IBC and age
Different cancers grow at different rates. In many cases (prostate cancer is a good example), the rate of growth is slow enough that it may not be worth treating at all.
Younger people tend to get cancer less, but when they do, it is often much more aggressive. There isn’t a single explanation for this: faster-growing tumours show up earlier, and younger people have stronger immune systems that can take on slower cancer.
I’ve heard a lot of young women with inflammatory breast cancer say that they had trouble getting the tests they needed because they didn’t fit the statistical pattern of a breast cancer patient. A 25-year-old mother of 3 in Georgia is currently trying to get permission from her doctor to get a biopsy to rule out IBC for symptoms she has been experiencing for two months now, and is being refused because she is “too young”. It’s statistically improbable, but considering that both her mother and grandmother were diagnosed with breast cancer in their thirties, it’s hardly impossible. And for a young woman like her, if she does have IBC then starting treatment sooner can make all the difference.
The issue here is education. IBC is not like other kinds of breast cancer. There isn’t always a lump, and to a family doctor who doesn’t know better, it can look like an infection. All too often, it isn’t properly diagnosed until several rounds of antibiotics too late.
The incidence of IBC is increasing, and women and doctors alike need to know about it. Not out of fear - quite the opposite - but because a little knowledge will save many lives.
July 16th, 2007 at 3:39 pm
Absolutely! I wonder how many of us are diagnosed quickly because of luck — or slowly because of the opposite kind of luck. The word must be spread about this horrid cancer and how women and men and their doctors can recognize it more quickly.
I was diagnosed 1 month ago today. I’m 34 with two baby boys, but I am lucky enough to live in Washington, D.C., where I got great treatment quickly. I’ve already had a ton of tests and my first chemotherapy treatment. I’m now trying to talk about this disease in my mommy-circles and anywhere else I can, and I’m so glad that you are too.
I am talking about IBC on my blog this month at http://toddlerplanet.wordpress.com. Please feel free to come over and visit — or let me know if I can contribute here in any way.
So glad you’re here.