Cate’s cancer journey

Wearing pink in fight mode in photo session with friend and professional photographer Kay Beaton.

This breast cancer story is not a short story

I believe my cancer story truly began in 1989, the year my sister Carol died from breast cancer at the age of 39. That should have been a BIG wake-up call for me.

But at the time, instead of realizing the possibility that I, too, could get breast cancer and developing my own personal plan to reduce that risk, I chose the much more comforting responses: Denial and Magical Thinking.

Denial because I remember thinking that cancer wouldn’t strike twice in the same family. I felt I had dodged the bullet that Carol took for me and my two surviving sisters. Magical Thinking because I was young and lived a healthy lifestyle. I felt invincible.

I don’t want my story to scare you, but I do hope it serves as a cautionary tale. Cancer can strike anyone at any time. All we can do is put up a strong, first-line of defense to safeguard our health and protect our bodies.

Breast cancer round 1: mastectomy and chemo

In the spring of 2000 and at the same age (39) that my sister was when she died, I was diagnosed with breast cancer. Another bullet to my family, especially my mother. I had a modified radical mastectomy, when some limited lymph node involvement was found, followed by chemotherapy. I received mixed opinions on radiation, so I opted against it. Because my cancer was hormone-receptor-positive, I was put on Tamoxifen. With surgery, chemo, and adjuvant drug therapy, radiation seemed like overkill. Tamoxifen was prescribed for five years, and then I was moved to Arimidex, though I stopped that treatment, mainly because of its side-effects. Yet honestly, magical thinking again influenced my decision. I wanted to be done with breast cancer.

Chemo does make you bald, but only temporarily. Plus now there are ways to minimize hair loss during treatment.
Graffiti for plotting and targeting the radiation beam.

Breast cancer round 2: radiation

Seven years later, in the summer of 2007, I learned that breast cancer was not done with me when I found a small lump in my mastectomy incision. Doctors concluded that some microscopic cells had remained after the mastectomy and chemo that were kept in check by the Tamoxifen. The radiation option I declined in 2000 was now a must-do, so I did, signing up for radiation duty, every day, M-F, for 6 weeks. Since 2007, radiotherapy has become more sophisticated and targeted and often requires fewer sessions and less time.

Radiation side story

In 2009, I experienced another setback. The radiation caused encapsulation (surrounding scar tissue) of my implant. I consulted a reputable plastic surgeon who said surgery on radiated tissue could be a challenge. She said she wouldn’t even consider it until at least a year had passed; I waited longer. She replaced the implant and felt the procedure went well and that my skin was fine, which it was, for several weeks, until the morning I awoke with a red stain on my white t-shirt. The incision wound had split open, otherwise known as dehiscence. I felt no pain. My insides weren’t poking out. My boyfriend drove me to the nearest ER as I held the incision together. I expected to be pumped full of antibiotics and stitched back together again.

Antibiotics, yes; stitching, no. The incision would need to heal on its own. I was devastated. Disfigured and devastated, but the healing process had begun. Then, walking to my car with snow and ice on the ground in a high alpine environment, I slipped. I was able to catch myself, but the action caused another little split. I was to face a fresh new hell—healing aided by a wound vac, a device that decreases air pressure on a wound to help it heal more quickly.

When I finally was able to have reconstructive surgery—emphasis on construction—it required fresh new tissue, donated by my own latissimus dorsi muscle and tunneled from my back to my front. I felt whole once again and life returned to a new, new normal.

Me and my wound vac, inseparable for about a month.
Day in the University of Colorado Hospital, December 2021, as part of a clinical trial onboarding process.

Breast cancer round 3: clinical trials

After all I went through with the wound dehiscence, life was good during the first half of the 2010s, until 2016. I developed a persistent cough, leading to the discovery of fluid in my right lung, which was drained and biopsied. You guessed it, the biopsy revealed cancer cells. A scan revealed cancer in my right lung and a bit in my lower spine, not lung or bone cancer but breast cancer cells that had moved into those areas and staked their claim. I was diagnosed with metastatic (Stage 4) breast cancer. The good news was that treatment options were available. During my time living with MBC (over 5 years now), I have been on in-market drugs and two clinical trials. It feels like a continuous game of whack-a-mole, but so far I’m winning.

20+ years a breast cancer survivor

The idea of cancer recurring or being found at an advanced stage is not something anyone wants to think about, so my advice is: Don’t. Cancers advance only when they’re left undisturbed, and most cancers don’t recur, especially if they’re detected and treated early. Yet do stay vigilant, live healthy, and most importantly, live!