Why Fear of Recurrence Happens
There are several issues that could impact your fears of cancer recurrence.
Personality, Lifestyle and Social Support
Many factors influence your fears of cancer coming back. These factors may include:
- your personal coping style
- situations impacting your life now (marriage, kids, work, etc.)
- past mental health
- whether you feel you have a support system to fall back on
- whether you have family members or friends who had cancer recurrences
You may struggle to talk about your fears of recurrence with loved ones. Often they want to focus on the fact that you are done with treatment and feeling better. They want to believe you are physically and emotionally well.
Because your loved ones don’t see you going to many medical appointments anymore, they may forget you’re still struggling. Those close to you may not know that you feel your support has disappeared. Share your thoughts and concerns with them.
Your History and Diagnosis
You may worry about recurrence even more if you have a family history of breast cancer or because of the type or aggressiveness of the cancer.
Although it’s never possible to predict the exact risk of the cancer coming back, you may have been given statistics about your risks. If you know you have a breast cancer gene mutation
or you were treated for a more advanced or aggressive
breast cancer, you may be especially frightened. Remember that statistics are based on large populations of people, but you are just one person. The statistics you find won’t always be true for each person.
Triple-Negative Breast Cancer
If you have triple-negative breast cancer and you had surgery or chemotherapy
, you took the best treatments available to you. Triple-negative breast cancers are sensitive to chemotherapy. Still, since there aren’t ongoing treatments available today for triple-negative breast cancer
like there are for hormone receptor
-positive or HER2-positive breast cancers, your fear of recurrence
may be intense.
Ongoing Hormonal or Targeted Therapy
Taking a daily hormonal or targeted therapy may make you feel more secure that you’re doing everything possible to protect your health. But taking them also may remind you of your diagnosis. Plus, these medicines may cause uncomfortable side effects that interfere with the quality of your life.
You should keep taking these medicines according to your doctor’s instructions, but don’t be afraid to talk about the side effects. Your doctor can help you find ways to manage them or may even be able to switch your medicine.
Genetics and Family History
Some factors suggest there may be a genetic link to breast cancer, such as
- having a strong family history of breast cancer or ovarian cancer
- being diagnosed before age 50, or
- being diagnosed with triple-negative breast cancer
before age 60
If you have these or other indicators of genetic risk, you may manage your fears by going through genetic testing and taking steps to protect your health.
If the genetic test results show you have a mutation in certain breast cancer-realted genes, you could worry about the increased risk for developing breast cancer again or developing another type of cancer.
Studies show that people diagnosed with breast cancer and who carry a BRCA gene mutation don’t have a higher risk of the original cancer coming back than those who don’t have the mutation. You do have a higher risk, though, of developing a second primary breast cancer, a new breast cancer unrelated to your first diagnosis
, than women who do not have this type of genetic risk. Your doctor and genetic counselor can help you choose the best ways for you to lower your risk of developing a new cancer.