How long have you been Stage IV?

12122232426

Comments

  • @ssales13 I had a bilateral mastectomy 16 years ago, so will try to remember as best I can. One thing they should tell you is that they put 1-2 drains on each side of your chest. This is to drain excess fluids following surgery. They are left in for several days up to a week, I believe. It all depends on your fluid output.

    I did find it very helpful to sleep propped up quite a bit, so get some comfortable pillows!

    It also helps to have button-down shirts. Lifting things over your head for the first month is a bit challenging.

    Your team should be giving you a list of exercises and stretches to do. I did mine probably twice as many times per day as suggested and got my muscles back to normal very quickly.

    Just FYI: I didn’t have much “pain,” just a lot of pressure from the fluid buildup.

    I’m sure other ladies will have varied input, as we all experience these things differently.

    Praying your journey goes smoothly. Just know I am always thinking of you wishing you the best!

    Hugs, Pam 💗😃

  • eddiej
    eddiej Posts: 72

    @ssales13 Good morning Stacy! I can’t help here since I haven’t had a mastectomy but I did have a breast reduction 12 years ago and all the info the other gals have given about the drains is familiar. Also, I don’t remember pain as such, more annoyance from the drains.
    Keeping good thoughts for you!! xojuliana

  • ssales13
    ssales13 Posts: 175

    @norah2024 , @livinglifenow @eddiej thank you ladies for your input and well wishes! I will definitely know next Tuesday if having the surgery is what the doctor suggests. I’ll let you all know something after I see the surgeon. Thanks again❤️

  • aj
    aj Posts: 387

    @norah2024 my CA 15-3 went from 38 in July to 63 in October. I’m going for another tumor marker test next week. CEA marker is normal. The Caris test is like the guardiant test. Just a different company

  • norah2024
    norah2024 Posts: 85

    @AJ

    Thank you for your reply.

    What is the second marker test you’re going to do? Is it CA 27-29?

    I did that one too, and it was elevated. I also did the CEA test, and it was normal.

    Thank you for clarifying about Caris test, because I was planning to ask my doctor if this test might solve the mystery regarding my condition and the type of treatment.

    But since it’s the same test as guardiant , I’ve already done it before.
    I hope everything goes well for you.

  • aj
    aj Posts: 387

    @norah2024 , I get CA15-3 and CEA. The Caris test checks for ESRI, PIK-3, and all those.

  • moderators
    moderators Posts: 9,647

    @acki05 Du hast wirklich schon unglaublich viel geschafft! Trotz der langen Behandlung und all der Herausforderungen klingt es toll, dass es dir immer noch recht gut geht – das zeigt, wie stark du bist 💗

    Die Kombination aus Fulvestrant und Truqap ist ja eine moderne und vielversprechende Therapie. Viele berichten, dass sie gut damit zurechtkommen – und es ist super, dass du sie gut verträgst. Es klingt so, als würdest du dich trotz allem nicht unterkriegen lassen und weiter aktiv durchs Leben gehen.

    Und wie du siehst, sind unsere Diskussionsforen auf Englisch — wir warten schon gespannt auf das Übersetzungsmodul! Aber einige von uns sprechen auch Deutsch (-:


  • ssales13
    ssales13 Posts: 175

    @acki05 welcome to the group. I’m glad that although you have gone through what you have so far that you are doing well. I hope you continue to do well.

  • ssales13
    ssales13 Posts: 175

    @livinglifenow , @eddiej , @AJ , @tougholdcrow Hey ladies I went to my doctors appointment yesterday and she said my PET scan was ok and didn’t show any progression from the last one.. So she said I’m stable and that at the moment they would shelf the idea of surgery for right now and now I go every 8 weeks to see her or nurse practitioner and get my Xgeva shot and PET scan every 4 months. I’m thrilled and relieved. I hope everyone is doing ok. I’m always praying for everyone on here.❤️

  • Gosh, that is a relief, @ssales13 !

  • eddiej
    eddiej Posts: 72

    @ssales13 Great news!! So happy to hear this and pray it continues for years to come ♥️

    I get my scans every 3 months and my Xgevaa shot was switched to every 3 months too after this recent positive scan. Sort of same protocol… we are not alone 🤗

    it’s 5:16 in NY and dark outside… winter has arrived… all good! I love winter ❄️ .

    Hope everyone is doing well! Stay cool! xox juliana

  • ssales13
    ssales13 Posts: 175

    @tougholdcrow , @eddiej Thank you ladies! @eddiej I’m in MD so not too far from you and yes it seems we do have the same sort of protocol! It’s nice to know. Have a great evening ❤️

  • @ssales13 Wow! That is excellent news, Stacy. So happy for you. Wishing many more great scans!

    Hugs, Pam 💗

  • ssales13
    ssales13 Posts: 175

    @livinglifenow thanks Pam!

  • aj
    aj Posts: 387

    @ssales13 whew! Surgery is no fun and I’m glad you can avoid it!

  • ssales13
    ssales13 Posts: 175

    @AJ I am so thankful for not having to have surgery right now. I feel very blessed❤️ I hope you have a great evening!

  • norah2024
    norah2024 Posts: 85

    @ssales13

    Truly wonderful news. We’re all praying for you. I hope things always go well for you
    🤗🫂

  • ssales13
    ssales13 Posts: 175

    @norah2024 thank you so much for your kind words! I appreciate the prayers❤️

  • I recently had both the liquid biopsy (blood draw) and tissue from tumor 2 years ago tested by Caris. Nothing new as 2 years ago tumor tissue was tested by Natera/Altera and no mutations pointing to other treatments. Signatera kept monitoring the ctDNA. Caris billed Medicare a whopping $27,000 but was only paid $9600 (boo-hoo). I was not happy that dr pushed for these tests.

  • aj
    aj Posts: 387

    @newfmamainoregon , wow. I hope you didn’t have to pay anything for that! I’m just getting the blood biopsy. Tissue testing three years ago showed no mutations. I guess my oncologist wants to see if any have developed. But I just got scans that showed great improvement. So my treatment appears to be working as it is .

  • New to this thread. But to answer the original question of this discussion, I was diagnosed with Stage IV in January 2025. I was diagnosed with Stage 1, Grade 3 breast cancer in July 2019, went through surgery, chemo then radiation, and spent the last 5 years on Tamoxifen. This Stage IV metastatic carcinoma is on my liver. Obviously, there is no way to know how long I had cancer before it was detected. So when I hear the whole 60 months life expectancy (with the therapy treatments I am on) it definitely freaks me out. I have been taking Kisqali and Exemestane for 8 months now, and my scans and cancer index tests are showing promising results.

  • cskinner
    cskinner Posts: 13

    @aj sorry for the delayed response. I haven’t been on the boards for a few weeks. I had the Caris test when I got my metastatic diagnosis earlier this year. No evidence of the mutations it looks for so my oncologist stuck with her original treatment plan.

  • @aj

    “Great news! 🫂
    I’m happy for you, and I hope no mutations appear…… and that the treatment keeps working effectively always.🧡

  • ssales13
    ssales13 Posts: 175

    @aj Awesome news about your good scans last week and your no active cancer in the brain!!

  • @aj I hope you get really great results with the new treatment. Sending positive vibes your way.

  • aj
    aj Posts: 387

    @tougholdcrow, no new treatment right now. Xeloda and Faslodex are working