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michka
06-25-2011, 06:59 AM
I just came back from my sternum MRI. It is confirmed that I have a half an inch met. I keep crying since I left the place.
What can be done for a met on the sternum? Did anyone have success? With what? Chemo, zometa, radiation? And by the way is it possible when you have already been radiated?
They are still speaking about a biopsy but are quite sure it is a met. So what's the use? Extra suffering?
I am going down the bad path. I am seeing my onc on Tuesday.
But it is here on our site I get the most support. Love to all.
Michka

DonnaD
06-25-2011, 08:18 AM
Michka,
So sorry to hear about your news. Take a deep breath. We all remember those first days after the news of BC and how our world changed. One step at a time, you are allowed to cry. Next you will fight as so many others are doing on this site.

There are so many new drugs now. Hoping your onc will have a plan for you on Tuesday and you can get started right away.

I will be praying for you, as will many others.
Donna

Pam P
06-25-2011, 09:08 AM
Michka - I am sorry to hear of your news of met on the sternum. It seems a long time right now to wait until Tuesday to see your doctor and make a plan. Please please try to not panic. I know it's scary news but you know there is a way to attack this bone met. Your signature doesn't say your treatment history and my memory isn't great. If you are not getting treatment now I would think adding a chemo would be the way to go. Or if it's just one spot maybe radiation -- have you had rads to that area before? Navelbine is known to work well on bones. I have a friend who had a met on sternum - it's gone now. Sorry I don't recall what tx she had. I wouldn't go with the extra pain of a biopsy either. MRI seems pretty clear on what's going on so like you say why put yourself through extra suffering. You are a brave fighter even though you may not feel it right now. Take good care and try to find some pleasant distractions as you wait to see you doctor. Pam

CoolBreeze
06-25-2011, 11:15 AM
I'm sorry to hear this. But, bones are treatable and it's only one, yes? Maybe they can put you on chemo and zometa as a preventative, and zap that puppy away.

Sheila
06-25-2011, 11:39 AM
Michka
I know this news is devastating, but take a deep breath then begin the fight again....this should be much easier to take care of than the liver met ordeal. Stay strong, and know that we are here to support you and keep you in our prayers....you deserve a break already!
Sendind a big hug

michka
06-25-2011, 11:48 AM
I 've been on Navelbine and Herceptin for 2 months after my liver surgery. 3 months ago there was no bone met.

Rich66
06-25-2011, 11:59 AM
Did you have G-CSF with or prior to the navelbine?

It's anecdotal but..
Mom went on a unique weekly/metronomic Zometa schedule upon having PET/CT and neck MRI suggesting bone met. It appears to be gone or inactive at this point. There were a bunch of other meds and supplements happening too, so hard to know for sure what did the trick. It was done also based on the idea that Zometa can fight cancer in tissues as well. Just a thought. If you could get Herceptin weekly too, might give some synergy and reduce potential heart damage from extended Herceptin. Regarding the biopsy, the questions seem to be whether the images could be anything else and if it is cancer, how would treatment be changed by the biopsy.

I imagine Chelee has looked at bone mets and biopsy options inside out and will chime in.

More on bone mets here (http://her2support.org/vbulletin/showthread.php?t=43192&highlight=Bone+mets)


(if you have a treatment history signature, folks can give you better feedback)

CoolBreeze
06-25-2011, 12:19 PM
I'm sorry, I didn't remember you'd had liver mets. I'm so confused these days. :( Maybe Zometa will help?

Lien
06-25-2011, 02:28 PM
Hi Michka,

I'm so sorry about this new development. It is hard to take, I know. So cry, worry, vent, but try to keep things in perspective too: bone mets are often very treatable. I know many who saw their bone mets become stable or even disappear. Some live with just bone mets for a decade or more without seeing progression. And sometimes they just need to find the right combo for their situation to go back to being NED.

What I'm trying to say is: you have many, many options and you are not going down the bad path in the forseeable future. So take a deep breath, and see it for what it is: a next step on your journey. We would rather have avoided this part, but it's here, and you will deal with it. Like you dealt with everything else.

Hugs

Jacqueline

tricia keegan
06-25-2011, 05:06 PM
Michka thinking of you and sending good wishes ((((hugs))))

Jackie07
06-26-2011, 12:37 AM
Michka,

Below is the treatment history of Kim in DC who's been treating mets to Sternum since early 2008. I hope she will chime in soon.

