Cancer not detected in MRI or Mamogram
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Cleveland - OH
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In 2006, over a period of weeks I noticed the nipple of my right breast flattening. I went to my oncologist's office and had a clinical breast exam performed, and nothing suspicious was felt. Though I had had my yearly bilateral mammogram about six months earlier, my oncologist sent me for a mammogram of my right breast.
Nothing was seen on the mammogram, but while I was in the radiology office, the doctor suggested I also get a sonogram of the breast, which I and my oncologist agreed would be wise,so the oncologist faxed over the script so I could have the test right then and there.
The ultrasound technician did the sonogram, then a radiologist came in and told me nothing was seen. I told her that something had to be wrong as I could see the change in my nipple over the period of a few weeks. She then performed the sonogram procedure herself and told me there was nothing there. I asked her to explain to me what she thought the cause of the change in the nipple could be. She said it was due to changes still going on from the radiation treatment 10 years earlier. I told her it did not make any sense to me; that explanation only seemed reasonable if the change occurred over a period of years, but this was not the case - the change occurred in a matter of weeks.
I went back to my oncologist. He did a clinical exam and still nothing unusual was felt. He assured me things were okay. I got dressed, and he said to be absolutely sure, I could have a breast MRI.
I did have the MRI and it turned out that there was cancer (invasive lobular cancer) throughout that breast. I ended up having a mastectomy and chemo and 52 Herceptin treatments.
P.S. After the cancer in the right breast was confirmed with a biopsy, I asked for an MRI of my left breast (knowing that lobular cancer is often bilateral). The breast MRI showed a small suspicious area (not visible on a repeat mammogram).
My oncologist recommended a double mastectomy and my surgeon agreed. I got a second opinion from another surgeon (in a National Cancer Institute-designated Comprehensive Cancer Center) who said whatever it was was small, and that in a few weeks the hospital would have equipment set up to do a biopsy under MRI guidance. There was a delay in getting the equipment set up and I could not wait, so I had my right breast removed and then had 8 chemo treatments and started Herceptin.
I was going to have the MRI-guided biopsy, but my regular surgeon said to have a mammogram first. The cancer in my left breast was now visible by mammogram, so I had a mammogram-guided wire localization and a breast biopsy.
It turned out to be a very tiny (.7 mm) invasive lobular cancer. I had a mastectomy. Sentinel node biopsy found a micrometastasis in the sentinel node. A subsequent axillary node dissection found no additional cancer.