It just occurred to me that Breast Cancer Awareness Month is fast approaching, not the least of which because I did a Komen event last night as one of the breast cancer experts. I sometimes wonder if I suffer from a bit of the imposter syndrome, because sixteen years on I still sometimes can’t believe that I’m considered some sort of “expert” in breast cancer, much less anything else. It’s not that different than when, as a freshly minted faculty member, I was sent out to our cancer center’s affiliates to attend their tumor boards as the “expert” from the mother ship.
In any case, in my blogging world, Breast Cancer Awareness month not infrequently provokes a sense of trepidation. This is not because I have any objection to the event; I actually quite appreciate the attention on the disease to whose eradication I’ve devoted my professional career. Rather, it’s because every year as October rolls around I can count on an unrelenting rush of stories about breast cancer that are either full of misinformation or promote downright quackery. Particularly irritating to me are what I like to call alternative breast cancer cure testimonials. Indeed, one of the very earliest posts I ever wrote for this blog was about just that, understanding the nature of cancer cure testimonials, using—of course—breast cancer cure testimonials as examples. Over the last decade I’ve written more variations on these discussions than I care to remember, and unfortunately, even after all that time, they just keep coming and coming. As repetitive as these stories can sometimes become, I feel obligated to take them on from time to time because to me it’s important to explain and illustrate why they do not demonstrate that whatever quackery the patient chose instead of effective chemotherapy is not responsible for the patient’s good fortune of still being alive. Also, when such women die, as many of them ultimately do, I point it out when I learn of it not out of a desire to gloat, but rather out of profound sadness and a desire to warn others. Kim Tinkham is perhaps the best example of this, a sad tale of a woman who chose Robert O. Young’s quackery over effective medicine and ultimately died of her breast cancer.
So here comes another one:
A SUNSHINE Coast mum who decided to fight breast cancer without drugs is clear of the disease and about to go undergo reconstructive surgery.
Corissa Macklin-Rice underwent a double mastectomy in March last year after being diagnosed with stage three ductal carcinoma which had spread into her lymph nodes.
She chose not to have chemotherapy, radiation or the oestrogen blocker Tamoxifen after watching her mother’s battle with breast cancer which ended with her death in 2011
Ms Macklin-Rice regards the conventional drugs as “poison” and chose to fight cancer by adopting an organic vegan diet and making lifestyle changes.
The Bli Bli 43-year-old said she was now clear of cancer.
I vaguely remember hearing about this case last year but for whatever reason didn’t blog about it at the time. Like Jessica Ainscough, she appears to have chosen a variant of the quackery known as the Gerson protocol:
“I have anywhere up to 13 juices and five coffee enemas per day. I only eat organic food, use no chemicals and gave up my hairdressing job due to the chemical exposure.”
While her decision has received strong criticism from loved ones and friends, Ms Macklin-Rice said she stood by it, feeling happier and healthier than she had in years.
“My friend told me one night that she hated me for wanting to die,” she said.
“I said to her we all choose which way we will go. I believe I am choosing life.”
Ms Macklin-Rice said she had heavily researched all options before making her decision.
“I personally believe that the body has the capability to heal from anything and everything naturally. It does frighten people not to have a quick cure,” she said.
Thirteen juices and five coffee enemas per day? Yes, that’s pretty much exactly what the Gerson protocol requires. Also, the Gerson protocol requires supplements. It’s also hard here not to point out that it’s impossible to “use no chemicals.” If you eat and drink, you are eating and drinking chemicals. If you bathe, you are bathing in a chemical (water, or, as snarky skeptics like to call it, dihydrogen monoxide), if you breathe, you are breathing chemicals. Air is, after all, a mixture of primarily nitrogen and oxygen, with much lower amounts of carbon dioxide and other chemicals. Yes, it’s a pet peeve of mine.
We also seem ideas that come to the fore time and time again in these stories and explain the human reaction to embrace woo rather than science-based medicine. Macklin-Rice saw her mother die of breast cancer four years ago. I get it. I watched my mother-in-law slowly die of breast cancer six years ago, although she never received chemotherapy after her metastatic disease was diagnosed because it was so advanced that even the most aggressive oncologist was not enthusiastic about more chemotherapy. It’s easy to see how Macklin-Rice might not be able to separate the effects of her mother’s growing tumor from effects of chemotherapy and therefore blame chemotherapy for her mother’s death. It’s a very human reaction, but it’s one that drives people from indicated chemotherapy time and time again.
I realize that newspapers see women like Macklin-Rice and instead of seeing a woman being misled by quackery see a brave woman forging her own way, a human interest story, with a dash of controversy thrown in, but I detest how reporters tend to glorify such stories. I also detest how they misunderstand the nature of breast cancer treatment. Why? Well, contrary to what Macklin-Rice seems to think, it’s not the alternative medicine quackery (but I repeat myself) that has kept her alive. It was the surgery. She had maximal surgery, a double mastectomy, plus removal of her lymph nodes. What does that mean?
