Expecting possible breast cancer diagnosis / Sore hip

Here for the first time. 38F.

About 2ish weeks ago, I found what felt like a thickened area of my breast. I was at a point in my cycle where boobs do things like that, so I waited until a few days after my period to ring the GP when it hadn't gone down. Saw GP on Friday, he was upfront that there's about a 4cm lump (!!!), and in his experience it's suspicious. He ran me through the list of benign lumps, and why it doesn't seem to be those. Very briefly discussed the kinds of cancer treatment there are. Said he hopes he's wrong, but my overwhelming sense from the appointment was that I'm bracing for bad news. Of course, I'm now waiting for my breast clinic appointment. 

Googling has actually comforted me somewhat: knowing what to expect at the breast clinic and if it is cancer, what that all means, what might happen logistically. What's freaking me out is that I've had on and off hip pain for years (since my teens), and it's acting up now. It's a kind of discomfort where I feel the need to 'pop' my hip a lot, and some low level pain, nothing that's ever bothered me that much though. It's the kind of thing that happens when I exercise either too much or too little, and usually lasts a week or two before going away. 

BUT, I foolishly googled "breast cancer hip pain" and now distractingly anxious that I have metastatic breast cancer, when it hasn't even been confirmed if my newfound lump is cancer or not. 

I know, of course, that no one here can tell me one way or another, but maybe some of you have experience with the waiting for diagnosis, and the fears like this that can haunt. I realise that if it is cancer, I'll have a lot of this kind of waiting, and wonder how on earth I can learn to handle it well, maybe even gracefully? Even if it were some kind of super terminal cancer, I'd feel a bit silly spending the final whatever-amount-of-time I had worrying about the technicalities of exactly how bad a diagnosis could be.

Any advice welcome. Thanks everyone :,) 

  • Hi 

    I'm  awaiting a clinic appointment aswell for a lump I going which I thought was a bone but then the doctor said something about nodules that weren't on other breast , a two week waiting time from seeing my doctor has turned into six weeks before getting an appt which intake is COVID and possibly half the people allowed at a clinic , I've also had a sore back one side on side breast is playing up going into my neck but doctor insists this is stress . I've had problems before and was at the breast clinic just over a year ago in October and had a fibromendinia and they weren't concerned and biopsied.I've found the wait is horrible and your mind goes into overdrive and I have myself diagnosed . This is normal I try and tell myself to be positive but it is so hard . Hopefully you are not waiting too long

  • Thanks for your response [@Tezz]‍ and sharing your story. I'm so sorry to hear your wait extended to 6 weeks - that must have been so difficult! Do you know if we're allowed to bring someone with us to the breast clinic appointment?

     

     

     

  • Hi 

    the letter I got in was to travel alone too your appointment but if you needed to take someone I guess it is if you have disability or something too call them in advance , I hope this helps 

  • Hi [@Iz_rey]‍ 

    Firstly sorry to hear that you were given all that information before you have even seen the breast clinic as the wait for appointemtns drag along in normal circumstances but to have that hanging over your head before you have even seen anyone must be awful..

    How old are you please? I ask as when I was diagnosed it was back in August and I wasn't allowed anyone in with me - I am 46, they do make exceptions but it would have to be for very good reason, but all the nurses are so patient and kind and really put you at ease and they don't rush you.

    When you are fearinf the worse you do find that any other pain whether it be a long time or pain or a new pain your mind goes into overdrive and you start fearing the worse.

    Even though I was diagnosed in August and already had surgery, I am going back to the breast clinic tomorrow, I believe I have a cyst in the same breast as the cancer I have been having pain in my neck and shoulder blade and have rippling at the top of the breast, so of course my mind automatically goes back to "oh ***, the cancer is back" but that is the irrational side of my brain especially when your tired and not sleeping because of worry, when I can put my rational brain on I know that the pain is just going to be referred pain, the rippling is because I have a growth in my breast so of course it is going to have an affect on the skin and it's a cyst!! - or so I hope!

    The point is, our brains our cruel and play on our feelings.

    Until you are seen of course your mind is going to jump all over the place, around the forum you will see lots of people saying the same, the wait is the worse, you just want answers now and they can't give them to you.

    I've not yet found a way to destress over the waiting, I have started painting again though, something to relieve the boredom of sitting around at home more than anything.

    The nice thing about the breast clinic is the all female team, the staying in the one seperate area from thr rest of the hospital and they are equipped to do everything in that area, from seeing a consultant, then going for your mammogram and then into the ultrasound room, all done on the same day in the same place. Then of course it's back to waiting for any biopsy results - in my case it took 6 days to get results but could differ in different areas of the  country or different biopsies needed.

