How to Understand Bone Scans for Breast Cancer: All You Need to Know

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  • Опубликовано: 7 июн 2024
  • What is a bone scan? What should you expect? In this video, Dr. Jennifer Griggs explains everything you need to know about bone scans.
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    0:00 Introduction
    0:26 What is a Bone Scan?
    2:29 How Are Bone Scans Done?
    4:27 Biopsies and Bone Scans
    7:10 What to Do During the Break?

Комментарии • 61

  • @juanitagee9511
    @juanitagee9511 Год назад +9

    Thank you so much your knowledge is so helpful - and the way you deliver the message is so easy to understand.

    • @yerbba
      @yerbba  Год назад

      Thank you for your kind words and for watching

  • @debtreat7382
    @debtreat7382 4 месяца назад

    I watched this video previously but watched it again just now because my oncologist ordered a bone scan for me on Tuesday. My ALP is 194 and climbing. Your video helped answer some questions. Thank you, Dr. Griggs.

    • @yerbba
      @yerbba  4 месяца назад

      We're glad you found this video to be a helpful resource. Hoping for a good outcome. Thank you for being part of the Yerbba community!

    • @debtreat7382
      @debtreat7382 4 месяца назад +1

      @@yerbba the bone scan showed no metastasis, Praise the Lord!! ALP will be monitored.

  • @silvana11221122
    @silvana11221122 3 месяца назад

    Always helpful thank you

    • @yerbba
      @yerbba  2 месяца назад

      Your support means a lot to us! Thank you for watching.

  • @marciacapell1541
    @marciacapell1541 6 месяцев назад

    You are very helpful! Thankyou so much! 😊❤

    • @yerbba
      @yerbba  6 месяцев назад

      Thank you for watching. We are so glad you found this video helpful.

  • @pattycarol5191
    @pattycarol5191 Год назад +2

    I had a double mastectomy back in September. Today my oncologist made an appointment for me to have a bone scan due to my leg constantly hurts. It's been like that for awhile.

    • @yerbba
      @yerbba  Год назад +1

      Wishing you the best. Sounds like your doctor is good as listening to you.

  • @lanacampbell-moore6686
    @lanacampbell-moore6686 Год назад +2

    Thank you 💕

    • @yerbba
      @yerbba  Год назад +1

      You're welcome, thank you for watching

  • @jodyk4909
    @jodyk4909 5 месяцев назад +1

    You are FANTASTIC! Over the past 2.5 years your videos have helped me SO much. I will be having my first bone scan this week, and I believe I also have arthritis. If areas of my spine light up, I am worried they may biopsy those when they may merely be arthritis. Is a spinal bone biopsy dangerous/invasive? (I'm having the scan because I've been having lots of bone pain, but it might only be from Tamoxifen or psychogenic. I had a left femur xray but nothing showed up despite the pain there.) I feel the bone scan would be prudent given that my case was aggressive and complicated, but is a biopsy the only way they can tell the difference between cancer and arthritis? Thank you in advance.

    • @yerbba
      @yerbba  5 месяцев назад +1

      It is possible that the bone scan could be sufficiently clearly consistent with metastases, but a biopsy is generally advised to confirm the tumor characteristics (ER, PR, and HER2) if possible. Bone biopsies are generally very very safe albeit uncomfortable and, in some people, painful. Nonetheless, being certain that what is seen on bone scan is indeed cancer is important in many cases. Thank you for being part of the Yerbba community!

    • @jodyk4909
      @jodyk4909 5 месяцев назад

      ​@@yerbba Thank you so very much. Again, your videos are excellent.

  • @Aduhh33165
    @Aduhh33165 Год назад

    Tq doc Jen...👍

    • @yerbba
      @yerbba  Год назад

      Always a pleasure!

  • @joannacebu
    @joannacebu Год назад +3

    Thank you for your explanation. Is there a case when person with stage 1 is still ordered for a bone scan?

    • @yerbba
      @yerbba  Год назад +1

      A bone scan would be helpful if someone is having symptoms that are unclear in origin. Otherwise, people with Stage I breast cancer do not need to have bone scans.

  • @shoaibrahman2515
    @shoaibrahman2515 6 месяцев назад +1

    Hello. This is a very important question I would like to ask you. My mum went through surgery and now is on chemotherapy (AC T). It's Stage 2 breast cancer. But her doctor told her to get a bone scan while she was on chemo. The bone scan results showed that increased radiotracer concentrations are seen in right 9th rib posteriorly and d7 vertebra, and lastly the impressions were osteoblastic activity in those mentioned areas, suggesting skeletal metastases, need radiological correlation.
    Does the above statements mean that her staging will change now? and does it indicate that the cancer has metastasized? Would love a reply. Thanks in advance.

    • @yerbba
      @yerbba  5 месяцев назад

      Thanks for writing. If the scans are consistent with metastases, this would be a Stage IV (4) cancer. It is likely that additional tests, including a biopsy, may be offered. Wishing you and your mother the best.

