Soon I will be moving to beautiful Columbia, Missouri, which is located in Boone County, Missouri to start a new job as Science Librarian at the University of Missouri. I will be beginning treatment for invasive ductal carcinoma, aka the commonest kind of breast cancer, shortly thereafter.
Timeline from diagnosis until a week ago. All of this took place in BeauWashPA:
Thursday, June 19, 2014: Regular 3D mammogram. A few hours later I get a call requesting my presence at a second mammogram and an ultrasound because they "want some more views." Skeered. They tell me to be prepared for a possible biopsy too.
Tuesday, June 24, 2014: Second mammogram and ultrasound does indeed turn into biopsy. The radiologist tells me that she will recommend surgery for the lump that they found even if it doesn't turn out to be malignant. Still skeered. Also shocked that I will have to be cut into no matter what. But a little reassured by their reassurances that the lump is very small and I will be fine if it does turn out to be cancer.
Monday, June 30, 2014: The radiologist calls. "I was right," she says in the tone Gregory House, MD used when he successfully diagnosed rare brain-eating fungi. "It's a breast cancer." In addition to being a bit annoyed by her tone, I am struck by the phrase "a breast cancer." It seems weird. Is a cancer different from cancer? Not sure.
The first text message after was to my sisters. |
Thursday, July 10, 2014: My neighbor happens to work for one of the most highly-thought of general surgeons in Washington, and is also his sister-in-law, so she has gotten me into his schedule for a consult as soon as possible after the holiday weekend. Together we decide that a lumpectomy is probably a good option for me. He explains to me that he will also need to biopsy the lymph nodes under my arm the day before the lumpectomy to see if the cancer has spread. This involves shooting me up with dye too. On the day of the lumpectomy I will first undergo a needle localizing procedure, called "needle loc" for short, in which he would basically put a wire around the tumor's margins to help him figure out where to start cutting and to make sure, I think, that he works on the right side, not the left.
Friday, July 11, 2014: The surgeon's office calls. They didn't know that I was scheduled for a second-look ultrasound on the left side because the MRI showed some lumps that were most likely benign but that needed a, guess what, second look anyway. Do I want to wait on my lumpectomy in case I have cancer in both breasts after all? I decide to wait. (I will later wish I hadn't because the ultrasound couldn't find any cancer on the right side.)