Living Beyond Breast Cancer and the Triple-Negative Breast Cancer Foundation sponsored an excellent teleconference Tuesday
April 26, 2011 on fear of recurrence—the first of its kind, and badly
needed. They will ultimately post a transcript and podcast.
The presenter was Hester Hill Schnipper, LICSW, BCD, OSW-C,
chief, Oncology Social Work, Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center.
Adjunct Professor, Simmons College School of Social Work. She is author of Woman to Woman: A Handbook for Women Newly Diagnosed with Breast Cancer and After Breast Cancer: A Common-Sense Guide to Life After Treatment.
chief, Oncology Social Work, Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center.
Adjunct Professor, Simmons College School of Social Work. She is author of Woman to Woman: A Handbook for Women Newly Diagnosed with Breast Cancer and After Breast Cancer: A Common-Sense Guide to Life After Treatment.
More important, she has dealt with two bouts of breast cancer, both hormone positive.
My notes from the conference.
•Women
after any kind of breast cancer are scared. Women treated with TNBC
often have triple worries. How much worse is it? How do statistics
play our? How much should I worry?
•
Statistics are pretty meaningless for any one woman—they have to do with
a large group of women. How a disease affects an individual is an
individual thing.
• It is important to live as though cancer is not going to return.
• Worries can be worse if feel we do not have any safety net, as women with ER+ have with hormonal therapy.
• With TNBC, the risk of recurrence is worst for first five years.
• Local recurrence—in the breast—is more easily treatable that if disease has spread throughout the body.
• Women are often asked by friends, “Are you cured?” We cannot answer that.
• After
five years, the recurrence risk significantly lower. Women with ER+
have much later recurrences. The treatment is being lengthened for ER+
to 10, even 15 years.
• Women with TNBC don’t need to own that particular worry.
•
Dealing with cancer afterward is the hard part. Treatment is so arduous,
so draining, we are focused just on getting through. We don’t have the
energy to deal with emotional issues.
• Many
women are dealing with abandonment issues—caregivers no longer there.
Lose their support system, no longer have immediate or daily access.
Easy to feel abandoned by the caregivers they saw so often during
treatment.
• We face elation mixed with anxiety. Others think, hooray, let’s have a big party. We think, what have I been through, what happened to me?
• Even with lumpectomy, the breast looks different--burned, sore, not the breast we remember having.
• Many have gained weight—five, ten pounds.
• We have a bald head.
• Most
women feel comfortable going out without something on their head three
months after treatment ends. That means almost nine months without
hair.
• Plan
for at least as long as duration of your treatment to feel well
emotionally and physically. We usually expect to feel better quicker.
* It is
generally an upward curve, but you’ll have days when you feel very
tired, or very scared, or very sad about what happened.
• A lot of us feel precariously balanced somewhere between health and illness.
•
Cancer forces us to step out of our routine. Forces us to think about
our lives. Gives us the chance to make changes. Some choose not to.
We are likely to think differently, to pay more attention to
relationships.
• We don’t feel like our old selves. And most friends don’t get it.
* It is
best to stagger follow up appointments with medical oncologist,
surgeon, and radiation oncologist, although the temptation is to make
all appointments on same day. Know your self, know whether would prefer
to stay away from doctor.
• What about primary care physician? If have other problems, what about those specialists, those issues?
• During treatment, your medical oncologist acts like primary care physician. Once done, it’s not clear who to call.
•
Plenty of women prefer to call their primary care physicians with
concerns. Others call oncologist—big fear, and want to hear immediately
if there is something wrong. Studies indicate that women followed by
primary care physician do just as well as those followed by oncologist.
•
Follow the two-week rule—if something has been bothering you for less
than two weeks, wait to call. (Cough, sore back, generally not feeling
well.) Give it two weeks, most things go away. If not sleeping well,
don’t wait. Meant to be reassuring—most things can wait.
• 30
years ago there was a great deal more follow-up. Chest x-ray, blood
markers. Now, unless woman is in a clinical trial, or worried, most
doctors don’t follow with scans or xrays.
• Blood
tests or markers: A couple of markers indicate cancer activity. Not
really accurate. Helpful for stage IV, to see if treatment working.