8/98 dx right breast
5/2003 tram flap right breast
8/2004 dx new primary left breast with inflammatory bc
er/pr-, her2neu+++
8/19 taxotere and herceptin
1/15/2005 Navelbine/Herceptin
4/2005 radiation and Herceptin
5/15/2005 Herceptin alone
2/12/2008 skin biopsy positive
2/14/2008 met to sternum, possibly right breast
2/27 Start omitarg, herceptin, taxotere trial
3/17 Kicked off trial because I started too close to my last herceptin
3/19 start tykerb xeloda
Right breast confirmed met
5/15/08 skin mets gone, no hypermetabolic activity in breast, sternum healing
8/24/08 scans still look good. sternum still active with scarring. No evidence of progression
10/08 Progression in sternum
12/08 Start TDM1 trial
1/09 Scans show stable
12/09 1 year on TDM1 still stable
10/10 progression in chest and liver
11/10 false positive of liver mets; tykerb and herceptin
4/11 Rads to the sternum

Lani
06-26-2011, 04:52 AM
looks like Flori had a sternal/manubrium met as well Maybe she will chime in.

Lani

PS in the past bone marrow tests were not only done on the pelvis, but on the sternum as well. Perhaps others will chime in as to whether their sternal mets were biopsied

krisvell
06-26-2011, 06:23 AM
Michka; I am sorry to hear about the news. It sounds in reading the posts you have good prospects in getting this treated and being NED. I personally know the feeling of setback. When I got the radiation necrosis, I was in a blue funk for several days. As others have said, once the news sets in you will be able to move forward and fight this beast.
Just know I am here for you and you are in my prayers.
Hang in there.
Love & Hugs,

Kris......

caya
06-26-2011, 11:06 AM
Michka - I am sending big hugs and "bisses" from Canada.

all the best
caya

michka
06-26-2011, 11:31 AM
Thanks to all for your warm support But nobody is answering about getting rid of sternum mets. I figure it is almost impossible. I have already been radiated 5 years ago with the rest of my chest and all nodes. Is it possible with the new machines to just target this small zone again? I lost faith in chemo and herceptin that never worked for me. Michka

Lani
06-26-2011, 11:40 AM
yes, mischka I think I have readof using the cyberknife to reirradiate locally. Stanford is the only institution in the world with two cyberknifes (it was invented there) and they have more experience than anyone else using it in locations where other's don't ie, extracranially.

If you can be patient I believe others will answer. It was quite a while ago that Flori posted about her sternal mets--so she has survived a long time with them.

Others probably have as well.

Try putting sternum mets into the search above--that was how i found Flori had them

There are probably others.

It is the weekend, so posting may be slow.

Denosumab has been recently approved vs bc bone mets and appears more effective than zoledronic acid, with less side effects and MAY HAVE its own anticancer effects besides.

There is nothing particular about the sternum which determines that it cannot be treated as successfully as any other bony site. Yes, it is close to the heart and lungs, but Cyberknife pinpoint accuracy should be able to avoid those from what I have read/heard and many other treatments still are available and are becoming available to her2+ stage IVs.

It sounds as if you are NOWHERE near the end of the road in terms of running out of treatments or having something untreatable. Hold on for
other input, I am sure it is coming. If you can't hold on try to email flori

I think her old handle is socal gal, it formally was Flori I think--not sure if she has a different "persona" now. See if you can find out and PM her

Lani
06-26-2011, 12:11 PM
Mischka--my previous two posts succumbed to your panic and did not follow my own long-standing rule as to how to respond to bad news of one's one or others

Rather than get scared and just ask for others' experience on an internet support site (very important and incredibly helpful though it might be), benefit from the worldwide experience as described by those who best can document and evaluate it objectively(with MRI scans of response to treatment, all the relevant test results(FISH levels, size of lesions, doses of chemo, rads etc) ie, using the national librayr of medicine via PUBmed which covers the entire world's literature--not just that of the English speaking world

I seemed to have remembered that having solitary sternal mets carried a rather more favorable prognosis so....

