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Ann Brenoff

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I Don't Have Breast Cancer

Posted: 09/21/2012 11:07 am

I don't have breast cancer. I had a breast cancer scare, which makes me about as un-unique as they come since more than half of cancer-free women who are screened annually over the course of a decade will have what is known as a false positive on a mammogram. The root of my scare was a little deeper because breast cancer has struck at targets all around my life but always missed the bull's eye that is me.

It just happened again and I need to talk about it. And let me begin with a tip of the hat to those whose scares turn out to be real, which again, mine wasn't. You have my admiration for your strength, my respect for your courage and my pledge to never again say no when you ask me to wear a pink ribbon or cough up a few bucks to support you when you walk in a fundraiser for breast cancer research. You got me with this last scare. Fear has its own way of leaving scars.

For about a month now, I've experienced sporadic pain in my left breast. I immediately turned to the best resources I know -- my friends who are breast cancer survivors. "Does breast cancer hurt?" I besieged them. No, not generally, they told me with a few adding "unless...." I didn't need them to finish the sentence. Breast cancer doesn't generally hurt unless the tumor is sufficiently large, and large tumors, as a rule, are not a good thing. Got it.

I spent hours in the mirror staring at myself when no one was around, thinking of my best friend Robin Goldstein who died from breast cancer at age 35. I reminded myself that the kind of breast cancer that young women get is more aggressive than the one that typically strikes older women. I am 62. Happy, happy to be 62, I told myself.

At the urging of friends, I moved up my annual mammogram to last Friday. I told the technician of the pain and of the fibroid tumor that sits behind the nipple in that breast. It's been there since my first mammogram in 1988 and has remained unchanged ever since. I dutifully tell each new radiologist about it and keep my original X-rays in my possession.

"We'll call you if there's a problem," was the receptionist's farewell as I left. I pushed all worry out of my head, smug that I had done what needed to be done. I wasn't an ostrich with her head in the sand, after all.

I was fine until a few days ago when I got the call I didn't want. Followup tests were necessary, I was told, and uh, could I come in right away? I drove as fast as I could and was there in minutes, yet the trip over was long enough for my mind to go to all those dark places. I have two children who need me. I have a husband who would fall apart. I have a job with health insurance that I would surely need to keep.

For the record, I have long-admired people who can contain their worry, but I recognize I am not one of them. I respect how some people process each step calmly and keep their fears in proportional check. Me? When my worry train leaves the station, it barrels full steam ahead.

Fighting back tears and playing out scenes in my head where I bravely tell my kids how "everything will be fine," I walked into the imaging lab, which days ago seemed so harmless and now felt ominous. I was led to a different room; was this the room they use to tell you you have cancer?

"Hello, I'm Yolanda. How are you today?" the woman who would be doing my ultrasound introduced herself. I think she said Yolanda, maybe it was Wanda. How was I supposed to remember her name when all I want to know is whether I'm OK or not?

"I'm fine," I told her, returning her smile. I'm seriously not fine, I shouted inside my head. I'm fucking terrified.

She put the warm gel on my breast and began her work, eyes staring at her machine.

"How do you deal with terrified women all day long?" I asked her, trying to pretend that I wasn't one of them.

"I don't look at their faces," Yolanda-Wanda said, not looking at mine. She answered my next question before I asked it. "If I look at them, they ask me if I've found anything. Then they try and read my face."

"OK, have you found anything? And please look at me!" I told her, in the lightest voice I could manage. She laughed, and kept her eyes on her screen. Yolanda-Wanda knew her stuff.

She excused herself to fetch the doctor, leaving me to pickle in my own worry. If they told me I needed a biopsy, would I still go to my daughter's volleyball game? Next week is so jammed with kid stuff and work assignments, could a surgery be delayed? I remember the 90-year-old spa queen I interviewed who had had breast cancer decades earlier. She told the doctors on the spot to "get rid" of her breasts -- just like that. Would I ever get my head to that place?

Yolanda-Wanda re-entered, alone. More delays, I feared, more tests without answers.

