Guest guest Posted September 11, 2005 Report Share Posted September 11, 2005 I am recently diagnosed (8/15 was when the doctor called me) with breast cancer. We thought I had invasive cancer in the right breast and only DCIS in the left, so my oncologist referred me to a breast surgeon for lumpectomies. On August 26 I had lumpectomies to remove cancer from both breasts, with sentinel node biopsy of the right. When the radiologist was placing the wire for my wire localization, she spotted an area in the left breast that concerned her, so she marked it as well. It turned out that the new area was invasive lobular carcinoma. They also found evidence of atypical hyperplasia all through my left breast. The tumor removed from the right was 1.8 cm (we'd thought it was about 9 mm). My nodes on the right were clear, but we didn't get clean margins on the right. So now my surgeon has recommended a left mastectomy. She's also suggested (although I do have the option of refusing this) of a right mastectomy as well. I've decided to go ahead with bilateral mastectomies with immediate reconstruction, given the fact that there is so much going on there in my left breast (some of which we didn't find until surgery) and we just don't know what might have been missed on the right. My surgeon had originally ordered an MRI as part of my staging, but my insurance refused to approve it without a lot of paperwork being mailed to them for review. The MRI might have seen what else is there. Rather than let them play roullette with my health and wait and worry, I feel it's better to have both breasts removed and decrease my risk of recurrence. We don't know yet about whether I'll have chemo - that will depend on the pathology from the left nodes. Also, my medical oncologist will determine this, based on further pathology on that 1.8 cm tumor. I have my second consult with the plastic surgeon tomorrow afternoon. I've pretty much decided to choose tissue expanders and implants, with nipple reconstruction. I've been on a rollercoaster ride ever since my oncologist called me 8/15. Oh, and the reason I already had an oncologist is that I conquered non-Hodgkins lymphoma in 2003 and I'd gone to her for my sixth-month check-up. I let them schedule a mammogram for me, since I hadn't had one in awhile. And this is what they found. Thank God I did that! My name is Estelle; I'm 50 and married to my (most of the time) best friend, Dave; we have no children, but we have five " furkids. " I'm an educator, so I have thousands of " kids " that I've taught. I look forward to getting to know everyone and getting some help and encouragement for this journey on which I find myself an unwilling participant. Estelle Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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