been a fuel source for a cancer. That way it cannot fuel another estrogen-positive cancer in the body if the drug continues to work as planned.
That will not prevent any other cancer from developing, including an estrogen-negative one though. In a sense, one can be unlucky more than once. And age and other factors can impact on general immunity.
One oncologist was interviewed and thinks that a second breast cancer, in a different area from the first, shouldn't be considered a simple recurrence but a new, independent event even if compared biopsies 'looks the same. That is, he thinks many distant occurrences are unrelated to the first except for occurring in the same body with the same biochemistry. His argument is for increasing research into how best to strengthen the immune system in general as the that could be the best anti-cancer weapon.
British oncologist Dr. Nicholas Turner is a Team Leader in the Breast Cancer Now Toby Robins Research Centre at The Institute of Cancer Research, London. Here are some recent awards with links to UK breast cancer research. Liquid biopsies sound interesting for finding the likelihood of relapse. There may soon be a better way than current diagnosis and cut/burn/poison treatment.
https://www.icr.ac.uk/news-features/news-archive?tags=cf4efcca-6595-64f3-a772-ff0000325351
@vivi1 I tried to look up the answer to your question on whether further treatment is needed if no circulating cancer cells are found. You might want to read through this: https://www.sciencedirect.com/topics/medicine-and-dentistry/circulating-tumor-cell
What I get from this is that for a variety of reasons, CTC's are hard to detect (rare in the body, can be hidden by red blood cells, etc.) so I would not trust the test results. It looks like some of the troublesome cells aren't actually circulating but have embedded.
If no CTC's are detected, it does look like survival time for patients is longer than for those who have a significant count, so there is prognostic value. But I am not sure a score of zero means no treatment and your doctor can best tell you the answer!
The article notes that the test has been approved for use in the EU but I couldn't find the name it's used under to look at studies on it. But there are several similar tests in development so, if this one doesn't live up to early indicators, another one undoubtedly will at some point.
The reason any of us take an aromatase inhibitor is to thwart new primaries, a recurrence, and/or a metastatic distant spread. If after treatment we no longer have circulating cancer cells, do we need to take them? Maybe to prevent a new primary. There was interesting news posted on the Daily Mail recently about a new blood test for BC that may be more accurate than a mammogram, with no radiation and no false positives. https://www.dailymail.co.uk/sciencetech/article-11042803/Game-changer-blood-test-better-finding-early-breast-cancers-mammogram.html
My bones are ok
Mine was a yes