"You can get dressed. You are free to go. It was nothing of concern," she said. Nothing of concern? My breasts, my life, something was seen somewhere by someone that led to being thrown into this abyss and it was nothing of concern.

And that, friends, is what a false positive feels like.

 

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I don't have breast cancer. I had a breast cancer scare, which makes me about as un-unique as they come since more than half of cancer-free women who are screened annually over the course of a decade ...
I don't have breast cancer. I had a breast cancer scare, which makes me about as un-unique as they come since more than half of cancer-free women who are screened annually over the course of a decade ...
 
 
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Summer77
11:43 PM on 09/30/2012
I hated when they treat us like kids. If you see something and I ask you a question and you can't answer it! Then get me someone who can! I just went for an ultra sound and its ok to be a little stand offish but you don't have to be a zombie, That would make me more suspicious and scared. Look I'm a big girl, I'm not a baby don't send me home on a Friday to soak without answering any of my questions!
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
stillstandingkickingbutt
Please, I have the floor
11:56 AM on 09/30/2012
I also exp the same thing about 4 yrs ago
I refused chemo, surgery and everything else I went home to Cuba and they told me the truth? I had no cancer.
My thoughts are that my case may have been about racism as i was over 50 at the time and fit right into the scheme?

I have been a nurse for over 30 yrs and a retired Atty and i sought that sec opinion
I am still kicking and now a nurse prac in bus for myself in a small clinic serving the poor
i am really careful when women ask about mammograms which we do not provide(yet) I give them the FACTS!
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
jamie461
11:27 PM on 09/29/2012
My mammograms are always categorized as "abnormal." That's because the tissue is a little denser on one side than the other. Getting that call after my first mammogram was terrifying. I'm used to it now. "Abnormal" readings are very common. I always go back for a diagnostic mammogram, which is read immediately by the radiologist, and nothing is needed beyond that. I will say, however, that a diagnostic mammogram is probably the most painful thing I've ever experienced in a medical setting. I've often said they could get terrorists to talk readily if they could just give them a diagnostic mammogram.
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ReadHead322
I was born in a crossfire hurricane
07:36 PM on 09/29/2012
Right there with you, sister. I am in awe of people who can keep those fears in perspective, and can keep their imaginations in check. When I have had test results that needed further attention, I had my bucket list prepared and my death bed comments written up in my head.
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sararuth
08:01 PM on 09/28/2012
I have medical insurance:) Recommended mammogram revealed a cyst. Recommended ultrasound confirmed benign cyst. Next recommended ultrasound was for six months later. Next ultrasound revealed cyst had slightly increased in size. MRI was ordered. Just yesterday, MRI offered me peace of mind when no cancer was revealed and gave a baseline to monitor future growth of cyst.

For those with no insurance: Annual well checks are usually not an option: neither are mammograms, ultrasounds, MRI's.... I have peace of mind most don't. Wish I could help and I don't mind paying more taxes if it feeds one more child or detects cancer, heart disease.......early enough to give someone a chance to live a quality life or even just live a life. And yes, I already pay a higher percentage of tax than Romney.
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Summer77
11:47 PM on 09/30/2012
I hear you! We need to help those Women who need the test but can't afford them or we are going to set the clock right back to the 50s when Women died because they just could not get the help they needed. There were no programs for them. I have good Insurance but believe me every time I go for these test I am always thinking of my sisters out there that can't afford them and I go with a heavy heart.
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sararuth
09:38 AM on 10/01/2012
We are the lucky ones, but even with insurance, I have a $2,000 deductable, co pays, transportation costs... I too have dental insurance but it only pays about a half. My four dental implants cost me over $10,000. Guess I know where my retirement went. But at least I also have all my teeth, most pp cannot afford good dental care and cosmetic dentistry.
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Abmaj7
he who laughs last, thinks slowest
01:05 AM on 09/28/2012
A few comments.....Mammograms are a screening test and like ALL screening tests they are fraught with false positives (a necessary evil that arises when balancing considerations like cost, invasiveness, sensitivity and specificity).
A breast U/S primarily delineates lesions and determines whether they are cystic or solid. In a 62 year old, a cystic lesion needs apiration and the fluid sent for cytology; a solid lesion requires at least a needle biopsy and preferably excisional biopsy. An U/S alone is inadequate to prove a benign lesion, unless the area of concern was indeed that superficial, mobile and well circumscribed fibroma you had described.
So you were frightened unnecessarily because had the first doctor or NP actually done their freakin' job and done an appropriate history and manual breast exam prior to sending you for the inital mammogram, the U/S would not have been necessary.............unless, you had particulary good insurance, but that's another story.
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ie
ugh.
01:04 AM on 09/28/2012
Been there, done that. Not so easy, though. At the time I had no idea that false positives are somewhat common. I had a trip overseas planned to visit my mother-in-law. I got that call to returnfor another mammogram the day before I left for two weeks. We had to schedule it to be done after I returned. It was a long two weeks and a vacation that really was not a vacation. I was ecstatic at the results, but I think that two weeks two more time off my life that the time away from work added back.
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theBUSHdemocrat
12:30 AM on 09/28/2012
I'm BRCA Negative Uninformed with a family history of breast cancer in our 30's. My scare required a MRI Needle Guided Biopsy. Those few days between test and results are brutal, I put on a strong face but had completely lost it! At the end of the day, I'll take a million false positives over a real one.

