Possible lung mets?

Hi, 

My mum was diagnosed with triple negative breast cancer in July 2020. She underwent chemo, mastectomy and radiation. Treatment finished in April this year.

Abour 4 weeks ago she started with a dry cough and a bit of a runny nose. A week later, the dry cough has developed into a chesty cough. We just put it down to a cold/bug but then a few days later, my mum started with awful pain when trying to take a deep breath. She went to her gp and they sent her for a chest x- ray, and the radiologist said that there was infection and she was prescribed antibiotics. 
 

The gp ordered for another x-ray for in 4 weeks time to check the infection had cleared or reduced. We got the results yesterday. The radiologist has written “dense area, growth, nature uncertain”. The gp has now referred my mum to the respiratory clinic, but because of her history, we are worried sick that it is secondary breast cancer in her lung.

The gp said she now didn’t think it was an infection. 

The plus side being that the pain upon taking a deep breath only lasted 3 days, her cough has improved and she has no other symptoms such as weight loss or coughing blood.
 

Are these positives? Is there anything else that could cause this? Is there something else it could be besides cancer that would cause this dense area to grow in 4 weeks?

I’m a bit annoyed with the gp to be honest because she says “I don’t think it’s infection”, but then in the next sentence says “we aren’t to speculate”.

I did post on the ask one of the nurses section and they have said they aren’t aware of any benign conditions that would cause this, so that now fills me with more worry.

Anyone had any similar experiences?

Thanks x

Is your Mum still under the breast clinic/ Oncology  - ring them and let them know what’s going on and ask if they can look at the X-rays . They have specialist radiographers as part of their team ,they  are skilled at looking at scans / x rays - they are far better at working out if things are cancer related than general radiographers. I had scans due to bone issues that were interpreted as possibly suspicious by radiology but the specialist and radiographer in Oncology quickly said very unlikely and biopsy proved them right .You need an opinion from breast care team . Fingers crossed .Best wishes . Jill x