As is usually the case with testimonials, I tried to find out as much as I could about Macklin-Rice’s cancer. Reports are rather vague. We know she had involvement of her lymph nodes, but we do not know how many. We know that she had a palpable lump large enough that a mastectomy appeared to be the best treatment. That means she had at least a stage II, probably stage IIB cancer, although she might have had a stage III cancer. We do know that it’s grade 3. We do not know if her tumor is estrogen receptor positive, which makes a difference. If we go to Adjuvant! Online, we can nonetheless determine what the actual effect of Macklin-Rice’s choice will be if we make some reasonable assumptions. For instance, for purposes of this exercise I will assume her tumor is 3-5 cm in size and that she has 1-3 positive lymph nodes. For purposes of this exercise, I assume that Macklin-Rice is in perfect health, which seems reasonable. There is, of course, a lot of wiggle room and uncertainty give the vagueness of the information we have (for instance, if her tumor was negative for estrogen receptor, Macklin-Rice would not receive Tamoxifen), but this gives a ballpark figure:
So there you see it. Making these assumptions, with just surgery alone, Macklin-Rice could have expected a 51% chance of being alive in ten years. Not great odds. Adding chemotherapy alone would increase her odds by around 22%. So basically, by forgoing chemotherapy, she decreased her odds of being alive in ten years by around 30%. That is typical. Chemotherapy in general increases the odds of long term survival by around 30% in breast cancer. Of course, her odds of being alive in ten years remain better than 50-50 even with just surgery. Of course, if her cancer was worse than my assumptions, the numbers get worse, but the potential benefit of chemotherapy becomes greater on an absolute basis.
Yet her story is basically an “I’m still standing” story, a triumph that she is still alive more than a year later. It’s not surprising that Macklin-Rice is alive a year later; it would be, while not surprising, unusual if she were not alive a year after her surgery. This gives exactly the wrong message, namely that her choice of quackery was the right one and that she is doing well.
She treated a recurrence of the disease – some lumps in scar tissue – in May this year using a home-made black salve.
This is a dire sign. Local recurrences in the skin of the mastectomy flap is a poor prognostic sign; where there is one recurrence, there will usually be more. The end result can be horrific, en cuirasse disease, which can result in great pain due to huge foul, fungating, ulcerating swaths of chest wall. It’s also why radiation is often recommended after mastectomy for a more locally advanced breast cancer—to prevent this very occurence. But what about getting rid of the local recurrence with black salve? I’ve written about black salve many times before; it’s basically caustic fluid. It burns. So, instead of a clean excision of a chest wall recurrence, Macklin-Rice chose a much messier, nastier path, burning the lumps out and leaving ugly eschars. As I’ve put it before, black salve is cutting and burning naturally and without fine control. Sure, it can work for small skin lesions, but at what cost? I also have to wonder about the plastic surgeon willing to do Macklin-Rice’s reconstruction under these conditions. Yes, plastic surgeons hate chest-wall radiation because it makes reconstruction harder and the cosmetic results less satisfying, but local recurrences in their reconstruction are an even worse outcome.
Here’s what truly infuriates me about alternative medicine approaches:
Ms Macklin-Rice put the recurrence down to becoming slack with her diet, sneaking “party foods” and alcohol.
“I had got a little complacent with food so I had to get strict again,” she said.
On the one hand, there is the idea of “empowerment,” where the patient takes charge of her disease and is responsible for its outcome through radical diets, coffee enemas, or whatever. There is a dark side to “empowerment,” however. It’s a dark side discussed many times here. That’s the idea that, if a cancer patient isn’t doing well, if her disease recurs, it’s her fault for not having adhered to the regimen of woo tightly enough, for having failed it somehow. In other words, the methods never fail; the patient does. If the cancer recurs, it’s the patient’s fault. So Macklin-Rice believes (apparently) that she must always adhere to a rigid vegan diet and do her Gerson therapy religiously (word choice intentional) for the rest of her life; or her cancer will return and it will have been her fault.
I don’t call that “empowerment.” I call that blaming the patient.