I put sternum metastasis breast cancer into pubmed and...voila... even without using my ability to get full articles found the following, including several articles which are free access in full

Here they are and they sound good!(even the rather extensive one's which required extensive surgery and even the cautionary one was cautionary because the patient had other metastases besides the sternal one which changed the picture! Remember for every very bad case which whose successful treatment is published/publishable there are probably hundreds or thousands of much less remarkable cases that went smoothly, were not considered remarkeable and were not published:

J Chemother. 2011 Feb;23(1):49-52.
Successful multimodal treatment of a breast cancer patient with a recurrence invading the chest wall.
Corrado G, di Stefano A, Salutari V, Piraino A, Margaritora S, Lucidi A, Scambia G, Ferrandina G.
Source
Gynecologic Oncology Unit, Catholic University of the Sacred Heart, Campobasso, Italy. giacomo.corrado@alice.it
Abstract
We describe successful operative management of a solitary breast cancer metastasis in the chest wall after complete response with concomitant non-pegylated liposomal doxorubicin (NPLD) and docetaxel followed by sternal rib resection with prosthetic reconstruction. We report a case of a 41-year-old woman who had a breast cancer recurrence infiltrating neighboring osteo-cartilage of the left sternal body, the cartilaginous portion of the third and fourth ipsilateral ribs and was inseparable from the rear side pectoral reaching deep into contiguity with the pericardium. After 6 cycles of chemotherapy with NPLD plus docetaxel, sternal rib resection with prosthetic reconstruction was performed. Histological examination did not show any evidence of residual tumor. At 9 months of follow-up, the patient appears free of disease. Our case demonstrates that a multimodal approach in patients with chest wall recurrence of breast cancer without distant metastasis, may be safe and effective for maintaining a good quality of life.
PMID: 21482496

Ann Thorac Surg. 2011 Feb;91(2):584-6.
Sternal metastasis of breast cancer: ex vivo hypothermia and reimplantation.
Rosenberg M, Castagno A, Nadal J, Rosales A, Pueyrredon EP, Patané AK.
Source
Department of Thoracic Surgery, Instituto Fleming, Buenos Aires, Argentina. mrosenberg@arnet.com.ar
Abstract
Breast cancer frequently metastasizes to the bone. When the sternum is involved, it usually presents as a solitary lesion. In such cases, resection is indicated, including with the intention to cure. This case report describes a technique for a complete exeresis of the sternum, ex vivo repair under hypothermia, and reimplantation. Cryosurgery is a well-known technique to resect bone metastases and was the procedure used in our patient. The follow-up after 2 years shows no evidence of tumor recurrence, with excellent results on aesthetic levels.
Copyright © 2011 The Society of Thoracic Surgeons. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
PMID: 21256319
J Med Case Reports. 2010 Mar 1;4:75.
Solitary metastatic adenocarcinoma of the sternum treated by total sternectomy and chest wall reconstruction using a Gore-Tex patch and myocutaneous flap: a case report.
Daliakopoulos SI, Klimatsidas MN, Korfer R.
Source
Herz-und Diabeteszentrum Nordrhein Westfalen, Georgstrasse 11, Bad Oeynhausen, Universitätsklinikum der Ruhr-Universität Bochum, Germany. sdaliakopoulos@hotmail.de.
Abstract
ABSTRACT:
INTRODUCTION:
The consequences of bone metastasis are often devastating. Although the exact incidence of bone metastasis is unknown, it is estimated that 350,000 people die of bone metastasis annually in the United States. The incidence of local recurrences after mastectomy and breast-conserving therapy varies between 5% and 40% depending on the risk factors and primary therapy utilized. So far, a standard therapy of local recurrence has not been defined, while indications of resection and reconstruction considerations have been infrequently described. This case report reviews the use of sternectomy for breast cancer recurrence, highlights the need for thorough clinical and radiologic evaluation to ensure the absence of other systemic diseases, and suggests the use of serratus anterior muscle flap as a pedicle graft to cover full-thickness defects of the anterior chest wall.
CASE PRESENTATION:
We report the case of a 70-year-old Caucasian woman who was referred to our hospital for the management of a retrosternal mediastinal mass. She had undergone radical mastectomy in 1999. Computed tomography and magnetic resonance imaging revealed a 74.23 x 37.7 x 133.6-mm mass in the anterior mediastinum adjacent to the main pulmonary artery, the right ventricle and the ascending aorta. We performed total sternectomy at all layers encompassing the skin, the subcutaneous tissues, the right pectoralis major muscle, all the costal cartilages, and the anterior part of the pericardium. The defect was immediately closed using a 0.6 mm Gore-Tex cardiovascular patch combined with a serratus anterior muscle flap. Our patient had remained asymptomatic during her follow-up examination after 18 months.
CONCLUSION:
Chest wall resection has become a critical component of the thoracic surgeon's armamentarium. It may be performed to treat either benign conditions (osteoradionecrosis, osteomyelitis) or malignant diseases. There are, however, very few reports on the results of full-thickness complete chest wall resections for locally recurrent breast cancer with sufficient safety margins, and even fewer reports that describe the operative technique of using the serratus anterior muscle as a pedicled flap.
PMID: 20193081 [PubMed - in process] PMCID: PMC2844379 Free PMC Article

