Re: ONC nurses...please answer....
I received chemo back in 1984....and I am obviously still here and in remission. Overall survival rate (> 5 years) w/all cancers other than basal cell skin (common and very curable, thus not calculated in) ranges from 73-78% depending on the service reporting, the year, etc.
As far as the number of those who got chemo, or if it was for breast ca or their age, after 12 years in oncology I don't bother to keep up with numbers. They are less important in how the pt will do - each pt is very individual as to how the do, with their individual characteristics.
One problem is if you are a nurse in a hospital.....you are going to see a higher death rate. The VAST majority of uncomplicated cases with few comorbidities and that are more treatable are generally managed mostly outpatient and the hospital does not see them, except maybe for early surgical intervention.
What the hospital nurse tends to see are : the poorly insured, caught later, multiple comorbidity, complications from chemo pt. And that is not going to have the better outcomes. Or we see acute leukemics, lymphomas....which require a lot of hospitalization, more complications and poorer prognosis.
These days, I care only for leukemics, which tend to be the sickest of sick and require long hospitalization. Yet, I would not hesitate to get chemo, and have higher than average odds of needing it again, given genetic and health issues.
First, get your breast lump diagnosed. There is absolutely no use buying trouble until it knocks on your door. Trying to get estimates/statistics on breast ca when you have a breast lump but have no clue as to what it consists of, is really a exercise in futility as IF it is cancer, there so many different variables (cell type, genetics, hormone receptor status, age, cardiac status) that effect treatment and curability, it is really quite useless.
An example, Acute Leukemia (AML) in adults is graded from M0 to M7. M3 is considered very curable with rates of of 85-90%, though if not caught quickly it can take you out rapidly and cause major damage. The other forms of AML generally have much lower cure rates ....closer to 20 to 45%. The rates also vary heavily depending on age, comorbidities, cardiac status (the vast majority require treatment with drugs that have significant potential for cardiac toxicity).
GET IT DIAGNOSED!!!!! And go from there. If it is cancer, there will be a number of tests done to determine all of those variants to give your best options.
Try not to worry.....though you will as everyone does and I have multiple times. But it really does not do you much good until there is some hard facts to work with.
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