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04-06-2008, 02:49 PM
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#1
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Senior Member
Join Date: Jan 2007
Posts: 73
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Post treatment for mastectomy gals
If you had a mastectomy especially a bi-lateral what kind of follow up screening do you get from your surgeon. I never really thought about it before. I see my surgeon every six months who basically checks the same areas my onc. does. I always thought that since I had the mastectomies that it would be unlikely for bc to recur there. I have now heard however, that some doctors have their patients go for MRI's of their reconstructed breasts I guess to detect any recurrence near the chest wall. Does this fall under the same post treatment practice that many oncs. have regarding no scans unless symptoms?
So ladies, what is your follow up if you've had mastectomies?
__________________
Diagnosed 11/06 IDC left breast Stage 1, High Grade w/extensive High Grade DCIS. Right breast extensive hyperplasia w/calcifications.
ER-/PR- HER2+++
Bi-lateral masectomy 12/15/06 w/expanders
SNB Node Negative
Chemo Taxotere, Cytoxan 2/07-4/07
Herceptin Started 5/07
Exchange surgery 6/15/07
Herceptin stopped after 12 rounds due to herceptin induced cardiomyopathy
On heart meds 'til?
Age 40 at diagnosis
Cancer may have been a defining moment but it does not define me!
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04-06-2008, 06:00 PM
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#2
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Senior Member
Join Date: Oct 2005
Posts: 823
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For me I no longer see a surgeon. My Onc does do the on hand exam, If he felt something not right then further testing would be done. My PCP has me get an Ultra Sound yearly, IF that shows anything further scanning would be done.
Yes, it is possible for cancer to reoccur to these areas, especially on the scar line and as you said near the chest wall.
__________________
Vicki
Texas
Biopsy Dx'd 3-23-05 Age 48
MRM 4-5-05 w/ 2 tumor's 5cm, and 6 cm (right side)
IDC (poorly differentiated infiltrating ductual carcinoma)
5+/16 nodes
Stage III A
Grade 3
ER/PR-, Her2/neu ++
Ki67 78%
Begin Chemo 5-2-05 4XAC Dose Dense , 4X Abraxane Dose Dense (ended August 05)
28 Rad's ended October 13 2005
Started Herceptin Weekly August 2005 for one year
Had a Simple mastectomy left side after Mamo showed incresed micro-calcifications. Jan. 17 2006.
Brain MRI Feb.2006--All Clear
August 28, 2006 Last Weekly Herceptin.
October 2006--Colonoscopy, 6 Polyp's removed--all B9
PET Scan July 2007
Abdominal MRI Oct. 2007---2 Right Kidney Cysts
Core Biopsy-- Lump on Scar Line 1-10-08---B9
Brain MRI 6-2008--All Clear
PET/CT Scan 6-2008
Sept. 8 2008, 4CM area removed from mastectomy scar line. Proved to be B9.
PET/CT Scan-- July 2009 --All clear
August 17,2009 ---Had Port Removed
6 Years NED -- April 5,2011
DX'd with Melanoma left arm 10-10-2011
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04-06-2008, 08:12 PM
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#3
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Senior Member
Join Date: May 2006
Posts: 221
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Nowhere to hide?
Hi,
I had bilaterals and no one really did any follow up exams, if you mean by feel, except me. Although I saw my onc every six months for the first few years, he was not a hands-on kind of guy. After the post-op visit, I didn't see the surgeon again. I know this varies from one area or one provider group to another. But this suited me fine (I do not like being a patient). And there isn't really anywhere for something to hide. It's pretty much bones and skin except in the axillary area. I can't imagine that there'd be something on my chest that someone else would notice before I did.
I did find something really subtle once in the shower (you know, that lub-dub feeling as your soaped hand goes across an area) and I saw the surgeon for it, but after feeling about in the area of my concern, he said "a recurrence is much more obvious that this". And that was almost two years ago so he was correct.
A local recurrence after mastectomy can happen anywhere, but it's typically in the scar tissue from the surgery, which may extend into the chest wall. Or it can be in nearby axillary nodes. I find it intriguing that it can happen in the scar tissue. Cancer is supposed to prefer vascular areas, and scar tissue, once healed, is less vascular, right? Just look at how white it appears. And it's not as if after mastectomy, scar tissue is located near the area of the original cancer in most cases. So why the recurrence in the scar tissue? What part of the healing dynamic encourages cancer cells to congregate there, and later to grow? And could we control that, so that rads could be avoided, both after mastectomy and lumpectomy? And is this question linked to the possibility that surgery encourages distant spread? So many questions ...
Debbie Laxague
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04-07-2008, 04:03 AM
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#4
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Senior Member
Join Date: Aug 2006
Location: Sheboygan, WI
Posts: 2,582
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Hi Paris
I've had both breasts removed also and I no longer see my surgeon. My first surgery was July '05 and my second breast was removed in March of '06. Since that time the only "thing" that is done is the area is physcially examined. By my onc. and by me.
Love to you,
Mary Jo
__________________
"Be still and know that I am God." Psalm 46:10
Dx. 6/24/05 age 45 Right Breast IDC ER/PR. Neg., - Her2+++ RB Mast. - 7/28/05 - 4 cm. tumor Margins clear - 1 microscopic cell 1 sent. node No Vasucular Invasion 4 DD A/C - 4 DD Taxol & Herceptin 1 full year of Herceptin received every 3 weeks 28 rads prophylactic Mast. 3/2/06
17 Years NED
<>< Romans 8:28
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04-07-2008, 07:29 AM
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#5
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Senior Member
Join Date: Jul 2007
Location: Canada
Posts: 2,193
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Hi Paris
I have not seen my surgeon since 4 days after
my mastectomy. My onc examines the incision
area thorougly about every 4 months.
__________________
PinkGirl
Dx Aug/05 at age 51
2cm. Stage 2A, Grade 3
ER+/PR-
Her2 +++
Sept 7/05 Mastectomy
4 FAC, 4 Taxol, no radiation
1 year of Herceptin
Tamoxifen for approx. 4 months,
Arimidex for 5 years
Prophylactic mastectomy June 22/09
" I yam what I yam." - Popeye
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