Genetic Testing Complete
Hello all. Whew, follow-up appointment with my genetic counselor yesterday, Gloria Morris, MD PhD at Upstate. She is wonderful if anyone in Upstate NY is seeking genetic testing after a cancer diagnosis. She's at the Upstate Cancer Center. No gene mutations were noted after a very comprehensive panel (testing of 50+ genes). Looks like my bilateral RCC was simply luck of the draw.
Next up, scans in August and a follow-up with my urologic oncologist.
Continued thoughts, prayers and strength for all.
Comments
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so Interesting!
I have a consult May 24th to get genetic testing and will do it as long as my insurance will pay. I hope they will!
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Good luck! Holler with theSteph85 said:I had my blood drawn last
I had my blood drawn last week for my genetic testing. Im sure I had the luck of the draw as well. You never know though! Hope your doing well, take care!
Stephanie
Good luck! Holler with the results. I'm doing well, thank you.
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Fingers crossed for you. IGlidergal365 said:so Interesting!
I have a consult May 24th to get genetic testing and will do it as long as my insurance will pay. I hope they will!
Fingers crossed for you. I know insurance and genetic testing can be tricky. Luckily mine was covered in full...literally zero dollars out of pocket. This was due to the advocacy of my docs, my young age, the RCC being in each kidney and some cancer in the family. Nice when the insurance company does the right thing.
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I agreeLMCRJB13 said:Fingers crossed for you. I
Fingers crossed for you. I know insurance and genetic testing can be tricky. Luckily mine was covered in full...literally zero dollars out of pocket. This was due to the advocacy of my docs, my young age, the RCC being in each kidney and some cancer in the family. Nice when the insurance company does the right thing.
I'm 40 and had Papillary Type 2 in my right kidney. And I have a 35 year old sister who apparently has a kidney lesion that was found 2 years ago when she had gallbladder issues and she never followed up on. Still trying to get her to get the follow up done! UGH. She's in NY (Poughkeepsie area) and I'm on the West coast. Makes dragging her there harder. My dad died of Pancreatic cancer at 52. I think those three things together might be enough to get it done. The out of pocket for the consult is $120 if insurance won't pay. I can swing that. It's the potential costs for the bloodwork that are scary.
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I'm 38, clear cell in right,Glidergal365 said:I agree
I'm 40 and had Papillary Type 2 in my right kidney. And I have a 35 year old sister who apparently has a kidney lesion that was found 2 years ago when she had gallbladder issues and she never followed up on. Still trying to get her to get the follow up done! UGH. She's in NY (Poughkeepsie area) and I'm on the West coast. Makes dragging her there harder. My dad died of Pancreatic cancer at 52. I think those three things together might be enough to get it done. The out of pocket for the consult is $120 if insurance won't pay. I can swing that. It's the potential costs for the bloodwork that are scary.
I'm 38, clear cell in right, papillary in left...totally bizarre. I have a paternal aunt that died from mRCC...a maternal aunt that died from mBreast...and my paternal grandfather died from Bladder cancer. Thought there would be some gene mutation for me, but nothing came back and I'll take it.
Sounds like that should definitely be enough for you. Hoping everything works out for you!
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Good news
LM--good news! Question, did your insurance cover that cost or was it out of pocket? Curious about the cost if it is out of pocket. I have my scans (this will be considered my 2 year check up) in mid-June. Genetic testing will be one of the pieces of conversation with my doctor.
I'm sure you'll have good news to share in August.
Stub
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Genetic Testing
I don't know anything about this.
Is it more for people who have never had cancer and they want to see if they are at risk for developing cancer?0 -
The oncologist said because of my age and typeDevastated Wife said:Genetic Testing
I don't know anything about this.
Is it more for people who have never had cancer and they want to see if they are at risk for developing cancer?I had papillary RCC type 2. And I'm 40. Those two facts together are really uncommon. I also have a 35-year-old sister who has a kidney lesion she has ignored for two years apparently (Working on getting her to follow up at the moment). He said if it comes back positive for a certain gene than it would change how they do my follow up and it would put a 50/50 risk for my siblings to have the same gene and cancers. I'm working with the insurance company to see what they will cover. Just the consult is $120 without insurance. The issue would be the actual blood work. Once I get the recommendations on which tests she'd like to run, I can take it to the insurance company and see if it meets their criteria. They said that sometimes, based on risk factors and the way the doctor writes it, it can be covered.
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Thanks, Stub. Insurancestub1969 said:Good news
LM--good news! Question, did your insurance cover that cost or was it out of pocket? Curious about the cost if it is out of pocket. I have my scans (this will be considered my 2 year check up) in mid-June. Genetic testing will be one of the pieces of conversation with my doctor.
I'm sure you'll have good news to share in August.
Stub
Thanks, Stub. Insurance fully covered the office visits and actual testing cost. I was kind of surprised actually.
Hoping Uncle NED pays you another visit next month.
Living life as normal...all is good at the moment. Off to Burlington, VT this weekend for some craft beer drinking with five buddies...Mancation 2018 here I come.
Cheers, bud.
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Genetic testing checks forDevastated Wife said:Genetic Testing
I don't know anything about this.
Is it more for people who have never had cancer and they want to see if they are at risk for developing cancer?Genetic testing checks for mutations in certain genes that have been shown to cause/lead to certain cancers. My understanding is that the testing is a good base-line to help discover the cancer cause (if any) and help plan for future treatment.
The testing is recommended for (per my Genetic Counselor/Doc):
-A person with a cancer diagnosis at an earlier than usual age, such as breast, colon or uterine cancer under age 50.
-A person with more than one new tumor. This includes someone with bilateral cancer of paired organs such as cancer in both breasts or both kidneys, or a person with more than one type of cancer.
-A person with certain cancers, such as ovarian cancer, male breast cancer, medullary thyroid cancer, or a person with other rare or certain type of tumor.
-A person with excessive colon polyps.
-A family history of multiple relatives with a similar type of cancer.
-A combination of certain cancers in the family history which may be suggestive of an inherited cancer gene. This is not always obvious and should be discussed with your physician.
-A known inherited cancer risk gene alteration (mutation) in the family.
-A person who has concerns about the possibility of hereditary cancer risk.
Hope that helps to inform. I think the genetic testing piece is important.
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My response fell below forDevastated Wife said:Genetic Testing
I don't know anything about this.
Is it more for people who have never had cancer and they want to see if they are at risk for developing cancer?My response fell below for some reason
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Great News!
Glad to hear this... Speedy recover and NED forever
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That’s good news. I think I
That’s good news. I think I may need to have the testing also.
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