• ASCO
recommends against blood tests—they’re not accurate and don’t make any
difference in how well you do. If recurrence is discovered in august
with symptoms, you will do just as well as woman whose cancer is
discovered in February with a blood test. It does make a difference in
anxiety limit. Known women with elevated markers, but no sign of
cancer. Anxiety increased. (TNBC, though, can grow quickly, so those
with especially aggressive cancer may benefit from earlier detection.)
*
Lifestyle modifications—particularly important with TNBC. No pill to
take. Some attention to diet, exercise, weight and alcohol may make a
difference.
• Diet and weight work together.
• Higher weight connected to first cancer and recurrence.
• This
is really hard. Many of us gained weight, many dealing with chemopause.
Harder to lose weight. Exercise is important—for mental health, and
will tone up the body you have. "I go to the gym almost every morning. I
hate it there. But I am dedicated to doing all I can to reduce
recurrence and make myself look better."
• A lot
out there published about diet, but we still do not know much. A diet
to reduce cancer risk is not different than what we know about diet in
general.
• What
we know increasingly about alcohol—more than one drink a day increases
risk. "In the interest in being honest, I have a glass of wine at dinner
almost every night. If my cancer came back, I am not going to believe
it is because of my wine."
• Moderation in all things. Quality of life is important. Know what enhances our joy in life.
• Do
not worry about the impact of stress. It does not influence recurrence,
no matter what anybody says. Not going to make your cancer come back.
• It is normal to feel sadness that this has happened, that this has brought concern and worry to those you love.
* Anxiety—that it will it come back: Who will take care of my children.
• Exhaustion—many women stay tired for a long time. And being tired makes us more susceptible to worry.
• Sense
of isolation. Consider chat rooms, conferences, retreats. No matter
how much others (without cancer) try, they do not understand. Most
difficult for young women who are worries about whether they will raise
their kids and friends who are thinking of what new car to buy.
• Women fall into two camps—I survived it and am OK. Or, one bad thing happened, what else can happen?
•Inevitably,
we lose some friends along the way, but develop new and close
newfriends. Difficult if close friend or family member vanished through
this. You may decide not worth the time and energy to revive that
relationship.
• You may feel crazy—it is inevitable, around time of diagnosis, and after.
Depression vs. anxiety vs. fear
All of us fell depressed. Not all clinical depressed. Comes with the territory.
Courage is like a muscle—you have to use it to make it stronger. Courage is fear that has said its prayers.
Things
to help with fear—be as specific as possible. What are you afraid
of:Afraid of dying? Afraid of being dead? The dying process? Of pain?
Of losing things that make up the pleasures of our day. Doctors have
made an enormous improvement in pain control. Trade off—pain drugs
make you sleepy. Ask your doctor—what would you do for me if I had
unbearable pain?
We may
be fearful of being a burden. Find out what kinds of care available.
How would family members assist you? What can you set up to make it
easier for spouse and family?
Biggest
fear is leaving children."In 1993, when I was diagnosed with my first
cancer, I was a single mom with 11 yr old with no relationship with her
father. I was wracked with fear." Made legal arrangements, talked with
people who would care for her and love her. Made me feel better.
•Sadness—it
is worth being sad about. Just because feel sad—fearful, moody, short
tempered does not mean you are clinically depressed.
• Post
traumatic stress disorder. What it might feel like after cancer— angry
outbursts, think too much about your crisis. Helps to talk about it,
normalize it.
• Two
week rule helpful—if have half days and hours, then other days when you
feel OK, you’re probably not clinically depressed. Many of symptoms of
depression—changes in sleep, appetite, social relationship, abiity to
concentrate—are the symptoms of going through cancer treatment. Am I
really depressed? Do I need help? Give it some time, if after a few
weeks you usually will feel somewhat better.
• If
feelings persist and you don’t feel like you are getting better, you may
need help. If you feel angry or out of control. Like you’re covered
with a heavy, wet, foggy blanket and you feel like you have to push it
away.
• Medication can help, conversations also help.
• If
you wonder if you need help, you might need it. Find a good therapist
who knows something about breast cancer—you want somebody who knows
about it and understands—you don’t want to have to educate your
therapist. Therapists are people—don’t want one who is scared to death
about cancer. if calling around, asking about insurance, opening, etc.
Ask what is your experience working with women with BC. Not, but
willing to do it. Probably not best.
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