Gan To Kagaku Ryoho. 2009 Dec;36(13):2627-30.
[A case of advanced breast cancer with multiple bone metastases responding to docetaxel and high-dose toremifene as fourth-line chemo-endocrine therapy].
[Article in Japanese]
Minamoto K, Ikeda T.
Source
Dept. of Surgery, Tamano Citizen Hospital.
Abstract
A 55-year old woman, who underwent left mastectomy (Bt+Ax), was revealed to have sternum metastasis by postoperative 99mTc bone scanning(T1bN1M1). She received daily aromatase inhibitor (anastrozole), as a primary systemic endocrine therapy, and biweekly pamidronate for metastatic breast cancer. However, she depended on folk medicine a year later, at which time the primary treatment was discontinued. Another year later, the bone metastases developed with increased serum levels of tumor markers (CEA, CA19-9, and NCC-ST-439). Then, she underwent three different regimens of systemic chemo-endocrine therapy over the following three years, including CAF+MPA as the first-line, paclitaxel (PTX) + anastrozole as the second-line, and S-1+anastrozole as the third-line regimen. She recently completed 10 courses of the fourth-line regimen[tri-weekly docetaxel (DOC) and high-dose toremifene (TOR 120 mg/day)], which reduced levels of 99mTc accumulation in the multiple bone metastases and levels of the serum tumor markers to the normal range. No severe adverse events occurred except peripheral thrombovasculitis (grade 2) in her left anterior arm during the fourth regimen. She recently maintains the current status by taking a regular dose (40 mg/day) of toremifene for 5 months. Combination treatment with DOC and high-dose TOR can be one of the worthwhile regimens as systemic chemo-endocrine therapy for patients with advanced breast cancer who develop bone metastases.
PMID: 20009468
Curr Oncol. 2008 Aug;15(4):193-5.
Sternal resection for recurrent breast cancer: a cautionary tale.
Lee L, Keller A, Clemons M.
Source
Division of Medical Oncology, Princess Margaret Hospital, Toronto, ON.
Abstract
The occurrence of a solitary sternal metastasis from breast cancer is relatively uncommon, and its treatment is controversial. Most case reports on the role of sternal resection in what is termed a "solitary sternal metastasis" tend to present a rather optimistic outcome.Here, we report the case of a premenopausal woman with axillary lymph node-positive, triple-negative breast cancer treated with mastectomy followed by adjuvant chemotherapy and radiation therapy. She developed a radiologically isolated sternal recurrence 3 years later, which was treated with partial sternectomy. The present case report reviews the use of sternectomy for breast cancer recurrence and highlights the need for thorough clinical and radiologic evaluation to ensure the absence of other systemic disease before extensive surgery is undertaken.
PMID: 18769608 [PubMed] PMCID: PMC2528306 Free PMC Article

