Language matters and the words that people use are so important. Here's some words that are often misunderstood in this context: Cure: many people who have breast cancer are told they are cured when they are at the place where cancer cannot be visibly detected in imaging tests or on bloodwork after a breast cancer … Continue reading BCAM 2021: Day #25
BCAM 2021: Day #24
When I was first diagnosed with breast cancer back in 2017, my surgeon drew diagrams very similar to the ones on this slide. She told me how having HER2 receptors used to be a really really bad thing, but that there was an amazing new medication that I could take if I had them. She … Continue reading BCAM 2021: Day #24
BCAM 2021: Day #23
What does it mean to be hormone receptor positive? At a basic level, hormones that each of our bodies make naturally are fuel for the cancer. If there is estrogen or progesterone in high amounts in the body, then the cancer has more fuel to grow and spread. When the fuel is block and removed … Continue reading BCAM 2021: Day #23
BCAM 2021: Day #22
Receptors are how we often successfully target cancer cells and when there are no receptors, those same medications may not work. Our sisters with metastatic triple negative breast cancer have a particularly rough experience since the only medication that is usually effective are the harshest IV chemotherapeutic agents. This can mean some very rough days … Continue reading BCAM 2021: Day #22
BCAM 2021: Day #21
I've regularly dealt with headaches as a child and as an adult, so after my diagnosis, this experience did continue. My doctors have always been very very concerned about my headaches and I've had multiple brain MRIs to ensure that there were no metastases in my brain. For now, there haven't been any, but we … Continue reading BCAM 2021: Day #21
BCAM 2021: Day #20
For those of us with hormone positive, Her2 negative MBC, the liver is the most likely place for metastases after the bones. Knowing the symptoms and the likelihood for different areas of progression is a good thing to be aware of so that we can educate our medical team on what's going on. We will … Continue reading BCAM 2021: Day #20
BCAM 2021: Day #19
Knowing the signs and symptoms of different areas of metastases is so important. Whether you are learning to listen to your body prior to or after a breast cancer diagnosis, it's incumbent on all of us to be able to give medical professionals and others the best information. We live inside our bodies 24/7 and … Continue reading BCAM 2021: Day #19
BCAM 2021: Day #18
Bone metastasis are no fun. When I was diagnosed in 2017 with Stage IV Metastatic Breast Cancer, it was because of metastasis in my bones, all of them. On on a bone scan or x-ray, the lesions/tumors/mets show up as black spots; on a PET/CT, the same areas show up as bright lights, demonstrating the … Continue reading BCAM 2021: Day #18
BCAM 2021: Day #17
I didn't understand when I was diagnosed how people are counted in the US or elsewhere, for that matter. As I learned more about the databases kept by the federal and state governments, I was really astonished to learn how these large and complicated databases are falling short. Not to say that their efforts don't … Continue reading BCAM 2021: Day #17
BCAM 2021: Day #16
Medication can often be given to a patient in a variety of ways -- pills, liquid to be swallowed, injections and infusions. Typically pills or liquid to be swallowed can be administered at home, which most injections have to be done in a doctors office and most infusions at an infusion center or hospital setting. … Continue reading BCAM 2021: Day #16
