Take anastrozole for the rest or your life?
My friend is 76. She has had BC twice…once in each breast. The last time was 4 years ago. Her oncologist told her she would have to take anastrozole for the rest of her life. Our cases are similar…different oncologists and I am 73…I was told I would finish after 5 years. Has anyone been told this or is currently taking it for the rest of their lives?
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It’s an exhausting journey from the start ; emotional exhaustion!
I am on Anastrozole to reduce recurrence risk… and will stay on until something better comes along.
I had genetic testing before. Zero markers for ANY cancers and no family history. My body didn’t get the memo.
There has been new studies that for early stage breast cancer, taking Anastrozole for 5 years seems to be effective. ♥️
So....following all active treatment (for which I used a local hospital), the time came for the "maintenance" part. My oncologist at the time (and mind you, I was 69) suggested Tamoxifen for 5 years. Pretty cookie cutter, no? That's the first time I sought a second opinion. I mean, I was way past menopause at that point. I went to an uptown cancer center and sure enough they prescribed a more nuanced appoach: finish the two years Tamoxifen, then 7-8 years of Anastrozole (which thankfully I tolerate with no problems). Zometa (bone protecting drug, not for everyone, and serious side effects which I thought were worth chancing because in some reliable studies Zometa has been shown to aid in preventing bone metastases) for 3 years, every 6 months by infusion. I would have no problem with continuing the AI when the time comes, but like I always say: every day we're still around gives them one more day to come up with something better. Some of these things you just have to try and see if they agree with you. In my mind the maintenance part of our treatment is just as important or maybe moreso than the critcal portion of our treatment. The cancer center I consult with currently says that a total of 10 years is the plan. Like you say, a lot can change for offerings by that time. I'm now 73.
@mdr3 will you be considering a Breast Cancer Index to see if there is benefit in extending treatment? I really wanted to do at least 7 years but the BCI told me no benefit. I decided to trust that test, and am glad to see it in the NCCN guidelines.
You know, I really don't know what blood tests they did on me initially at the local hospital. All I remember was for the brca gene which was negative. As I said, we had to move fast, and they threw just about everything but the kitchen sink at it. Would they have done a BCI initially? I suppose that is a good question for brighter minds than mine uptown. I've had three oncologists at DF tell me that 8 total years AI would be the standard of care for me (and that's without blood work). I've been on the AI since October 2021 so I have a way to go. After this last go around I'm definitely feeling cancer diagnostic fatigue. One cancer at a time LOL!
@mdr3 the BCI is done after 5 years on meds.