  • @shelley9304
    @shelley9304 Год назад +7

    Hello, I’m stage 3 breast cancer patient. I had mastectomy, radiation and done with chemo on March 2022.
    I didn’t have bone scan after the chemo treat. How does the doctor know if the cancer is gone or the treatment is working or not? Shouldn’t I have to get another bone scan?

    • @yerbba
      @yerbba  Год назад +4

      Great question. Bone scans are important before starting chemotherapy to determine whether or not the cancer has already spread before giving chemotherapy. If the bone scan shows that the cancer was in the bone, but purpose of treatment would have been to control symptoms and extend life. If the bone scan was negative, that means that the goal of treatment was cure. Follow up tests are not useful after treatment unless someone has symptoms. Scans cannot confirm that there is no cancer. They can just confirm that there is no obvious evidence of cancer that would change the goals of care. I hope that makes sense!

    • @shelley9304
      @shelley9304 Год назад

      @@yerbba
      Thank you so much for your kind explanation. It makes sense

  • @Noor_r
    @Noor_r Год назад +2

    Hi, my mom has completed her chemotherapy and targeted therapy for stage 2 breast cancer two months ago. We had her routine test done where the calcium came a bit high around 11.02 mg/dl and the vitamin D was low at 16.85 ng/ml, the doctor has asked us to get a bone scan done though she said its mostly due to Vitamin D deficiency. She was also having calcium supplements. Can this indicate metastasis?

    • @yerbba
      @yerbba  Год назад +1

      While metastases could explain the high calcium, there are other common sources of high calcium, such as hyperparathyroidism. It is worth getting a thorough workup if the bone scan is negative. Thanks for the question.

  • @ranjha920
    @ranjha920 Год назад +1

    Maam! my mom has stage 1 breast cancer.she is also struggling from joints issue. So should we go for bone scan or only follow cancer treatment?

    • @yerbba
      @yerbba  Год назад +1

      Having joint pains does not require a bone scan. Such a good question, and thank you for writing.

  • @cindyscharr457
    @cindyscharr457 10 месяцев назад +1

    If a patient with MBC gets a CAT scan every four months and has had PET scans would a DEXA scan be of any benefit? Is it only for osteoporosis? What machine does bone scans? Is it an x-ray machine? Are the pictures of the skeleton like a DEXA scan? Thank you for educating us.

    • @yerbba
      @yerbba  9 месяцев назад

      It can be so confusing to have so many scans. A DEXA scan is only for assessing body composition, including bone mass. It does not help determine where cancer is in the bone (if at all). Bone scans require an injection of a radioisotope and then pictures 3 hours later. If the other scans are informative, not everyone needs a bone scan.

    • @himanisabharwal9366
      @himanisabharwal9366 2 месяца назад

      "metabolic activity involving intramedullary spine"
      What does this mean?

  • @Smath01
    @Smath01 6 месяцев назад

    Hello doctor, is bone scan needed after whole body FDG PET-CT scan which shows negative metastasis? Thank you

    • @yerbba
      @yerbba  6 месяцев назад +1

      In general, a PET-CT should be sufficient. If someone has worrisome symptoms, a bone scan may be part of the evaluation.

    • @Smath01
      @Smath01 5 месяцев назад

      Thank you doctor for the reply.

  • @wendyfield7708
    @wendyfield7708 3 месяца назад

    I don’t think this is done much by the NHS in the UK? Not for breast cancer.

    • @yerbba
      @yerbba  3 месяца назад

      Bone scans are often overused. For example, they should not be done in people with Stage 0, Stage I, or Stage II breast cancer. Even in Stage III disease, the benefit is not entirely clear.

  • @NehaKumari-hr6yj
    @NehaKumari-hr6yj 6 месяцев назад

    Hi, please my mother suffering from bone mets,is it curable??

    • @yerbba
      @yerbba  5 месяцев назад

      Thank you for writing. Your mother is fortunate to have you. At this point in medical science, we generally do not consider metastatic disease to be curable. Many people can live for many years with an excellent quality of life, however. Approximately 1 in 20 people live for 20 years. This is more often the case in people who are younger (under 50), have estrogen and progesterone receptor positive disease, and who have only bone metastases.

  • @georginapuentes9447
    @georginapuentes9447 4 месяца назад

    My mom is on chemo now for stage 1 breast cancer, she got a bone scan and it shows a focal increased activity within the left proximal femur in the region of the lesser trochanter. What could that be? I’m so scared she don’t feel any pain in that area

    • @yerbba
      @yerbba  4 месяца назад

      Thanks for writing. Of course this is scary. When scans are done in people with Stage I (one) cancer with no symptoms, the vast majority of the time, these are what are called "incidental findings" and are not due to cancer. Wishing you both the best.