Anticancer Res. 2007 Nov-Dec;27(6C):4259-62.
Percutaneous combined therapy for painful sternal metastases: a radiofrequency thermal ablation (RFTA) and cementoplasty protocol.
Masala S, Manenti G, Roselli M, Mammucari M, Bartolucci DA, Formica V, Massari F, Simonetti G.
Source
University Hospital, Department of Diagnostic Imaging, Molecular Imaging, Interventional Radiology and Radiation Therapy, Viale Oxford 81, 00133 Rome, Italy. salva.masala@tiscali.it
Abstract
BACKGROUND:
Radiofrequency thermal ablation (RFTA) has recently been introduced for the treatment of painful bone metastases. We report the outcome of one combined protocol session of percutaneous RFTA and cementoplasty on a painful sternal breast cancer metastasis of a 66-year-old patient.
PATIENTS AND METHODS:
A sternal lesion was identified at a repeated CT scan during the oncological follow-up. Due to severe chest pain, the patient was treated percutaneously to obtain pain relief and bone stabilization. Percutaneous RFTA was performed using a 15-gauge needle electrode (MIRAS TX-120) coaxially introduced through a 13-gauge bone biopsy needle. The lesion was heated up to 80 degrees C for 3 minutes. A percutaneous injection of 1 cc polymethylmethacrylate in the central part of the lesion was performed immediately after the RFTA procedure.
RESULTS:
Immediate symptomatic improvement was documented.
CONCLUSION:
Combined percutaneous therapy showed feasibility and effectiveness and can be considered as an alternative for the treatment of painful bone metastases.
PMID: 18214029
Surg Today. 2006;36(3):225-9.
Resection of sternal tumors and reconstruction of the thorax: a review of 15 patients.
Haraguchi S, Hioki M, Hisayoshi T, Yamashita K, Yamashita Y, Kawamura J, Hirata T, Yamagishi S, Koizumi K, Shimizu K.
Source
Department of Surgery, Nippon Medical School Second Hospital, 1-396 Kosugi-cho, Nakahara-ku, Kawasaki, Kanagawa, 211-8533, Japan.
Abstract
PURPOSE:
We report our experience of resecting sternal tumors, followed by reconstruction of the skeletal and soft-tissue defects, and discuss the usefulness of sandwiched Marlex and stainless-steel mesh.
METHODS:
Fifteen patients underwent resection of a sternal tumor and chest wall reconstruction with autologous bone grafts, sandwiched Marlex and stainless-steel mesh or a titanium plate, and musculocutaneous flaps. The sternal tumors were from locally recurrent breast carcinoma in ten patients, metastasis from other organs in three, and primary chondrosarcoma in two.
RESULTS:
All patients were extubated without paradoxical respiration just after surgery. There was no operative mortality. A wound infection developed in the acute phase after a sandwiched Marlex and stainless-steel mesh reconstruction in one patient. A second repair with Marlex and stainless-steel mesh was required in two patients; for flail chest after an autologous bone graft in one; and following re-recurrence of breast carcinoma in another patient who had undergone a musculocutaneous flap repair. No signs of breakdown, dislodgment, severe depression, or deformity were seen in any of the six patients who underwent reconstruction with Marlex and stainless-steel mesh during a median follow-up period of 56 months.
CONCLUSIONS:
Wide resection of sternal tumors provides good local control. Reconstruction with Marlex and stainless-steel mesh seems to be the most effective technique for repairing a wide anterior chest wall defect.

the following is an old_pre her2 measurement being routine_ article:
Ann Oncol. 2003 Aug;14(8):1234-40.
Comparison between solitary and multiple skeletal metastatic lesions of breast cancer patients.
Koizumi M, Yoshimoto M, Kasumi F, Ogata E.
Source
Department of Nuclear Medicine, Cancer Institute Hospital, Tokyo, Japan. mitsuru@jfcr.or.jp
Abstract
BACKGROUND:
Breast cancer has been the subject of many recent studies because it is a significant cause of death in women. This study was performed to clarify whether solitary skeletal metastasis has clinical significance compared with multiple skeletal metastasis.
PATIENTS AND METHODS:
Seven hundred and three patients who developed metastatic bone lesions up to September 2002 after beginning treatment for breast cancer from 1988 to 1998 were included. The lesions were classified first as solitary or multiple based on bone scan results and then according to anatomical distribution. Next, solitary-to-multiple conversion was investigated in patients with solitary skeletal metastasis. Then factors related to solitary or multiple skeletal metastasis were analyzed. The prognosis of skeletal metastasis was compared between patients with solitary or multiple metastatic bone lesions. A Cox proportional hazards model was used to test whether solitary skeletal metastasis compared with multiple skeletal metastasis was an independent factor of survival.
RESULTS:
Two hundred and eighty-nine patients (41%) had solitary skeletal metastasis and 414 patients (59%) showed multiple skeletal metastasis. The sternum was a frequent site for solitary skeletal metastasis (98 of 289, 34%), while other skeletal sites were more frequent in patients with multiple metastatic bone lesions (P <0.001). Solitary sternal metastatic lesions remained solitary longer than solitary metastatic bone lesions to places other than the sternum (P <0.001), but did not lengthen patient survival times (P = 0.871). The factors related to solitary skeletal metastasis are TNM stage (tumor-node-metastasis) and histology. The patients with earlier stage and favorable histology tend to have solitary skeletal metastasis. The patients with solitary skeletal metastasis lived longer than those with multiple metastatic bone lesions (P <0.001). Multivariate analysis revealed that a solitary metastatic bone lesion (P = 0.002) is an independent favorable prognostic factor in patients with skeletal metastasis.
CONCLUSIONS:
Solitary skeletal metastasis has a different anatomical distribution and is an independent prognostic factor in patients with skeletal metastasis.
PMID: 12881385

PMID: 16493530

If you go to the Stanford University Medical center site I seem to remember they have ways to contact them to ask about their cyberknife--ask them about their experience with sternal mets which have previously been irradiated. Other treatment modalities are being developed --I know Dr. Wapnir at Stanford has a clinical trial using radioactive iodine against her2+ brain mets which have the Na-I symporter demonstrated on biopsy but don't know if anyone is doing a similar trial with bone mets. Keep on checking clinical trials, they keep adding more all the time.

