Hi Alison.,
just thought I would share my thoughts and tuppence worth in here. I had a grade and stage 2. 2cm invasive tumour - had lumpectomy and sample node removal. 3/8 nodes positive, so went back for total axillary removal. Another one positive,so I was strongly advised to have FEC chemo, which I did. Apparently my hospital in Plymouth, a breast care centre of excellence, advises all patients with tumours over 1 cm to have chemo, but I am aware /Oncs and hospitals differ. I would have thought a 3 cm tumour, even without lymph node involvement, would suggest chemo, and radiotherapy, but I am no doctor.
It seems your Onc is at Christie’s in Manchester, which besides the Royal Marsden, is one of the best hospitals for bc treatment in England, as they only deal with various cancers. Gosh, I wish I had been treated there, as they are in the forefront of new meds etc. My nephew worked as a cancer research scientist there for some 5 years, at the Paterson Institute, and his supervisor, Dr. Bob Hoskins, is often quoted in newspaper articles on bc.
I had a big problem with the Onc that my surgeon referred me to - won’t go into the nitty gritties as it is boring for people here who know me, but I just asked the receptionist in the Oncology Suite if I could please see another Oncologist - I didn’t care who, anyone other than him. There were no questions asked, no fuss, and within 15 mins prior to my first chemo treatment I saw a lovely young female GP who worked one morning a week in the Oncology Dept. Did I get lucky or not?
If you are not happy with your current Oncologist, I would respectfully ask your bc nurse if you can be referred to another one. You may discover, as I did, that I was extremely fortunate in finding a very compassionate doctor, who had to try and treat my Crohn’s and breast cancer concurrently. She was brilliant.
Chemo is not a therapy to undergo lightly, in view of the side effects, and you have every right to be treated by a doctor that you can get along with. This is your life - not their’s!!
The original Onc said I had a 4% better chance of surviving bc with chemo, along with radiation, some 5% and hormone therapy, which I think added another 3% (can’t remember the actual numbers now, as it was 4 years ago). I didn’t really understand, or indeed even care about the stats, just wanted to do whatever they advised. I figured they are the experts, not me. And - I am thankfully still here 4 years later and doing well with bc - although my Crohn’s is another kettle of fish.
I hope you can get to see another Oncologist - the bc surgeons don’t deal with chemo or radiotherapy and just refer you along to an Onc. Sometimes, as personalities, we just don’t “jell” with whomever we are referred to - but you have to make the decision to ask for another Oncologist. I don’t think you will have a problem if my experience was anything to go by.
Wish you the very best.
Liz.