The Breast Cancer Survival Manual, Fifth Edition: A Step-by-Step Guide for Women with Newly Diagnosed Breast Cancer
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About this ebook
The updated edition of the essential resource for the 250,000 women diagnosed with breast cancer each year
Breast cancer is the leading cause of death in women from thirty-five to fifty-four years of age, and few things are as terrifying and confusing as a diagnosis of this disease. The fifth edition of The Breast Cancer Survival Manual is a concise, information-packed guide that is newly revised to contain all of the latest findings to help the woman facing treatment feel informed and empowered. John Link, M.D., a pioneer developer of Breastlink Medical Group in Southern California includes the most current medical advice on
• Tamoxifen, Herceptin, and other chemotherapy options
• The growing importance of HER2 oncogene testing
• Clinical research trials under way that could broaden treatment options
• The role of preventive drugs and prophylactic mastectomy for those with high genetic risk
• Sentinel lymph node sampling, a method of local control soon to become standard
Of course, all of the basic information included in the previous editions—the nature and biology of breast cancer, choosing a treatment team, managing side effects, and optimizing medication—are here as well, making this the best book of its kind on the market.
John Link, M.D.
John Link, MD, is one of the world’s leading breast cancer oncologists and founder of Breastlink, a network of comprehensive breast cancer treatment centers in Southern California, and, as of recently, in New York City. Breastlink has been recognized as a leader and innovator in breast cancer care by Self magazine and ABC’s 20/20.
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The Breast Cancer Survival Manual, Fifth Edition - John Link, M.D.
Introduction
ABOUT THIS MANUAL
This book is a crisis manual. It is an attempt to put into writing the work we do on a daily basis, which is to help women with newly diagnosed breast cancer understand their situation and develop a plan to optimize a cure. With this life-altering and often life-threatening diagnosis, we ask women to become immediately educated and make critical decisions regarding their disease. We ask this at a time of immense crisis in a woman’s life—a time of fear, confusion, and anxiety, and it doesn’t seem fair. A newly diagnosed patient needs direct, useful, and honest information to help guide the choices she is being asked to make about the management of her cancer.
In our practice, we encounter women from all walks of life who have been given a diagnosis of breast cancer. Regardless of background, patients experience similar emotions, including shock, denial, fear, and a sense of urgency. Initially many patients lack the knowledge and information crucial for making sound decisions about medical care and are in no position to rush into treatment. This sense of urgency probably dates back to the old way of treating breast cancer, prior to 1970, when the one-stage mastectomy, or removal of the entire breast, underlying muscle, and axillary lymph nodes (also called radical mastectomy), was the only option. Treating breast cancer today involves a wide variety of options that may include surgery, radiation, chemotherapy, and/or hormones; the order and use of these treatments will vary depending on each woman’s unique situation.
In the majority of cases, the diagnosis of breast cancer is based on the needle biopsy obtained prior to surgery. Needle biopsies can be performed on small, nonpalpable (cannot be felt) lesions using image-guided assistance with either an ultrasound machine or a mammogram. Palpable lesions that can be felt are also biopsied with a needle, so that a woman is usually fully aware of her cancer diagnosis before making the decision to undergo further surgical procedure.
One of the first and most important things we tell a patient in our clinic is that she does have time—usually several weeks to a month—in order to confirm the diagnosis, seek expert opinions, and develop a survival plan. By taking this extra time to establish the appropriate treatment plan, a woman will not decrease her chances of survival and may very well have an increased chance of cure. Taking a little time is very helpful because the course of therapy can be developed and implemented without burning any bridges. In other words, some treatment decisions made now cannot be undone later. Some patients will require limited surgery without the removal of lymph nodes in the axilla (armpit). In other cases women will need chemotherapy treatment before continuing on to a surgical procedure. Still others will receive radiation at the same time as they undergo surgery. There is no single treatment plan that is appropriate for all women with breast cancer, and taking the time to review and evaluate all available options will result in a tailored plan that is right for you.
The old method of treating women with breast cancer is what we call the sequential method, in which a woman sees a succession of independent specialists, usually beginning with the surgeon. Each physician will then do what his or her training dictates. For instance, the surgeon will operate, then the radiation oncologist will give radiation therapy, and finally the oncologist will administer chemotherapy. This sequential approach is not always well coordinated and can lead to duplication and overtreatment or delay in treatment due to a lack of communication and proper sequencing.
Today’s newer approach to breast cancer diagnosis and treatment integrates all of the treating specialists into a single team. The optimal care of breast cancer involves the breast surgeon, plastic surgeon, radiation oncologist, medical oncologist, pathologist, and radiologist, working closely together and coordinated by a team leader. The team leader could be any one of your treating doctors, but there must be mutual understanding that this physician is assuming the role. Clearly, this is what any patient wants: the various treating physicians communicating with one another and working toward a unified treatment plan designed with each individual woman in mind.
