Gold Enthusiast
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The Dr. most likely feels that a mastectomy is not warranted, and that it can be safely avoided. She would most likely receive radiation either way. If she is concerned about the course of treatment, she should take the results to another oncologist for a second opinion, which is what I would do in the same situation.
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Diamond Enthusiast

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Under most circumstances a woman has two choices for treating the breast with cancer in it: one is to remove the breast, the other is to remove the cancer and give radiation treatments to the remaining breast tissue. It is NOT true that she would get radiation in either case. When the tumor falls into certain categories, then the choice between the two options is essentially equal and the woman must decide with which she feels most comfortable. In the case of your friend, it sounds like a strong possibility that she carries a breast cancer gene, and she should consider being tested for it: if she does indeed carry it, then consideration must be given to having BOTH breasts removed. That is a tough choice to make, but women who have the gene have a very high chance of cancer eventually developing in both breasts. Unfortunately, at this point the only way to deal with it is either to have the breasts removed, or to continue with very careful surveillance. If she would not consider bilateral mastectomy, there may not be much point in getting tested.
Another issue is that if it's true that mammogram showed nothing, (which may mean she had lobular cancer, which also is more likely to be bilateral) then surveillance is more difficult. The bottom line in any situation is the person must be comfortable with the advice she's getting, and if she is leaning toward mastectomy then she should say so. Each situation is unique, and hers is complicated by such a strong family history. Advice online is extremely limited in value, whether coming from someone who has treated thousands of breast cancer cases, like me, or someone who doesn't really know about it, like the one above. In either case, opinions expressed without knowing all the details or the person involved, are fairly meaningless as applied to specific cases: the best you can get is general info
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| Posts: 1505 | Location: Puget Sound, USA | Registered: 06-03-02 |    |
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Gold Enthusiast
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We've had a lot of cancer in our family, the latest is my mom. There is a tumor behind her lung, she just had the biopsy today, we should get the results Monday, the DR. is fairly certain the it's malignant, but the test will tell for sure. I know how overwhelming the whole process is, and I wish your friend all the best and peace of mind.
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Gold Enthusiast
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Thank you, it means a lot to me.
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