What's NEW in Breast Cancer Treatment in 2023 | Top Breast Cancer Docs Discuss Emerging Research

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  • Опубликовано: 13 янв 2023
  • Kelly Shanahan was an OB-GYN with her own private practice. In 2008, she was diagnosed with breast cancer. Five years later she learned the cancer was back and it is now stage 4.
    Kelly shares how she went from doctor to “professional patient” and how she has been coming to big medical conferences including the San Antonio Breast Cancer Symposium, where thousands of the top minds in medicine and research from around the world to discuss the latest in breast cancer research.
    In this conversation, top breast cancer doctors including Paolo Tarantino, MD with Dana-Farber Cancer Institute and Lola Fayanju, MD with Penn Medicine discuss the big highlights from this year’s San Antonio Breast Cancer Symposium. This year’s buzz was still focused heavily on the new subcategory of patients: HER2-low.
    Full story & transcript → www.thepatientstory.com/medic...
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Комментарии • 71

  • @ivonalatu4363
    @ivonalatu4363 Год назад +3

    Thank you for this great info.

  • @Legittoquit1
    @Legittoquit1 Год назад +46

    Isn’t it sad no new treatment in 30 years but they keep getting donations

    • @kristineportner7782
      @kristineportner7782 Год назад +6

      For sure!

    • @suevasiliauskas6772
      @suevasiliauskas6772 Год назад +11

      Actually, there are new treatments, CDK and aromatase inhibiters, for example, and they are working on more. These drugs have made my life easier and my prognosis better than it would have been 30 years ago. Understanding cancer and developing treatments is hard and it doesn't help to be negative,

    • @Ranchladytmd
      @Ranchladytmd Год назад +14

      @@suevasiliauskas6772 those drugs are killers.

    • @JasonSLee-gl1nf
      @JasonSLee-gl1nf Год назад +6

      @@suevasiliauskas6772 those treatments aren't new

    • @suevasiliauskas6772
      @suevasiliauskas6772 Год назад +10

      @@JasonSLee-gl1nf They have been available for about 10 years and they are keeping me alive. I am quite pleased with that. What is your point anyway?

  • @comradejensen418
    @comradejensen418 Год назад +8

    In UK stuck in the 1980s doesn't matter what your cancer is it's surgeon first. Chop your bits off. Like Whac-o-mole. No holistic service just keep the NHS queue moving, it's horrific as it takes nearly a year to survive the drastic surgery.

  • @bobs1356
    @bobs1356 Год назад +20

    I have doubts about my doctors. I only see a doctor if I have to. Otherwise I stay away from them. I am 73 and doing pretty Damm good for my age.

    • @christophdenner8878
      @christophdenner8878 Год назад

      But this attitude can cost your life. It's not smart to not do preventative tests or scans.

    • @bobs1356
      @bobs1356 Год назад +1

      @@christophdenner8878 I go to the doctor when I have to. I am having a hip replacement the 30th and u have to have EKG Chest XRay and lab I am in good health to have the surgery. Remember I am 73 not young and going through cancer.

    • @BubbleBurster-nv1vl
      @BubbleBurster-nv1vl Год назад

      I do the same. I don't want my life to be filled with doctor appointments when all is well.
      I have nearly zero trust in medical "experts" after seeing how COVID was handled and how the "vaccine", ahem mRNA which is not a "vaccine", was forced on people - one size fits all approach and then wrong protocols were used to the detriment of the people that contracted it. I have yet to meet a person that did not have an extreme adverse reaction to the "vaccine" or have health issues after it, that they didn't have before. People were censored to shut them up. That's not the America I grew up in nor does it speak well for the medical establishment. We didn't take the experimental "vaccine." I'm simply saying what others, out of politeness aren't saying. The doctors I have are good ... and they didn't push the "vaccine" on me, in fact one stated don't take it ... This doctor was able to get an exemption and not take it.

    • @BubbleBurster-nv1vl
      @BubbleBurster-nv1vl Год назад +2

      @@bobs1356 BTW last October I had two hips replaced at the same time. The way to go is the ANTERIOR approach. Don't do the lateral or posterior approach. The anterior approach does not cut muscle or ligaments and you heal faster without pain or complications or restrictions. It's done from the front with a small scare of less than 2 inches. Unfortunately many doctors don't do this approach - 95% still do the old more painful, longer healing - lateral or posterior approach. It takes effort to lean a better approach and they often don't keep up with new approaches. So be choosey on who you go to and what approach they take for a hip replacement. Not all doctors are equal. Check their background - some have had lawsuits and mindbogglingly still get awards from the medical community.
      I had my surgery late in the day but the next day, I was up and walking with a walker. The hospital would not release me until I could go up steps in their rehab room. I did that too I was released later that day. I only had one over night stay.
      Yes, your legs will swell up but I had NO PAIN - just muscle stiffness that over the counter, Tylenol easily handled and I only used that for the first couple of days. They really pushed oxycodone which I had no use for since it was just muscle stiffness. I had no issue with going up steps at home and used a walker to be on the safe side for balance when walking. You don't want to fall!
      I had in home physical therapy for two weeks and then my husband took me to a wonderful physical therapy practice. They were shocked that I could walk and go up and down steps.
      After about 3 weeks from surgery, I ditched the walker and just had a cane handy. I wanted to make sure my balance, since I had both hips done at the same time and I didn't want to risk a fall. I used a cane for about 2 weeks.
      I's very important to do your physical therapy exercises. You would never know I had both hips replaced. They work perfectly. I am sure you will do well. Best wishes for you!
      After my hips were done, I did follow up on the x-rays that showed breast cancer. I'm fine. I had a lumpectomy and I did allow 20 days of radiation.
      My husband twisted my arm on the radiation. I had very little side effects - some pinkness but nothing to complain about. They did a great job and took good care of me. I have cancer elsewhere that is in remission due to immunology treatments.
      A clean diet and good nutrition makes a difference as well as being in good shape and I suspect that is true of you too! Again, I am sure you will do well. Take care.

