Though breast cancer awareness month just ended, the message of how important awareness and early detection are continues. Dawn Dillon, who was diagnosed with Stage IIB breast cancer earlier this year wants women to know that a mammogram isn’t always enough to pick up on breast cancer.
Dillon’s story began many years ago,
with an extensive family history of breast cancer that goes back five
generations. Knowing this history made her proactive in her approach, and she
had a baseline mammogram around the time she turned 35. At that time, she was
told that she had fibrous, dense tissue and should have annual mammograms.
She began those annual mammograms when
she was 40. That year, something showed up on the mammogram. After an
ultrasound, two biopsies and a lumpectomy from her left breast, Dillon said she
thought “It’s going to come back as cancer. I was ready for it. But it came
back benign.” Following that experience,
Dillon had mammograms every six months for several years, and was then released
to annual exams again.
This year at her annual mammogram,
something suspicious once again showed up – this time in both breasts. Dillon
had both breasts biopsied, and though everything was fine on the right, the
left breast came back as cancerous. She received the diagnosis the day after
her 48th birthday.
Even with the long history, Dillon is
the youngest in her family to have been diagnosed with breast cancer. Because
she had been having annual mammograms, she anticipated that she would be in the
very early stages. Instead it was discovered that she had five slow growing
tumors, and cancer was also found in one lymph node out of the eight tested. Doctors
told Dillon that it is likely the cancer had been there for several years.
After discussing her family history,
Dillon and her doctor decided to proceed with a double mastectomy even though
no cancer had been found on the right side. After the surgery Dillon was told
the margins weren’t clear. This means, she said, that some cancer was left
behind. Dillon sought out additional opinions from the Dana Farber Cancer Institute
and Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center, but the doctors didn’t all agree on
what should happen next. “Everybody had a different opinion, which kind of
makes my story a little interesting,” said Dillon.
Some felt that she should have a second
surgery, chemotherapy and radiation. Others thought that radiation treatment
and hormone therapy would be enough. In the end, it was up to Dillon to make
the decision. “I felt more comfortable if they got the rest of the cancer out,”
she said, and on August 12th she went in for her second surgery on
the left breast.
After healing from her second surgery, Dillon
had another decision to make, and she opted to have the chemotherapy. “I’ll
never know whether chemo did the trick or didn’t. You just don’t know. You
really have to be in charge of what you feel most comfortable doing,” she said.
Next steps for Dillon include hormone
treatment to shut down the estrogen which feeds the cancer, and then radiation
treatments. The whole experience has taught Dillon some important lessons.
“It’s been a learning experience that
the medical field is not a perfect science. Doctors are going to have different
opinions and you basically have to weigh all of the information and do what you
feel most comfortable with,” she said.
One of the hardest things throughout her
illness, said Dillon, was telling her three children about the diagnosis, and
knowing that her mother had to watch her go through treatments in the same building
where her husband had been treated for non-Hodgkins Lymphoma. “I was worried
about all these things when I was told. I was worried how it would affect the
people that I love,” she said.
Everyone handled the news well, she
said, and she has had wonderful support from her family, her boyfriend Larry,
and other friends. She has also handled treatments well. “I was told by the doctor
that I was doing phenomenally well with the whole treatment. You worry about
your immune system,” she said. But she has not had other health issues, and
maintains a positive attitude which helped her get through the treatments, she
said.
Dillon said it’s important for women who
have been diagnosed to get second opinions and keep an open mind. Though she’s
been told that after the hormone treatment she’ll need to take a certain medication
for several years, she said she will do research to see if there are other
alternatives. She believes that exercise, drinking lots of water and eating the
right foods are all important. “There may be healthy substitutes instead of
taking prescription medications all the time, so I’m definitely going to keep
my mind open to that,” she said.
Dillon stresses that it’s important for
women to be aware that mammograms aren’t always the best option for breast
cancer detection. “If you have family history, ask about an ultrasound or MRI. It
doesn’t hurt to ask,” she said.
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