Knowing what I know about Macklin-Rice, I am not optimistic about her chances of long-term survival. I cited a roughly 50-50 chance of her living ten years based on Adjuvant! Online and optimistic assumptions, but if she has had chest wall recurrences those assumptions are far too optimistic. Macklin-Rice could conceivably beat the odds and do well indefinitely, and I hope that she does. I wouldn’t bet money on it, though.
from ScienceBlogs http://ift.tt/1F4dBhR
It just occurred to me that Breast Cancer Awareness Month is fast approaching, not the least of which because I did a Komen event last night as one of the breast cancer experts. I sometimes wonder if I suffer from a bit of the imposter syndrome, because sixteen years on I still sometimes can’t believe that I’m considered some sort of “expert” in breast cancer, much less anything else. It’s not that different than when, as a freshly minted faculty member, I was sent out to our cancer center’s affiliates to attend their tumor boards as the “expert” from the mother ship.
In any case, in my blogging world, Breast Cancer Awareness month not infrequently provokes a sense of trepidation. This is not because I have any objection to the event; I actually quite appreciate the attention on the disease to whose eradication I’ve devoted my professional career. Rather, it’s because every year as October rolls around I can count on an unrelenting rush of stories about breast cancer that are either full of misinformation or promote downright quackery. Particularly irritating to me are what I like to call alternative breast cancer cure testimonials. Indeed, one of the very earliest posts I ever wrote for this blog was about just that, understanding the nature of cancer cure testimonials, using—of course—breast cancer cure testimonials as examples. Over the last decade I’ve written more variations on these discussions than I care to remember, and unfortunately, even after all that time, they just keep coming and coming. As repetitive as these stories can sometimes become, I feel obligated to take them on from time to time because to me it’s important to explain and illustrate why they do not demonstrate that whatever quackery the patient chose instead of effective chemotherapy is not responsible for the patient’s good fortune of still being alive. Also, when such women die, as many of them ultimately do, I point it out when I learn of it not out of a desire to gloat, but rather out of profound sadness and a desire to warn others. Kim Tinkham is perhaps the best example of this, a sad tale of a woman who chose Robert O. Young’s quackery over effective medicine and ultimately died of her breast cancer.
So here comes another one:
A SUNSHINE Coast mum who decided to fight breast cancer without drugs is clear of the disease and about to go undergo reconstructive surgery.
Corissa Macklin-Rice underwent a double mastectomy in March last year after being diagnosed with stage three ductal carcinoma which had spread into her lymph nodes.
She chose not to have chemotherapy, radiation or the oestrogen blocker Tamoxifen after watching her mother’s battle with breast cancer which ended with her death in 2011
Ms Macklin-Rice regards the conventional drugs as “poison” and chose to fight cancer by adopting an organic vegan diet and making lifestyle changes.
The Bli Bli 43-year-old said she was now clear of cancer.
I vaguely remember hearing about this case last year but for whatever reason didn’t blog about it at the time. Like Jessica Ainscough, she appears to have chosen a variant of the quackery known as the Gerson protocol:
“I have anywhere up to 13 juices and five coffee enemas per day. I only eat organic food, use no chemicals and gave up my hairdressing job due to the chemical exposure.”
While her decision has received strong criticism from loved ones and friends, Ms Macklin-Rice said she stood by it, feeling happier and healthier than she had in years.
“My friend told me one night that she hated me for wanting to die,” she said.
“I said to her we all choose which way we will go. I believe I am choosing life.”
Ms Macklin-Rice said she had heavily researched all options before making her decision.
“I personally believe that the body has the capability to heal from anything and everything naturally. It does frighten people not to have a quick cure,” she said.
Thirteen juices and five coffee enemas per day? Yes, that’s pretty much exactly what the Gerson protocol requires. Also, the Gerson protocol requires supplements. It’s also hard here not to point out that it’s impossible to “use no chemicals.” If you eat and drink, you are eating and drinking chemicals. If you bathe, you are bathing in a chemical (water, or, as snarky skeptics like to call it, dihydrogen monoxide), if you breathe, you are breathing chemicals. Air is, after all, a mixture of primarily nitrogen and oxygen, with much lower amounts of carbon dioxide and other chemicals. Yes, it’s a pet peeve of mine.
We also seem ideas that come to the fore time and time again in these stories and explain the human reaction to embrace woo rather than science-based medicine. Macklin-Rice saw her mother die of breast cancer four years ago. I get it. I watched my mother-in-law slowly die of breast cancer six years ago, although she never received chemotherapy after her metastatic disease was diagnosed because it was so advanced that even the most aggressive oncologist was not enthusiastic about more chemotherapy. It’s easy to see how Macklin-Rice might not be able to separate the effects of her mother’s growing tumor from effects of chemotherapy and therefore blame chemotherapy for her mother’s death. It’s a very human reaction, but it’s one that drives people from indicated chemotherapy time and time again.
I realize that newspapers see women like Macklin-Rice and instead of seeing a woman being misled by quackery see a brave woman forging her own way, a human interest story, with a dash of controversy thrown in, but I detest how reporters tend to glorify such stories. I also detest how they misunderstand the nature of breast cancer treatment. Why? Well, contrary to what Macklin-Rice seems to think, it’s not the alternative medicine quackery (but I repeat myself) that has kept her alive. It was the surgery. She had maximal surgery, a double mastectomy, plus removal of her lymph nodes. What does that mean?