But don't panic-- just use the same amount of energy you would spend worrying on getting information that may help you now or in the future ie, build up your armaments!!

Good luck!

chrisy
06-26-2011, 02:24 PM
Lani- good advice for all of us!!! Thanks

Joan M
06-26-2011, 02:38 PM
Michi,

I believe the sternum is the only bone that can be operated on to remove a met, depending on how big it is, etc.

I know of somebody here in NYC who had this done about 6 months ago, but I've known about this for a long time. Sorry I didn't answer sooner.

Is this the only met in the bones?

Joan

Kmswilson
06-26-2011, 03:43 PM
I have a mets in a few bones, sternum being one of them. Also spine, sacrum, upper arm, and a rib. Right now, I receive Zometa monthly along with the taxol, Carboplatin and Herceptin which I receive three weeks on, one week off. I'm not sure how the sternum met is doing, just that my oncologist is pleased that my bones appear to show great healing over the last six months of treatment. I guess I have so much going on with my liver, I've been focusing on getting it and the breast tumors under control! I hope you will keep us posted on what your plan will be. Sorry I don't have more for you, I've just been going with the Zometa/chemo/Herceptin plan for now!

PatE
06-26-2011, 07:54 PM
Hi,
I had my liver and L2 spine treated with Cyberknife. Liver treated 3 years ago in August, liver is clear. My spine was treated May of last year, all was fine but my last pet scan (May) was questionable as to whether the area might be lighting up again. The Radiologist who reads the scans for the Onc's office thought it was returning but my Rad Onc (2 of them) thought the scans looked fine probably residual scaring. I have another pet scheduled for July 19th.
I can't say enough good things about Cyberknife, I have had very mild side effects maybe some fatigue.
Please know that bone mets like other areas can be dealt with its just a matter of finding what works for you. Seek out a Cyberknife Rad Onc to help you as most doctors don't know much about the the system and surgeons will rarely recommend it because if they don't cut they don't get paid (sorry but that is my opinion). Many Oncs also have financial interest in radiation therapy offices so they also may not be as quick to refer to Cyberknife. Stanford is excellent, the previous poster is correct that the technology was developed there. I fully expected that one day in the near future Cyberknife will be the gold standard for treating many different cancers including breast (in trials now). Hope I didn't offend anyone but this is truly my thoughts.
Sending you many hugs, you are always in my thoughts and prayers.

Emelie B
06-27-2011, 08:39 AM
Hi Michka,
If you look at my signature you will see that I had mets to lots of places and here I am NED for 18 mos. I did Taxol, Herceptin and Zometa and continue on every three weeks minus Taxol since 4- 2010.
Please don't panic and forget you have a lot of options still available. Also, Lani is right on with her advice.
We are all thinking of you and sending you healing thoughts.
Emelie

schoolteacher
06-28-2011, 10:01 AM
Michka,

Hope to hear from you soon. You are in my prayers.

Amelia

KDR
06-28-2011, 01:12 PM
Dear, dear Michka,
I hate the idea of you crying. Please don't. I know there are lots of people out there you have been just fine with sternum mets. Let me see what I can find for you on the Internet, too. Others, please chime in for our Michka on the subject.
Love
Karen

SoCalGal
06-28-2011, 04:09 PM
Hi Mishka,
I just posted this reply to your other thread- and Lani (as always) is right and right-on. I do have sternum mets and they have been under control for the past 4 years!! Here's my reply:
I had radiation to my sternum (3) times - once in 1996, general area clean sweep, then again in 2006, along scar line light sweep and in 2009, more advanced and focused on manubrium of sternum. Never with the cyberknife because my mets are sprinkled not focused. Haven't had a pet in quite some time so who knows where I stand right now but I am using Xgeva in hopes of controlling/curing and preventing more bone mets. So far, no new areas. Hope this helps!
xoxoFlori

Elizabethtx
06-30-2011, 01:23 PM
Mishka,
I am sorry I can't offer great advice, but I am praying that answer will be found! Stay strong, you CAN do this! Hugs!