Anonymous wrote:Hi everyone. Coco's story sounds quite similar to mine. I was diagnosed with stage IV colon cancer at age 35 last year, two years postpartum. Now NED after chemo and surgery, thank God! The odds of recurrence are frighteningly high, but I try not to dwell on that and just enjoy every moment with my daughter.
And it surprises me how many other young women I have met (mostly online, though several are local) with stories like mine, diagnosed with colon cancer within a couple of years after a pregnancy and not fitting any of the typical risk factors in terms of age, family history, diet, etc. There's no evidence that colon cancer is hormone-driven, but it does make me wonder if there is a subset of cases where that is a factor...
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Hi Trudy,
You can call me Beth. Like you, I was diagnosed with breast cancer in my 40's (43). I was diagnosed with what's called an "occult primary" breast cancer - basically no tumor was ever found in the breast, but I did have 2 positive lymph nodes. Like you, I'm also triple positive. I tested negative for BRCA1/2, but did test positive for a gene "variant of unknown significance". I do have some breast cancer on one side of my family (aunt and cousin).
I had neo-adjuvant TCHP chemotherapy, then due to my family history, I chose to have bilateral mastectomy (they did the reconstruction with implants at the same time) with axillary dissection (21 nodes removed - 2 found to still have some cancer cells upon pathology review of the tissue post surgery - no cancer cells found in my breasts at all). I am completing my year of Herceptin - will finish in October. And, I am having radiation of the axilla and breast on the effected side. I'll be starting Tamoxifen soon.
The most difficult/upsetting thing for me is how little the doctors can or will tell you about your risk of recurrence - especially for me I suppose - diagnosed young, triple positive and with an occult breast cancer. There's not much out there on that combination. So it's really, really scary for me. I tried to talk with my oncologist about it and was told that I should just go home, forget about it and live my life. I was told, "you're in remission, ok?" in a very harsh way. Alrighty then....
Anyway - I'm a mom, a wife and I work full time...so juggling life and this cancer merry-go-round has been very challenging. I'm looking forward to getting to mid-October. At that point I'll be done with all the major treatments and will be in follow-up mode + tamoxifen.
The think to understand in in these studies, there are people that beat the odds, and people that do worse than the odds.
In my case, 3 years ago, I was given 3 yr disease free survival of 15-20%. I had/have a very aggressive (sarcomitoid differentiated) metastatic kidney cancer. Three years later, I remain NED. Did I beat the odds, or did I hit the odds for just me? I don't know... but everyone is different. In my case, there was one metastasis. The treatment we tried was surgery (kidney and part of lung removed). For what ever reason, that may have worked for me. The message is there are always outliers.
Anonymous wrote:Hi Trudy,
You can call me Beth. Like you, I was diagnosed with breast cancer in my 40's (43). I was diagnosed with what's called an "occult primary" breast cancer - basically no tumor was ever found in the breast, but I did have 2 positive lymph nodes. Like you, I'm also triple positive. I tested negative for BRCA1/2, but did test positive for a gene "variant of unknown significance". I do have some breast cancer on one side of my family (aunt and cousin).
I had neo-adjuvant TCHP chemotherapy, then due to my family history, I chose to have bilateral mastectomy (they did the reconstruction with implants at the same time) with axillary dissection (21 nodes removed - 2 found to still have some cancer cells upon pathology review of the tissue post surgery - no cancer cells found in my breasts at all). I am completing my year of Herceptin - will finish in October. And, I am having radiation of the axilla and breast on the effected side. I'll be starting Tamoxifen soon.
The most difficult/upsetting thing for me is how little the doctors can or will tell you about your risk of recurrence - especially for me I suppose - diagnosed young, triple positive and with an occult breast cancer. There's not much out there on that combination. So it's really, really scary for me. I tried to talk with my oncologist about it and was told that I should just go home, forget about it and live my life. I was told, "you're in remission, ok?" in a very harsh way. Alrighty then....
Anyway - I'm a mom, a wife and I work full time...so juggling life and this cancer merry-go-round has been very challenging. I'm looking forward to getting to mid-October. At that point I'll be done with all the major treatments and will be in follow-up mode + tamoxifen.
