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Siewli's avatar
Siewli
Member
3 years ago

Waiting game

I have been diagnosed with breast cancer last Monday. I suspect that I m in Stage 4 as my specialist thinks the lumps have been 12-18 mths. I know my body is feeling pretty bad n getting nerve pain n isomia and yet I m still waiting for lymph nodes biopsy n PET scan to be done. Then another week of delay that I can see my breast specialist for treatment plan or surgery. I m afraid my body cannot wait any longer. Is there a way to get treatment immediately? Is this a norm to wait about 2-3 weeks to get treatment plan?

36 Replies

  • Thanks @AllyJay. I will try to hang in there. Appreciate for the tips of moving stuff to lower area. Thanks.
  • @Siewli we all understand your anxiety in wanting your treatment to start, but as mentioned above, your team need to know exactly what they need to treat. There are many different types, as well as the grade and stage of breast cancer, and each requires a different plan. Just like say, bears. If a zoo is told they're getting a pair of bears and they start preparing for the arrival of grizzly bears. They get in huge stocks of the type of food that they eat, and plan the enclosure for them. Then the truck arrives with a pair of pandas which only eat bamboo, or polar bears who don't eat berries and vegetation, but who need nice fat seals, arrives.....Just as the needs of bears differs, so too the treatment of your particular cancer. They have to clearly identify it, then treat it. Some get chemo first then surgery, others surgery then chemo. Then there are those who don't even need chemo at all. Some get radiotherapy...others not. Some a full mastectomy, others lumpectomy....and other variations of treatments and the sequence of events. Use this waiting time to perhaps cook and freeze some meals and also to move items in cupboards and wardrobes to middle shelves as it's likely you'll find reaching up to get the coffee or whatever will be easier without stretching after surgery. Thinking of you and wishing you all the best with your treatment.
  • Thanks @Cath62 for your encouragement. First lump biopsy already shown a grade 2 cancer cell..n my 18mm lump has spread to a smaller lump 7mm next to it. Also showing lymph nodes swelling. And I m feeling unwell having chills n pain. It's so hard to go thru it when u are unwell n lost appettite.
  • Hi @Siewli, it sure is a hard time. I remember the waiting and the anxiety of it all. It is so overwhelming especially at the beginning. So much to understand and learn too on a topic none of us ever thought we would have to deal with. @Zoffiel is right about not over thinking it. 

    Try to keep busy so you are distracted, do things you enjoy and spend time with people who are positive and supportive. If you think too far ahead you will only get anxious. Stay in the present moment. Thinking or over thinking is not going to change what test results. 

    Breast cancer is unique for everyone and everyone's treatment plan is different too. The thing is your drs need to have all the information to form the best path forward for you.  Also just because a cancer is there awhile doesn't mean it is stage 4 at all. Could be slow growing. It is natural for humans to think the worst but the reality is that treatment is so good these days and improving all the time. 

    Hang in there. Sending positive vibes to you. We are here to support you when you get those results. Hope you have a good weekend.


  • Thanks @Zoffiel. Really appreciate your response n encouragement. I hope I still can draw from other people's positive experience n  hang in there n I wanted to get better. This is so hard.
  • @Siewli don't over think things at this stage.

    I know, you are reading this thinking 'Oh, thanks for that helpful hint' 

    You won't know your staging until you have all your tests. Even then, unless you are metastatic, staging is not a particularly helpful tool. 

    Whatever is going on has been brewing for a while. A couple of more weeks can feel like an eternity once you know something is wrong, but testing and screening takes time--regardless of who does it. Two or three week to get a reasonable idea of your diagnosis is quite speedy. Getting a treatment plan can take considerably longer.

    The main thing is to get into the system. Don't be distracted by timelines for other people's disease; what happened to someone else's wife/sister/friend/hubby is irrelevant.  Your particular version of this shitty disease needs to be fully understood before your team can figure out the best way forward for you. It takes time.
    Mxx