Good or Bad Karma
- Actress Shannen Doherty says she questioned whether karma played a factor in her metastatic breast cancer diagnosis.
- She’s been battling the disease since February 2019.
- The 90210 star is currently undergoing hormone therapy and targeted therapy during treatment.
In an interview with Elle, Doherty says she questioned her decisions in life after hearing the news from her doctor that her breast cancer had returned and had progressed to metastatic. She immediately started searching for clinical trials and realized all her future plans that would have to be on hold. After a while, she took a moment to recollect on her past.
Read MoreDr. Elizabeth Comen breaks down the basics of metastatic breast cancer
Despite the immediate blame she put on herself after hearing about the second diagnosis, she eventually set that aside. “At the end of that, what I came out with was, I have good karma. It may not seem like it, but I've been a really good human being,” Doherty says.
A roller coaster of emotions is common for many people after a cancer diagnosis, but it’s important to remember that no one ever “deserves” to be facing this disease. It’s incredible to see that Doherty understands this.
Hormone Therapy For Breast Cancer
The most common types of breast cancers are hormone receptor-positive cancers. When a tumor is “hormone receptor positive” it means a pathologist has run special tests to determine that the cancer is positive for either the estrogen and/or progesterone receptor. If either are positive, it means that the cancer needs these receptors to grow, and physicians will determine the best treatment in order to “starve” the cells.
“What we’re trying to do is actually starve the cancer cells or any rouge cancer cells that could have escaped the breast from estrogen,” Dr. Elizabeth Comen, a medical oncologist at Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center, tells SurvivorNet. “We do that by driving the estrogen levels down or by blocking the ability of estrogen to interact with the estrogen receptor on a cancer cell.”
Related: What is Tamoxifen for Breast Cancer?
However, pre and post menopausal women may experience different treatments. For pre-menopausal women, Dr. Comen says oncologists typically prescribe a medication called Tamoxifen, which blocks the ability of estrogen in a breast cancer cell from using that estrogen as a food supply. Another option is using Aromatase inhibitors, which decrease the amount of estrogen produced in cancer cells.
Dr. Elizabeth Comen explains how hormone therapy works in breast cancer
Learn more about SurvivorNet's rigorous medical review process.