Worried waiting for urgent scan. Thyroid and breast.

Hey all.

 

im 27 years old, 3 kids - youngest being only 6 weeks old.

 

ive had some swelling on my neck, base being a little puffy for two years. I put it down to putting abit of weight on my last pregnancy. 
 

I now have a lump on my chest, just above my breast which is a good two inches wide. It feels bony and hard and I went to my GP who worried the hell out of me referring me for an urgent scan on both my breasts and my thyroid. She said my thyroid was quite swollen and was alarmed that I'd left it that long.

I also had a blood test done yesterday and a chest X-ray, I'm not sure what the X-ray was for but the lady did say she could see a lump which made me worry more. 
 

I can't stop crying at the thought of having cancer and I can't bare the wait. 

  • Hello worriedmomx

    I'm sorry to hear that you're dealing with some health concerns at the moment, particularly at a time when you should be enjoying time with your new baby. 

    We know that waiting for tests and results can be a really difficult time. Hopefully, the GP will have the results of the x-ray next week and they'll be able to give you some reassurance about things. 

    In the meantime, I wonder if you might find it helpful to talk things through with one of our team of nruses when they're back in the office next week. I'm sure they'll be happy to offer any advice, support, and reassurance that they can. If you'd like to chat with them they're available Monday to Friday 9 am to 5 pm on 0808 800 4040. 

    Keep in touch and let us know how you get on. 

    Best wishes, 
    Jenn
    Cancer Chat moderator 

  • I've had thyroid cancer and can reassure you quite a bit on this one. Firstly, thyroid nodules are extremely common and most are benign and secondly, even if it is cancer, and it probably isn't, it's not likely to be anything like what you are thinking. The survival rate of the most common form of thyroid cancer is so high, it sounds ridiculous to even call it a survival rate. Like I got carried away looking at studies and stuff and there was more than one that had at the end "we also wanted to investigate things that led to a higher death rate but we couldn't find enough people who died of it to make any kind of stats."

    It also rarely requires chemotherapy or radiotherapy. They just remove your thyroid and that is basically it. If you are at higher risk of recurrance, they'll do radio-iodine treatment afterwards, which would probably be quite a hassle in your case, as you can't be around small children for a couple of weeks afterwards, so they would have to stay with somebody or you would have to stay with your parents or something, but the treatment itself is just swallowing a tablet.

    I am no expert and am really only guessing here, but the chest x-ray could possibly be related to the thyroid as I believe the lungs are the place it most common spreads to outside the neck, though even this is extremely rare - less than 5% of cases, I think - and it's still unlikely to be life-threatening or anything, at least not at your age. Thyroid cancer is way more serious in older people. In under 50s, there isn't even a stage 3 or 4. Everybody is considered stage 1 or 2, 1 if it is within the neck and 2 if it spreads outside, which as I've said, is pretty rare.

    Of course you don't want any form of cancer or any health risks at all, but my experience was that I had my thyroid and a load of lymph nodes removed, was in hospital for a week, off work for a month (this was largely because I am a teacher and really need to be able to both turn my head easily and raise my voice when necessary; if I'd worked somewhere like an office, I might have gone back a week or two earlier) and then just got on with my life as normal. 

    It's a year and a half down the line now, heading for two years, and the only ongoing issue is that I get some tingling/numbness in my neck occasionally, which is irritating, but no more than that. I had a couple of days after the operation when I didn't feel well, but I am literally talking maybe three or four days. I've been fine otherwise