In the News
As reported by CNN, October 18, 2007.
Olivia Newton-John, Jaclyn Smith On Surviving
Breast Cancer
By Elizabeth Cohen
ATLANTA, Georgia -- Actress Jaclyn Smith will never forget the
day she found out she had breast cancer. And she'll never forget the
lesson she learned in those very first moments of being a cancer
patient.
As her doctor gave her the diagnosis, "I was in a state of
panic," she says. "It was kind of surreal, and you don't really hear
what they're saying."
The lesson she learned that day: "Don't go it alone," she says.
Her husband, Brad Allen, who was with her at the doctor's office,
was better able to focus and ask questions about the best treatment
options.
Smith says she remembers she did manage to ask one question: "I
said, 'Am I going to be here for my children?' He said, '98 percent,
yes.' "
Five years later, Smith is indeed here for her children. She's
one of the 2.4 million women in the United States who've survived
breast cancer, according to the National Cancer Institute. According
to a report out this week from the American Cancer Society, the
death rate from breast cancer went down 2.2 percent per year from
1990 to 2004.
This means more life for these women, and more wisdom from them
about how to survive a cancer diagnosis. (Smith, for example,
travels the country talking to women about breast cancer as a paid
spokeswoman for drug company Eli Lilly). Here, from Smith, singer
Olivia Newton-John, and gynecological oncologist Dr. Carolyn
Runowicz, herself a breast cancer survivor, is advice that can come
only from having been there.
Smith and Newton-John: Don't always trust your instincts
When Smith got home from the doctor's office that day, "I said,
'Take my breast off.' I said, 'Take it off, take it off, take it
off." But she says her husband, who's a physician, showed her
studies that showed that with her particular kind of tumor, it was
best to do a lumpectomy with radiation.
Newton-John also found that her first instincts weren't always
right. When her cancer was diagnosed in 1992, she was scared of
having chemotherapy, and considered forgoing it and using
alternative treatments, such as homeopathy and acupuncture instead.
"Common sense prevailed," said Newton-John. "One of my
girlfriends said, 'Why would you want to risk even that one cancer
cell? You have a child.' " She had chemotherapy after a modified
radical mastectomy, and she says the chemo ended up not being nearly
as bad as she'd feared.
Newton-John: Don't call your friends
When Newton-John got her diagnosis, she sat down to call her
friends and tell them the bad news. Time was of the essence, since
she knew a journalist was about to report erroneously that she was
dying of cancer.
"The second friend I called burst into tears, and I thought, 'I
don't need this,' " she says. "So I had a sister and friends make
the calls. That way I could focus on positive thoughts, instead of
on the illness."
Smith: 'Girlfriends saved my day'
"One of the most important things you can do is remember the
power of girlfriends," Smith says. "Your family is there for you,
but they get emotional. Girlfriends saved my day."
Smith says one friend who'd survived breast cancer was
particularly helpful. "She'd been there and could say, 'Hey, look at
me now. I'm on the other side of it.' "
Sometimes the girlfriends can be new friends. When Newton-John
feared chemo, her oncologist put her in touch with other women who'd
had the same treatment she'd be getting, and they helped her deal
with her fears.
Runowicz: Know your tumor
It's very likely a breast cancer patient will be called upon to
make choices: lumpectomy vs. mastectomy, or choices between
different types of chemotherapy.
"In the old days, we used to be paternalistic, and tell patients
what to do," says Runowicz, the immediate past president of the
American Cancer Society and director of the Neag Cancer Center at
the University of Connecticut. "Now we lay out all the choices for
the patients."
For example, Runowicz said it wasn't at all clear what type of
chemotherapy she should have -- three doctors gave her three
different recommendations.
To make choices, she says, patients need to know what type of
tumor they have and how fast it's growing. She says a tumor that is
estrogen positive, progesterone positive, and HER2 negative is the
"best" kind to have -- tumors with those genetic characteristics
tend to be the easiest to treat. And if it's spread to more than
three lymph nodes, that's a sign you might need more aggressive
treatment.
Runowicz: 'It's never an emergency'
Runowicz tells breast cancer patients they have more time than
they think to plan out a treatment strategy. "The cancer has been
there for years before it's detected," she says. "Emotionally you
feel like you have to do everything tomorrow, and you don't."
Runowicz recommends taking some time to get a second (and maybe
third) opinion on treatment options, especially if the original
doctor was not at a major cancer center.
And when they start chemotherapy, she tells women to give up any
notions of having a normal life. "Chemo is in charge of your life.
You get sick and you get tired," she says. "You just have to say,
'this is a year of my life, and it's going to be a short year and a
long life.' " |