As is usually the case with testimonials, I tried to find out as much as I could about Macklin-Rice’s cancer. Reports are rather vague. We know she had involvement of her lymph nodes, but we do not know how many. We know that she had a palpable lump large enough that a mastectomy appeared to be the best treatment. That means she had at least a stage II, probably stage IIB cancer, although she might have had a stage III cancer. We do know that it’s grade 3. We do not know if her tumor is estrogen receptor positive, which makes a difference. If we go to Adjuvant! Online, we can nonetheless determine what the actual effect of Macklin-Rice’s choice will be if we make some reasonable assumptions. For instance, for purposes of this exercise I will assume her tumor is 3-5 cm in size and that she has 1-3 positive lymph nodes. For purposes of this exercise, I assume that Macklin-Rice is in perfect health, which seems reasonable. There is, of course, a lot of wiggle room and uncertainty give the vagueness of the information we have (for instance, if her tumor was negative for estrogen receptor, Macklin-Rice would not receive Tamoxifen), but this gives a ballpark figure:
So there you see it. Making these assumptions, with just surgery alone, Macklin-Rice could have expected a 51% chance of being alive in ten years. Not great odds. Adding chemotherapy alone would increase her odds by around 22%. So basically, by forgoing chemotherapy, she decreased her odds of being alive in ten years by around 30%. That is typical. Chemotherapy in general increases the odds of long term survival by around 30% in breast cancer. Of course, her odds of being alive in ten years remain better than 50-50 even with just surgery. Of course, if her cancer was worse than my assumptions, the numbers get worse, but the potential benefit of chemotherapy becomes greater on an absolute basis.
Yet her story is basically an “I’m still standing” story, a triumph that she is still alive more than a year later. It’s not surprising that Macklin-Rice is alive a year later; it would be, while not surprising, unusual if she were not alive a year after her surgery. This gives exactly the wrong message, namely that her choice of quackery was the right one and that she is doing well.
She treated a recurrence of the disease – some lumps in scar tissue – in May this year using a home-made black salve.
This is a dire sign. Local recurrences in the skin of the mastectomy flap is a poor prognostic sign; where there is one recurrence, there will usually be more. The end result can be horrific, en cuirasse disease, which can result in great pain due to huge foul, fungating, ulcerating swaths of chest wall. It’s also why radiation is often recommended after mastectomy for a more locally advanced breast cancer—to prevent this very occurence. But what about getting rid of the local recurrence with black salve? I’ve written about black salve many times before; it’s basically caustic fluid. It burns. So, instead of a clean excision of a chest wall recurrence, Macklin-Rice chose a much messier, nastier path, burning the lumps out and leaving ugly eschars. As I’ve put it before, black salve is cutting and burning naturally and without fine control. Sure, it can work for small skin lesions, but at what cost? I also have to wonder about the plastic surgeon willing to do Macklin-Rice’s reconstruction under these conditions. Yes, plastic surgeons hate chest-wall radiation because it makes reconstruction harder and the cosmetic results less satisfying, but local recurrences in their reconstruction are an even worse outcome.
Here’s what truly infuriates me about alternative medicine approaches:
Ms Macklin-Rice put the recurrence down to becoming slack with her diet, sneaking “party foods” and alcohol.
“I had got a little complacent with food so I had to get strict again,” she said.
On the one hand, there is the idea of “empowerment,” where the patient takes charge of her disease and is responsible for its outcome through radical diets, coffee enemas, or whatever. There is a dark side to “empowerment,” however. It’s a dark side discussed many times here. That’s the idea that, if a cancer patient isn’t doing well, if her disease recurs, it’s her fault for not having adhered to the regimen of woo tightly enough, for having failed it somehow. In other words, the methods never fail; the patient does. If the cancer recurs, it’s the patient’s fault. So Macklin-Rice believes (apparently) that she must always adhere to a rigid vegan diet and do her Gerson therapy religiously (word choice intentional) for the rest of her life; or her cancer will return and it will have been her fault.
I don’t call that “empowerment.” I call that blaming the patient.
Knowing what I know about Macklin-Rice, I am not optimistic about her chances of long-term survival. I cited a roughly 50-50 chance of her living ten years based on Adjuvant! Online and optimistic assumptions, but if she has had chest wall recurrences those assumptions are far too optimistic. Macklin-Rice could conceivably beat the odds and do well indefinitely, and I hope that she does. I wouldn’t bet money on it, though.
from ScienceBlogs http://ift.tt/1F4dBhR
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