At our breast care centers, once a breast cancer diagnosis has been established and we have collected the necessary information from imaging, pathology, and gene testing, our treatment planning team meets to develop a treatment plan designed for each woman. The treatment team includes the patient’s primary caregiver, breast surgeon, reconstruction/plastic surgeon, radiologist, pathologist, and the medical oncologist, as well as nurses, social workers, and other medical support staff as needed. Weekly meetings, or treatment planning conferences, allow the entire team the opportunity to review every case together as a group and make collaborative recommendations. The diagnostic team presents the radiologic images, and the pathology team provides information about how the cancer appears under the microscope. The treatment team then develops a plan based on each patient’s individual cancer situation. This team also evaluates each woman’s eligibility for one of the currently enrolling clinical research trials. Once the options, recommendations, and potential research protocols have been identified during the pretreatment planning conference, one of the treating physicians will present this information to the patient and her own personal support team.
Armed with the recommended treatment plan, the newly diagnosed woman is now ready to begin the tailored treatment protocol or to do further research, possibly seeking a second opinion. Many breast care centers today utilize treatment planning conferences, and you may want to search out a center that includes such a program.
With recent changes in health care delivery, women may have difficulty finding someone who can coordinate their care. In a managed care system, choices may differ from the private-practice model. If you are in a health maintenance organization (HMO), you can receive state-of-the-art
therapy, but it is critical that you become well educated and play a leading role in directing your care. You may need to go outside your HMO for a second opinion. Some managed care organizations will pay for this, although it may take some assertiveness on your part to obtain approval. Getting a second opinion may add an extra week before actual treatment can begin, but it will be time well spent.
As stated previously, we would like to strongly emphasize that breast cancer is unique in every woman. Breast cancer has a tremendous variability in the way it comes into existence, the way it looks under the microscope, the way it behaves biologically, and the way it interacts within each individual woman. These factors are extremely important in planning therapy.
In the past the medical profession tended to simplify breast cancer and make it all the same, or homogeneous, so that treatment could be standardized for all women. Although we know that breast cancer has a number of commonalities, we now know this does not justify using the same treatment for every woman. We’ve come a long way since the 1950s, when the only treatment for breast cancer was a radical mastectomy. We have a much better understanding of how to manage cancer within the breast (local control) and the factors that affect the cancer’s ability to spread into the lymph and blood systems (systemic control). Our current knowledge base and technological development now allow us to treat breast cancer using an individualized approach, which is more effective for you and your particular cancer situation.
Clearly, we must identify each woman’s unique cancer profile in order to make the best treatment choices. This profile allows us to look at a number of characteristics, including size of the tumor, type of cell, growth behavior of the cancer, influence of hormones, ability to attract and invade lymph and blood vessels, and genetic changes. Understanding genetic changes has led to new and better treatments and outcomes. Since the last edition of this book, this is where the most progress has been made. But don’t worry; this is not as complex as it may sound to you now. Most of this information is available from your mammograms and your tissue biopsy, and you will have a much better understanding of how to interpret your own unique cancer profile after reading this manual.
It would be a tremendous mistake to treat breast cancer without considering the woman herself. A woman’s age, hormone status, general health, emotional support network, sexuality, immune system, and psychological and spiritual being are all extremely important in planning treatment and maintaining health. Because traditional medicine often seems to neglect treating the whole person, many women today seek complementary therapy outside mainstream medicine. A few women are so distrustful of traditional medical treatment that they choose to rely exclusively on alternative therapies. Unfortunately, when some of these women come back to conventional medicine months to years later, they have more advanced breast cancer and are in a state of crisis. The treating physician should address the benefits of nutrition, vitamins and other supplements, psychotherapy, and physical therapy, in conjunction with state-of-the-art conventional therapy.
Chapter 1 of this manual begins your breast cancer education with a discussion about the nature and biology of breast cancer and how this affects your overall treatment plan. In today’s world, where knowledge is power, a woman who is well informed has increased confidence in her diagnosis and treatment plan and becomes her own advocate and partner with her treating team. Selection of an appropriate treatment team is critical to achieving optimal breast cancer care. We also believe that keeping track of your health history will help you to be an active and informed participant in your care and survival. We encourage you to manage your personal health information using a format that is best suited to you. In chapter 2 we provide important tips on how to choose your treatment team, obtain a second opinion, and collect and store your own comprehensive health records.
Determining your breast cancer type will help your medical team determine the best treatment for you. In chapter 3 we present the types or classifications of breast cancer currently used. Accurate interpretation of what your cancer looks like under the microscope is absolutely critical to define your specific breast cancer type and develop the tailored treatment plan. In chapter 4, we discuss in depth how to analyze your pathology report and the importance and use of this information in planning your optimal care. Chapter 5 is devoted to ductal carcinoma in situ (DCIS), an early cancer that accounts for up to 20 percent of newly diagnosed breast cancers, while chapter 6 addresses the remaining 80 percent of women, those who have been diagnosed with invasive breast cancer.
Throughout this manual, we will emphasize obtaining optimal treatment for your particular cancer. If you are overtreated, you may suffer unnecessary side effects or even physical complications. On the other hand, if you’re undertreated, you may face a more devastating prospect: being denied the latest and most up-to-date treatment and the best chance of being cured. In chapters 7 and 8 we discuss the most current treatment options.
Some women will require radiation therapy to prevent local recurrence. In chapter 9 we discuss the indications for inclusion of radiation as well as the different delivery methods. Chapter 10 addresses the management of treatment-induced side effects. For women who require mastectomy or significant removal of breast tissue, chapter 11 covers breast reconstruction and the current innovations that are changing women’s attitudes toward this previously feared