    When they discovered my lump, which I hadn't noticed and the consultant couldn't even feel it, I was at the breast clinic for a scan for a different reason, I had a scan two years previous with no sign of Cancer, so going back and them finding something I kind of got my head round it before I got the results and I looked up what it could mean, I thought it would come back as DCIS, so when I got called in and told cancer I was already prepared and was OK, the breast nurse kept asking if I was OK as I just didn't react to the news, then the oncologist said it was invasive cancer, that got a bit more of a reaction as I assumed DCIS, although of course during surgery they removed invasive and DCIS cancer from me.

    But as scary as it all sounds, they really do help you along the way and give you all the information you need, of course we all hope that you are not going to get the cancer diagnoses.

    I'm sorry that this probably hasn't helped you......... But if you need to chat you can always message me.

  • Hi [@Kay-D]‍ - thank you so much for your very thoughtful reply! And yes, it is helpful - even just chatting about it all is helpful.

    I actually appreciate that the Dr was upfront with me about his suspicions, while I'm trying not to play 'what if', I know an experienced GP like that probably feels a lot of lumps in their career, and it's allowed me and my husband to prepare if there's bad news. I'm 38, so fairly young in respect to all of this. Thanks for letting me know what the appointment is like, sounds like with Covid, I might have to update my husband afterwards how it all went. I'm not afraid of the appointment though. I'm more afraid of not-knowing, and more waiting after the appointment. The in between parts of the process. Which, I guess, is just being afraid of myself really. 

    How did your surgery and recovery go?

    How exciting to take up painting! What are you painting?  

    I have a demanding job, so hopefully once I start work this week I'll effectively have forgotten about my ill-behaving breast until the weekend. I'm totally new to the forum, but I'll try to figure out how to ping you a DM! Would like to make some friends along this unknown way :)

    I really hope your appointment goes well tomorrow, please post an update xx

  • Hi [@Tezz]‍ - thanks for letting me know what was in your letter, that's really helpful :) 

     

  • Hi [@Iz_rey]‍ 

    As an idea, if your husband is not able to go in with you, is to phone him as you go in and have your phone on speakerphone so he can hear what is being said, as it is very hard to relay all the information you are given.

    I paint anything really, my latest was a beach scene with just a few waves crashing on the shore...I have hung it on the wall opposite my bed and I look at it to calm me. 

    The surgery was a wide local excision and node removal, I was very lucky that although it was done through the NHS they partner with our local private hospital so the guiding wire and chemical was put in at the NHS hospital and then I went over to the private hospital for the surgery, so that part was brilliant, I was in contact with a person through the "someone like me" website, they match you with a person who is around the same age and has had the same diagnoses so you can talk to them through email or phone, she helped me to know exactly what to expect, but of course everyones recovery is so different and it took me three weeks to recover after surgery, mainly being able to move and do things for myself, so that was really hard.

    But I moved in with a friend who helped me and looked after me and that really helped, it was nice being looked after for a few weeks. Unfortunately because of lockdown and restrictions I wasn't able to see my daughter, still haven't, she doesn't live in the same area, although she isn't huge amount of miles away it feels like it when you can't see them!

    SO hopefully your husband is ready to be a maid for the next few months, drag it out!!!

    The not knowing and the waiting is the worse part of all of this, as you just can't switch it off, and even after you have the diagnoses regardless of what it is, your brain still doesn't switch off.

     

  • So, given how serious the GP was and the toll of the wait, we've decided to go for a private appointment tomorrow. So I should have at least a mammogram / ultrasound, and maybe a clearer idea of what we're dealing with (or not). Fingers crossed x 

    [@Kay-D]‍ - I hope you appointment went well! 

  • Morning [@Iz_rey]‍ 

     

    Good luck today, hope all goes well for you and you get your long awaited answers.

     

    Mine went OK but I now have unanswered questions...

     

    Let me know how it goes today.

  • Wow, well, I can't beleive it. Went to the private scan, and Dr did physical examination and said defo a lump there, it's irregular (yikes), and he could see why my GP referred me. But on ultrasound .... there's nothing there. Just normal breast tissue. Nothing unusual at all.

    So it's FANTASTIC that there is not big tumour there, though does raise the much-less-urgent question of why some normal breast tissue has decided to swell up all of a sudden.  I was told to keep my NHS appointment and bring the results of today's scan with me, and that it may be a while before I have a definate answer to what's going on, if anything. While the private Dr couldn't give me an all clear - I need a biopsy for that - I'm also not alarmed now.

    I've never been to a private doctor in the UK before, but so glad went for the scan today. We had to dip into our savings for it, but it was 100% worth it. 

    Thanks everyone for the support, I really was prepared for bad news :,)