The Right Questions To Ask

Released: Wednesday, September 9, 2009

By Devin Muller

Breast Cancer will strike nearly 182,000 women this year and plunge them into a world of complicated, arduous treatment. So it's heartening to know that more women are being diagnosed early, when the odds of beating the cancer are as high as 98 percent. Prevention and treatment are becoming personalized, thanks to genetic tests and new types of drugs. And after decades of no change, the death rate has finally begun to drop — about 2 percent annually since 1990.

Yet just because better tools and treatment exist is no guarantee that you'll get any of them. Your mammogram could be interpreted inaccurately, a lump could be incorrectly diagnosed, and you may not receive the best treatment for you simply because of where you live, the type of surgeon you choose — or even the doctor's sex.

That's why it's more important than ever to know the right questions to ask. Breast cancer is a complex, and no single approach works best for everybody. At every step — when you have your annual mammogram or get a suspicious lump checked out or undergo treatment — you should, at the very least, receive care that meets the scientific guidelines issued by leading cancer organizations. Here's how to make sure you do.

When you call for an appointment, ask if there's a breast-imaging specialist on staff. If not, shop around, advises Diana Miglioretti, Ph.D., a researcher with the Group Health Center for Health Studies in Seattle. "I'd go to someone who has been interpreting screening mammograms for at least 10 years."

If your screening mammogram is abnormal or you have a lump, the next step is often a diagnostic X-ray, which takes magnified close-ups of the suspicious tissue.

As with screening X-rays, the doctor who reads your diagnostic X-ray should be someone who specializes in mammograms, says Miglioretti, who led the study. Unless you live in a rural area, you should be able to find such a specialist no more than an hour or two away. "It's worth the drive," she says.

The biggest decision many women face when they're diagnosed with breast cancer is whether to have a mastectomy (removal of the entire breast) or a lumpectomy (only the tumor and surrounding tissue are cut out). In many cases, breast-conserving surgery, including lymph node testing and follow-up radiation, has the same lifesaving benefits as mastectomy. Yet your surgeon may not explain the options and consequences clearly or evenhandedly.

Ask loads of questions, starting with, "Am I a candidate for breast-conserving surgery, and if not, why not?" advises Dr. Sariego. Do your own research. And don't be shy about asking the first surgeon to recommend another for a second opinion. Better yet, look on your own: A recent study shows you're more likely to wind up with someone experienced and affiliated with a cancer program, compared with women who rely on referrals from their doctor or health plan, says Steven Katz, M.D., professor of medicine and health management and policy at the University of Michigan.

While you're asking questions, find out how your lymph nodes will be tested to see if the cancer has spread. A newer procedure, called sentinel-node biopsy, is less invasive and far less likely to cause permanent arm swelling than old-fashioned lymph node removal, but about 35 percent of patients aren't getting it, a recent multicenter study found.

Lumpectomy is just as effective as mastectomy only if it includes lymph node testing and a course of radiation treatments — generally five days a week for about six weeks. That's something your surgeon should make clear before you choose one procedure over the other.

Talk with a radiation oncologist before surgery. Ask how long your treatment will last and what the side effects might be. For that matter, talk with all the specialists who may be involved in your postsurgical care. Women often feel panicked and pressured to start treatment immediately, but it's usually safe to wait two to three weeks.

If a lumpectomy isn't right for you, a mastectomy followed by reconstruction is an alternative — but you may have to bring up the subject.

The news: Only about one-quarter of surgeons regularly send patients for a plastic surgery consultation before they make their lumpectomy or mastectomy decision, researchers from the University of Michigan found in a 2007 study. Who's most likely to make that referral? Women surgeons — as well as those who treat a lot of breast cancer. Reconstruction can be done during the same surgery as the mastectomy, but it requires the general and plastic surgeons to share turf and mesh schedules, which may be inconvenient for them — even if it's good for you

Reticence on Reconstruction continued...

Why it matters: Both procedures will alter your appearance, but in different ways. This may seem like a minor worry when you're newly diagnosed and terrified, but it's likely to become important when you're well.

"Ask your surgeon how your breast will look, how your clothing will fit," says Amy Alderman, M.D., M.P.H., an assistant professor of surgery at the University of Michigan. Even if you're sure you want breast-conserving surgery, you may want to consult with a plastic surgeon. Lumpectomy sometimes changes the breast more than women expect; a specialist can help you assess what might happen in your case. This is not vanity: Women who end up with extremely uneven breasts are more likely to be depressed and to worry that their cancer will return, a brand-new University of Michigan study found. Or you may want to seek out a breast surgeon who's experienced in oncoplastic techniques, which can improve the look of the breast.

Thankfully, the days of "Doctor knows best" are behind us. But that means breast cancer patients have to work with their physicians to make tough choices. To do that, women must share their fears and desires. "The doctor only knows what's on your X-ray and pathology report," says Karen Sepucha, Ph.D., a senior scientist with the Health Decision Research Unit at Massachusetts General Hospital: "What you care about needs to get on the table."

And you have to be the one who makes sure it does.

 

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