Congrats on your false positive!!
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Gabrielle Rossi
Jesus Christ is my lord and saviour
09:54 PM on 09/27/2012
I have had two suspicious mammograms and then two biopsies which turned out to be negative. My mother died from breast cancer, so I much rather go through the worry and stress of additional studies and biopsies, than to miss something that is deadly.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Summertown
A former traveler of the US now a country wife jus
03:38 PM on 09/27/2012
Been there. Although I will say I approached mine with a lot less concern than the OP did. I did the mammogram thing, got the call, come back for an ultrasound. OK, go do that, all of this without telling the hubs. The next call was almost funny. Do you want to go to the city for a cancer surgeon or stay in podunk for your surgery? What? I told her to read the results back to me, she did. I'll stay in podunk, I told her after digesting what the report said. No reason for the long road trip to the city. And there wasn't. It was a complex cyst.

A trick for you ladies out there if you can get the tech to agree to it. Ask to see the object that raised alarms, if you see movement within the object that is a cyst.
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Mary Ann 01
12:50 AM on 09/27/2012
Lucky you, to be able to go right in for the follow up. Must not have an HMO. I had to wait 10 days for the first available appointment. Try being normal, going to work, paying bills, grocery shopping.
09:51 PM on 09/26/2012
I had something similar. When I was 23 I found a lump in my breast. I became hysterical (I'm a hypochondriac) and when my husband confirmed that he felt something, well, I became even more hysterical. I went to the doctor and he sent me to the imaging center to be checked. The whole time I tried to remain calm, and I did a pretty OK job. I didn't talk to the tech much, but after she left it felt like an eternity until she came back. Everything was fine and they said it had to do with ovulation. Haven't had one since, but I religiously check myself.
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ravenslvr
No point replying back, I won't read it
03:54 PM on 09/26/2012
I was diagnosed with cervical cancer at 14. Telling a 14 yr old they wont have kids, pft, ok. At 22, baby craze hit me. I wanted a baby so bad. At 25 I got pregnant by my bff, who chose to have nothing to do with me or my miracle baby. I cut my losses, bc I wanted to enjoy my baby and not fight with him. Its been just me and my son for 3 years. I met a great man, a US soldier, who loves all of us and knows about my cancer. We are getting married 12*12*12 and soon after that are going to try for another baby. Hopefully I will be blessed with another baby. If not, I'm happy with what I got
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smeeeee
Now take your nice red pill
02:55 AM on 09/26/2012
Oh my god, that's awful. I'm telling you, ever since 50 it's just been one thing like this after another. I keep thinking one of these scares is going to be the real thing.
09:39 PM on 09/25/2012
Happy it was nothing and thanks for the story. I am happy to know I am not the only one who freaks out about these things