Breast Cancer on the Run in October: (Day 31) Synergy, Everyone and Everything

The previous 30 posts were randomly arranged. I suppose I could have ordered them on a chronological timeline, but I don’t think it would have been as interesting.

Breast Cancer on the Run in October: (Day 30) Breast Cancer and the Women’s Liberation Movement

I started this series talking about the role of women in offering support to breast cancer victims, raising awareness about the disease, putting pressure on the medical establishment to change, and raising money for research.

Breast Cancer on the Run in October: (Day 29) Stage 4 Breast Cancer as A Chronic Disease

Stage 4 breast cancer, metastatic breast cancer–these words terrify patients. And for good reason. Few people in the past survived the diagnosis for very long.

Breast Cancer on the Run in October: (Day 28) Breast MRI

Cancer is clever. A cancer cell will develop and then start to create its own blood supply to sustain itself. The vessels that it develops are generally immature and don’t regulate blood flow in and out of a structure in the same way as normal vessels.

Breast Cancer on the Run in October: (Day 27) Oncotype and the New Genetics

THANK YOU. THAN YOU. THANK YOU, GOD. THANK YOU, DOCTOR. THANK GOD I DON’T HAVE TO DO CHEMOTHERAPY…. A decade ago there were few women who would echo these sentiments. Most women who were diagnosed with breast cancer ended up needing chemotherapy after surgery.

Breast Cancer on the Run in October: (Day 26) Back to the Future

Reconstruction of the breast after mastectomy with a patient’s own tissue goes back a century. The first attempts were clumsy. One surgeon tried to put a giant lipoma in the defect. Others tried to make a breast out of muscle. Others attempted to bring part of the remaining breast over to the other side for restoration.

Breast Cancer on the Run in October: (Day 25) Ambulatory Surgery and “Drive Thru Mastectomies”

You want me to do a mastectomy as an ambulatory case? I asked incredulously when approached by a hospital administrator more than 15 years ago. They wanted me and other surgeons to do large breast operations and then send the patient home the same day?

Breast Cancer on the Run in October: (Day 24) Microscopes, Receptors and DNA

Most breast cancer patients don’t see the pathologist or molecular researchers. They work in obscurity in back rooms evaluating cells or tissues from biopsies or surgical specimens. Or, they work in special research labs determining how cells function, how cancer develops. They look into microscopes rather than into a patient’s eyes.

Breast Cancer on the Run in October: (Day 23) Chemotherapy Smorgasbord

Today the medical oncologist is presented with a smorgasbord of choices for their patients who are being considered for adjuvant chemotherapy. And patients are confronting an alphabet soup of acronyms to describe their regimens.

Breast Cancer on the Run in October: (Day 22) Digital Mammography….Hubble Space Program

What does digital mammography have in common with NASA and the Hubble Spacecraft Program? Digital Mammography has been an important improvement in our imaging capability to find breast cancer. But the Hubble Space Program?