Breast MRI yearly?

mschaben
mschaben Member Posts: 87

I had bilateral mastectomy in dec 2014.  Had fifteen lymph nodes removed and started reconstruction.  i have finished the aggressive chemo treatments in May and will continue herceptin til January and am still doing radiation.  I also will be taking tomoxifen for ten years.  I know after all treatments I will see my oncologist every three months for first year and so on for five years.  My question is if I will have to have a breast MRI yearly to check chest wall for recurrence.  Women who still have their breast have mamograms done. My surgeon at the beginning said I would have to but my oncologist says studies show that doing frequent scans won't improve the length of time you live. He said only if symptoms should arise of recurrence then they would.   So does anyone else have same situation and have you been told you would or wouldn't need a MRI yearly.  Thanks in advance.

 

mary

Comments

  • New Flower
    New Flower Member Posts: 4,294
    Hi Mary

    If your breast surgeon recommends annual MRIs you should follow your breast surgeon advice. Breast surgeon will order it and review with you at your annual visit. Many breast surgeons follow their patients for several years. Seeing two doctors will give you confidence 

    congratulation on finishing Chemo 

  • desertgirl947
    desertgirl947 Member Posts: 653 Member
    I haven't had MRIs and I am

    I haven't had MRIs and I am now almost three years in remission.  Last year I did have a very small mass develop just below my scar on the side where I had the most problems.  To be safe, I was sent for an ultrasound.  That was inconclusive.  So, I was sent for a biopsy.  As suspected, it was a small benign cyst. 

    I trust my oncology people.  I know that they will follow up on anything I find/they find that is out of the ordinary.  The nurse practitioner who works with my oncologist is very thorough when she checks me.  Last fall I graduated from three-month checks to six-month checks.

     

     

     

  • button2
    button2 Member Posts: 421
    Hey Mary

    I would follow your onc's advice. I believe MRIs are really safe so why not? I myself do CT scans every 6 months. Even if "statistics" show a treatment doesn't help survival generally, how do you know it won't help you personally? I say give any scan/treatment you can get a shot! Take care, Anna

  • TraciInLA
    TraciInLA Member Posts: 1,994 Member
    button2 said:

    Hey Mary

    I would follow your onc's advice. I believe MRIs are really safe so why not? I myself do CT scans every 6 months. Even if "statistics" show a treatment doesn't help survival generally, how do you know it won't help you personally? I say give any scan/treatment you can get a shot! Take care, Anna

    My doctors agree, no screening scans

    Mary,

    I'm sure this is an area where doctors have different opinions, and of course you should always do what's right for your own personal health situation -- I'll just share what my doctors have told me, for my own situation:

    I'm a 6-year breast cancer survivor (bilateral lumpectomies + chemo + radiation in 2009), and decided to have a prophylactic bilateral mastectomy 6 months ago due to some newly-available genetic testing.  I did not have reconstruction.  

    While making the decision, I met with a geneticist and genetic counselor at a major cancer center, as well as my own longtime surgeon, oncologist, and OB/GYN.  I asked every one of them about future screening scans, such as MRIs.

    Every one of them said that the standard of care after a bilateral mastectomy is that no screening scans are typically performed, only regular manual exams.  They explained that, after a mastectomy, there is so little tissue left between your skin and the chest wall that it would be easy to feel any developing lump in a very early stage.  I continue to see my oncologist every 4 months for an exam and blood work, and am currently seeing my surgeon every 3 months, but will not have any screening tests done.

    I don't know how reconstruction would affect these recommendations.

    Don't know if that helps?

    Traci

     

  • RozHopkins
    RozHopkins Member Posts: 578 Member
    I struggled with this too.

    I struggled with this too.  Wouldn't you think they would scan more frequently after bilateral.  But then as another lady explained below I did not realize anything appearing is easier to feel.  It's just I felt it better to check at the soonest moment instead of when it becomes very noticeable.  I definitely get the impression they do nothing until something obvious needs checking, which usually means more treatment unfortunately for us.......  I wonder if the specialists have their spouses checked more frequently after cancer. Bet they do.

  • Double Whammy
    Double Whammy Member Posts: 2,832 Member

    I struggled with this too.

    I struggled with this too.  Wouldn't you think they would scan more frequently after bilateral.  But then as another lady explained below I did not realize anything appearing is easier to feel.  It's just I felt it better to check at the soonest moment instead of when it becomes very noticeable.  I definitely get the impression they do nothing until something obvious needs checking, which usually means more treatment unfortunately for us.......  I wonder if the specialists have their spouses checked more frequently after cancer. Bet they do.

    I have yearly MRIs

    but I still have my breasts.    I like Traci's explanation about being able to readily palpate a local recurrence after mastectomy.  Makes sense.  It also makes sense that for those of us who had lumpectomies, it would be very difficult if not impossible to palpate a lump so close to the chest wall because of all the other normal breast tissue in front, so in addition to needing that breast tissue imaged, MRIs and mammograms are the only way to get "down deep and see what's there".   No type of breast screening is going to pick up on mets elsewhere and that is what we really worry about, so for most of us with early stage disease, it's  a matter of routine labs to check organ function and reporting any symptoms which woud then be checked more thoroughly.  Other scans (CT/PET) will not show lesions unless they have reached a certain size anyway.  If you were initially scanned, there is a baseline.  If you have bone pain, or a cough, or abdominal pain, be sure to report it and get a scan.  Good luck with your continued treatments.  

    Oh, and I do "get" the outcomes analyses that have been studied over the years and also the effects on cost containment.  I do not want unnecessary scans or over prescribing of meds if it's not going to help, but if you have just about any symptom that doesn't go away after a couple of weeks, it needs to be checked out.  And I think you need to tell your oncologist, because not every pcp makes the connection.

    Suzanne