Last spring, Signe was enjoying a vacation trip with her niece, but not enjoying their long car ride. Signe soon felt unusual discomfort where the shoulder strap pressed against her chest. That evening, Signe performed a breast self-exam, carefully probing a tender spot on her right breast.
“I felt a pea-sized lump,” Signe remembers, “and I just knew it was cancer.”
The next morning, Signe called to schedule a checkup. Both her training and temperament impelled her to get the facts, analyze her options and quickly put the most effective plan into play. What she didn’t know then was that she would find the answers, medical technology, comprehensive care and caring treatment team she needed at Methodist Estabrook Cancer Center.
“My mother is a breast cancer survivor,” Signe explains. “She had a radical mastectomy in her late 50s, and she has struggled with lymphedema. My three sisters and I understand the importance of early detection and treatment.”
Signe’s mother had traveled to the Mayo Clinic for care. If Signe’s suspicions proved correct, she expected to do the same.
Signe cut short her vacation, flying back for a short-notice appointment at her gynecologist’s office at Methodist Physicians Clinic Women’s Center. Here she had CAD (computer-aided detection) mammograms taken that highlighted the area of concern within the right breast. Next, radiologist Linda Sing, MD, performed a breast ultrasound, using sound waves to generate images that better identify abnormalities.
Signe’s first question for Dr. Sing was a direct one: Is it cancer?
“I so appreciated Dr. Sing’s frankness and compassion,” Signe remembers. “She told me that of the abnormalities she’d seen that looked like mine, all had been cancerous — and the biopsy that followed confirmed that mine was too.”
Dr. Sing made a recommendation that transformed Signe’s diagnosis and treatment. Current medical research, Dr. Sing knew, shows that approximately 10 percent of women diagnosed with cancer have an additional area of disease not visible by mammogram or ultrasound. To look for additional cancer sites and obtain the most complete picture of Signe’s disease, Dr. Sing recommended breast MRI.
“I had never heard of breast MRI,” Signe says, “but Dr. Sing explained that in my case there was good reason to take a closer look with this new technology, regardless of where I chose to go for treatment.” |
As Dr. Sing explains, “Breast MRI is not a screening tool for the average woman. Compared to mammography and ultrasound, it is more time-consuming and expensive. Breast MRI also increases the likelihood of finding false positives — abnormalities that are proven benign with biopsy.”
Yet, as Dr. Sing told Signe, “Breast MRI offers increased sensitivity that can help identify additional disease not seen on the mammograms of women recently diagnosed with breast cancer, and help evaluate women at high risk of breast cancer, especially younger women with dense breast tissue. For these women, breast MRI can provide peace of mind before surgery that all cancer has been identified.”
Eager to gather all the information she could about her diagnosis and treatment options before arranging the trip to Rochester, Signe scheduled an appointment with surgical oncologist James Reilly, MD, medical director of clinical services of the Breast Care Center at Methodist Estabrook Cancer Center.
The Breast Care Center offers advanced, comprehensive, multidisciplinary treatment for all breast conditions. Team members represent all specialties, subspecialties and support services related to breast health. Program coordinator Kathryn Simone, APRN, navigates each patient’s care, providing guidance every step of the way.
After Signe met Kathryn, Kathryn’s assistant Vicki Hough, MA, and
Dr. Reilly, her plans changed.
“I knew the minute I met with them that they were my team,” Signe recalls. “They were all so understanding, so genuinely interested in my well-being and eager to answer all of my questions — and I had a lot. We met for well over an hour, and it was clear that the total care I needed was right here, close to home.”
Surgical alternatives were uppermost in Signe’s mind. Was lumpectomy the answer? Or could additional cancer
be developing?
Breast MRI could help make
that determination. Signe and
Dr. Reilly reviewed the advantages
and disadvantages, including the
very real possibility of needless alarm over a false positive result.
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