Carolyn’s Story

juin 8, 2023

Carolyn

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In early July, 2021, I was 43 years-old with a 13 year-old son. I had a boyfriend of two years, a vacation to Lake Superior Provincial Park planned for later that summer, and I was in the final stages of the hiring process for a job I really wanted.
After a shower one night, I found a lump in my left breast. It felt a bit like a ping pong ball both size and texture-wise. I checked my right breast too and I actually found a lump in that breast as well. This one was smaller and harder, almost like a little pebble. I had also been noticing a sore spot in my left armpit and a strange sensation running down my arm, almost like hitting my funny bone.

I called my family doctor to make an appointment and, later that month, I saw her virtually. She told me they were likely nothing and that I was too young for it to be cancer, but at least she also wrote me a requisition for a mammogram and ultrasound.

It was a real struggle to get an appointment owing to pandemic delays but my doctor refused to refer me to a breast screening program location and instead insisted I schedule at a clinic. Finally, after weeks of leaving messages, sending emails, and trying to book online, I was able to get an appointment for October 22nd—this was at the beginning of August.

The next day after my appointment, I got a message to call the clinic—it was urgent. They told me they had been trying to reach my doctor all day but hadn’t heard back. They wanted my permission to send my images to a hospital. I figured it wasn’t good news.

About a month later, after numerous appointments for further imaging, biopsies, and genetic testing, I received an official diagnosis—the lump in my left breast was ER/PR+ HER2- invasive ductal carcinoma and it had already spread to my lymph nodes. I didn’t carry any genetic mutations though. Initially, I was pretty calm about it, maybe because I had already come to the realization from reading my reports online, but I think I had a bit of a nervous breakdown the weekend after I got the diagnosis.

At this point, the pathology for the lump in my right breast hadn’t come back yet so the plan was to wait to get that before forming a treatment plan. Incredibly, the lump in my right breast turned out to be a different cancer—mucinous carcinoma but at least ER/PR + HER2- too.

I had my first of eight sessions of chemo December 20th and got my last period ever on Christmas Day. The first four sessions went okay but I had a serious allergic reaction to the Paclitaxel I was given for my fifth and had to be switched to Taxotere. The side effects were awful and I was out of commission from day 3 to day 7 every time.

May 9th, 2022, I had a bilateral mastectomy. It made sense on many levels, it was what my surgeon had recommended from the start, and it was the choice I knew would give me the most peace of mind. Pathology showed that three of seven sentinel lymph nodes were malignant too so I was scheduled for Axillary lymph node dissection (ALND) in July, almost a year to the day of when I first found the lumps.
At the end of August, I started the first of 15 radiation therapy sessions. After everything I had been through up to that point, this step felt relatively “easy” so I was relieved. Of course the relief only lasted so long until I started thinking about all the what-ifs following treatment. I was really shocked and disappointed to learn that since I had a bilateral mastectomy, I wouldn’t receive any routine surveillance imaging. Since my cancer had been advanced, I worry about a recurrence and would want to know sooner than later, not like with my original diagnosis.

Which of course leads me to my disbelief of how the chance to detect my cancer early was effectively denied to me by outdated guidelines based on flawed methodology and upheld by a seemingly unqualified, out-of-touch, misogynistic task force. I couldn’t believe the stats about how many women are diagnosed in their forties and that even with that information, supposedly medically competent people would advise against screening. By that age, women have been having pap tests for two decades or more and no one felt we are too fragile to hear those results or go for further testing if necessary. I was further floored to learn that by the time you find a lump, your cancer is already advanced.

I truly wish I had known more about the risks, I wish my doctor had had a discussion with me at 40, and I wish the decision-makers listened to data rather than paternalistic anecdotes. I can only speculate what my treatment would have been had my cancer been detected early, but from everything I understand, I likely would have avoided chemo since it was to address the lymph node spread and I would likely have not needed the ALND either. As it stands now, I’m post-menopausal and I have permanent CIA and lymphedema. At 45 years-old.
But apparently I’m too young to have breast cancer.