  • @anusayakudhekar1254
    @anusayakudhekar1254 Год назад +2

    Hi mam my mother had completed her chemotherapy for breast cancer a month ago and now she is getting swelling on her face and eyes is this late side effects of chemotherapy or what please reply??

    • @yerbba
      @yerbba  Год назад +1

      Thanks for writing. Swelling around the eyes and of the face is not a common side effect of chemotherapy, either early or late. I recommend reaching out to your mother's medical team. She's fortunate to have you.

    • @anusayakudhekar1254
      @anusayakudhekar1254 Год назад +1

      @@yerbba thank you so much for reply

  • @theresa94010
    @theresa94010 8 месяцев назад +1

    How much radiation is emitted from a bone scan compared with a MRI? minimal not to be concerned?

    • @yerbba
      @yerbba  7 месяцев назад

      Correct, minimal exposure. Great question.

  • @Harsh-hd3rm
    @Harsh-hd3rm 10 месяцев назад +1

    Hi, Thank you for the detailed video. My mother completed her Chemotherapy for Stage 2 Triple Negative Breast Cancer 2 years ago.
    She has been complaining intermittent pain in the body for about a month now. Previously the pain used to trigger only in the evening but now it's bit more severe and persistent. She feels the pain in the bones.
    As she already has arthritis in legs - Joint pain, doctor suspected that it might be Rheumatoid arthritis and suggested to get a few tests done that included RA Factor, Alkaline Phosphatase, TSH, Iron, Ferritin and Anti-CCP. All of them came negative.
    So doctor has suggested to get the Bone scan done. I'm worried and confused.
    What are your thoughts?
    Do you think bone scan would be helpful? Or we should go for some other scan? Maybe PET or MRI? Any insights from you will greatly help to make a decision.

    • @yerbba
      @yerbba  10 месяцев назад

      In someone with pain that seems to be located in the bones, a bone scan is considered a great start. If the results are confusing and it's not possible to tell if there is cancer in the bone, another test, such as an MRI of a specific area or a PET scan may be needed.

    • @Harsh-hd3rm
      @Harsh-hd3rm 10 месяцев назад

      @@yerbba Thank you for your response. So If I understand it correctly, bone scan will highlight all the areas with increased activity. i.e. hotspots.
      If we find such spots then MRI or PET scan of those areas would be required to confirm the findings. Is my understanding correct? Is bone scan only used for highlighting such areas? Or it can tell something in a definite manner?

  • @josektom1468
    @josektom1468 Год назад +1

    Do we require a bone scan if you have already done a pet scan?

    • @yerbba
      @yerbba  Год назад +1

      Great question. PET scans are quite thorough, and a bone scan will add little if anything

  • @brianmurray9405
    @brianmurray9405 2 месяца назад +1

    Cancer that spreads from Brest to Bone is unfortunately common but my understanding is the best place for it to spread to is bone
    It’s not curable but treatment options exist and continue to improve side effects can be woeful but what do you rather constant bone pain walking or dealing with side effects which can come and go
    Talk to your care team listen to your oncologist many live long after mbc diagnosis and unfortunately some don’t they do take your overall health picture into consideration also
    Letrozole is usually drug used for mbc and perhaps tamoxifen after bc treatment being kept under surveillance truth is after bc your always on alert for a return recurrence or mets it sucks !
    Don’t give up hope there is new trends emerging in the cancer world to potentially eradicate this disease it may be years away yet and it’s a complex illness that no size fits all the unfortunate reality is without treatment you would pass away so if dealing with mbc the best way of looking at it is like chronic illness ❤ stay strong

    • @yerbba
      @yerbba  Месяц назад

      Thanks for writing. Yes, everyone is different. There are many treatments for cancer that has spread to the bone. In general, the life expectancy is longer in people whose metastatic disease is confined to the bone. We do not, however, want people to feel like they have a "best" metastatic cancer or for others to feel they have a "worst" metastatic cancer. Like you say, everyone has their own journey.

  • @MonicaLovesDogs
    @MonicaLovesDogs Год назад

    Is a bone scan an MRI?

    • @yerbba
      @yerbba  11 месяцев назад +1

      Great question. A bone scan is different from an MRI. A bone scan looks only at bone turnover. An MRI can see shapes and sizes of all structures, normal and abnormal, in the area that is scanned.

    • @Mimoza262
      @Mimoza262 5 месяцев назад

      It's claustrophobic like an mri. even though it's open on the sides, It is really close to your face. I had a whole body one and panicked at the end

  • @varaprasad2110
    @varaprasad2110 Год назад +1

    I am from India
    I got a doubt
    Is Bone Scaning is required during follow ups ( Even without any symptoms)
    Regards
    Vara Prasad

    • @yerbba
      @yerbba  Год назад

      We do not recommend bone scans after treatment is completed. If you have symptoms, we would consider a bone scan if the symptoms suggest that bone involvement with cancer may be present.