Anonymous wrote:You can call me Beth. Like you, I was diagnosed with breast cancer in my 40's (43). I was diagnosed with what's called an "occult primary" breast cancer - basically no tumor was ever found in the breast, but I did have 2 positive lymph nodes. Like you, I'm also triple positive. I tested negative for BRCA1/2, but did test positive for a gene "variant of unknown significance". I do have some breast cancer on one side of my family (aunt and cousin).
I had neo-adjuvant TCHP chemotherapy, then due to my family history, I chose to have bilateral mastectomy (they did the reconstruction with implants at the same time) with axillary dissection (21 nodes removed - 2 found to still have some cancer cells upon pathology review of the tissue post surgery - no cancer cells found in my breasts at all). I am completing my year of Herceptin - will finish in October. And, I am having radiation of the axilla and breast on the effected side. I'll be starting Tamoxifen soon.
The most difficult/upsetting thing for me is how little the doctors can or will tell you about your risk of recurrence - especially for me I suppose - diagnosed young, triple positive and with an occult breast cancer. There's not much out there on that combination. So it's really, really scary for me. I tried to talk with my oncologist about it and was told that I should just go home, forget about it and live my life. I was told, "you're in remission, ok?" in a very harsh way. Alrighty then....
Anyway - I'm a mom, a wife and I work full time...so juggling life and this cancer merry-go-round has been very challenging. I'm looking forward to getting to mid-October. At that point I'll be done with all the major treatments and will be in follow-up mode + tamoxifen.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:AMA OP here. I'm back in the hospital for a bad fall. After a CT, I'm now being told they see something so I'm waiting to see my oncologist. If it's a met, it would be a new one. I'm really hoping it isn't that.
It's one of those weird truths that you never really stop being afraid of cancer, even after you get it.
I'm sorry, AMA...how's it going? Please keep us posted. (((hugs)))
~Trudy
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Is anyone else here working with a naturopath, or pursuing any complementary/alternative strategies? I've been doing a lot of work on trying to strengthen my immune system. I'm also taking anti-inflammatories to try and keep my systemic inflammation as low as possible.
I would be very very careful with alternative strategies. If you are doing it in addition to your regular treatments, then make sure your oncologist is on board.
The real thing is most alternative strategies do not work. If they worked, they would be mainstream. The possible exception is cannabis, as (federal) research has been prohibited.
What can work well is alternative meds to counteract treatment side-effects. For example, acupuncture is very effective with neuropathic pain.
Anonymous wrote:Is anyone else here working with a naturopath, or pursuing any complementary/alternative strategies? I've been doing a lot of work on trying to strengthen my immune system. I'm also taking anti-inflammatories to try and keep my systemic inflammation as low as possible.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Hi Coco! How did you learn that you had cancer--were you experiencing symptoms or was it found during a regular checkup? Fingers crossed that it's just endometriosis.
~Trudy
Hi Trudy! I had symptoms. I was having some abdominal pains after eating. I'd also noticed a bit of blood in my stool (which I stupidly dismissed as post-pregnancy hemorrhoids). I was losing weight too, although I attributed that to breastfeeding. After 2 months or so of the stomach pains, I finally made an appt with a GI specialist, who recommended a colonoscopy. That was how they found it. There is no routine screening for colon cancer before age 50, so I'm very lucky that my doctor was proactive. Given the aggressiveness of my tumor, they've given me 50/50 odds that it will come back. What are the recurrence rates like for stage III breast cancer?
Those things like weight loss due to breast feeding and blood in the stool from hemorrhoids are spot on. You weren't being stupid.
You are lucky that your doctor was proactive most would have just send you home with some Colace.
Hope you continue to do well.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Hi Coco! How did you learn that you had cancer--were you experiencing symptoms or was it found during a regular checkup? Fingers crossed that it's just endometriosis.
~Trudy
Hi Trudy! I had symptoms. I was having some abdominal pains after eating. I'd also noticed a bit of blood in my stool (which I stupidly dismissed as post-pregnancy hemorrhoids). I was losing weight too, although I attributed that to breastfeeding. After 2 months or so of the stomach pains, I finally made an appt with a GI specialist, who recommended a colonoscopy. That was how they found it. There is no routine screening for colon cancer before age 50, so I'm very lucky that my doctor was proactive. Given the aggressiveness of my tumor, they've given me 50/50 odds that it will come back. What are the recurrence rates like for stage III breast cancer?