    • @oligreen1192
      @oligreen1192 9 месяцев назад

      Bless you. Please live forever 😊❤️

  • @wendyfield7708
    @wendyfield7708 Год назад +8

    So what IS the new research and treatments? What about metabolic treatments?

    • @leighwanstead3254
      @leighwanstead3254 7 месяцев назад +1

      I think exercise and keto and no processed food and water only fasting is the way everyone can afford to prevent cancer and no need donation.

  • @rhondagatlin6685
    @rhondagatlin6685 10 месяцев назад +7

    Why not address food toxicity in the US whereas American food processes make separate foods for other countries are not sold in the US. Sick, wrong and should be held accountable.

    • @cjbartoz
      @cjbartoz 10 месяцев назад +1

      An important perspective on relative risks was reported in a 1981 paper published in the Journal of the National Cancer Institute (66:1192-308, June 1981). It presented results of a monumental study of avoidable cancer risks by Richard Doll, Imperial Cancer Research Fund, and Richard Peto, Radcliffe Infirmary, Oxford, UK. Doll and Peto examined the incidence of about 40 types of cancer that were attributable to various environmental and life-style factors. They then estimated the proportion of US cancer deaths in 1978 that could have been avoided if these factors were controlled. They found that the combined effects of environmental factors, food additives, toxic chemicals in the workplace, air and water pollution, and industrial products accounted for 7% of 1978 US cancer deaths. But the combined effects of life-style factors including alcohol, diet, and smoking were related to 70% of US cancer deaths.

  • @rishigaurav1580
    @rishigaurav1580 Год назад +2

    My sister in law 37 yrs old suffering from Metastatic breast carcinoma and her
    ER - negative
    PR - negative
    HER 2/ neu ( ventana ) - negative ( score 0)
    .
    .
    .
    .
    .plz suggest the best hospital and doctor in the world plz

    • @heenah4463
      @heenah4463 7 месяцев назад +1

      Hyderabad Apollo

  • @rowenaagustin9285
    @rowenaagustin9285 3 месяца назад +1

    is it possible to cure breast cancer without undergo operations

  • @23skyoung
    @23skyoung 9 месяцев назад +2

    I was told that after chemotherapy and radiation with a lumpectomy, I would be in remission with continual medication (Anastrazole). Now it's going to be another five years after 5 years of trastuzam. Am I being treated correctly for stage 2 HER 2 Positive breast Cancer.

    • @user-pe8ok7vi2w
      @user-pe8ok7vi2w 8 месяцев назад +1

      Why not try RSO oil and be cancer free in 60 days ?

    • @IreneRattray
      @IreneRattray 8 месяцев назад

      HER 2 positive is not a HP (HORMONE POSITIVE) SO ISN'T TREATED SO YOUR TREATMENT MAY BE WRONG UNLESS THERE ARE ALSO ER cancer cells also. There are now 2023 Targeted treatment and immune treatment for HER2 Positive cancer. My sister in laws treatment for HER2 Pos.

  • @dao-lam
    @dao-lam Год назад +9

    Is it true that 25% Hormone Positive would come back as Stage 4?

  • @AminahKunbi
    @AminahKunbi 6 месяцев назад +1

    Use soursoup fruit

  • @EnestoJames
    @EnestoJames 5 месяцев назад +2

    must say that I
    have enormous respect for you
    Dr kanayo Peterson considering the manner in which my wife receive her complete treatment for
    HIV infection and cancer, thanks for coming to my rescue sir.

  • @silvialogan9226
    @silvialogan9226 5 месяцев назад +2

    Is that doctor cancer free and she still has cancer, but it is kept in control?

  • @thegeminiclub
    @thegeminiclub 8 месяцев назад +1

    Why don’t doctors just do a mastectomy and replace it with an implant later on if the woman wants to have boobs instead of going through chemotherapy or whatever?

  • @nowhere982
    @nowhere982 Месяц назад

    Theyve had over 100 years to get on top of this but now irs 1 in 2 getting cancer. It's also very big business.🤑🤔🤔🤔🤔

  • @MuhammadAhmad-gm2uq
    @MuhammadAhmad-gm2uq Год назад +5

    If you recite the below mentioned prayer 400 or 2000 times all your illnesses will vanish by the permission of Allah (all glory and praise be to Him).
    "O Allah, send prayers, peace and blessings upon our Master Muhammad, the medicine of hearts and their treatment, the soundness of bodies and their cure, the light of vision and its illumination, the spirit of all spirits and the secret of their endurance."

  • @jodysterk8771
    @jodysterk8771 Год назад +3

    I have my mammograms every year I have stage 3 dense breast I went two years and forgot too have one!’ And now I have a focal asymmetry that’s 6cm from the nipple and I have too have a ultrasound and biopsy of the mass it was compared too other films! I have no family history of Breast cancer!

    • @same5952
      @same5952 11 месяцев назад +4

      I never skipped annual mammogram. Was diagnosed with stage IIa exactly a year after receiving clean mammogram. No family history either. Makes me wonder if they missed something a year before.

    • @abd4175
      @abd4175 6 месяцев назад +2

      I had mammogram every 6 months due to dense breast. Within six months I had breast cancer spread to lymph nodes ..if I could go back in time, I would have a preventative mastectomy as dense breasts are high risk...please consider this if you have very dense breast tissue. I have no family history.

    • @NicolasVanhove
      @NicolasVanhove 12 дней назад

      @@abd4175 did you do ultrasound on top of the biyearly mammogram? how are you now?