Scanxiety: My Fear of Cancer Recurrence

By Cynthia Toussaint, PNN Columnist

Several months back, For Grace’s conference planning committee invited our webcaster, Rich, to join the call to talk logistics about our upcoming virtual “Pain-Cancer Connection” event. Rich is a long-time cancer survivor who’s dealt with decades of chronic pain as a result of his aggressive treatment.

It soothed me to talk with him because I was in the midst of brutal chemotherapy. I could relate when Rich shared his nightmare of getting one infusion too many and lying on the floor weeping after losing much of this tongue. I also understood Rich bungie jumping off a Las Vegas building after his treatment in a quest to find something scarier than chemo.

But that ease turned to discomfort when Rich warned me, “Oh Cynthia, you don’t know yet. There’s so much anxiety that comes with cancer.”

While I’ve long been aware that if triple-negative breast cancer returns, it tends to do so more aggressively in the first year or two, Rich was my introduction to “scanxiety.” We cancer survivors live in often paralyzing fear of a recurrence, one that will likely end us. In fact, I was recently stunned to hear a breast cancer survivor speak publicly of her relief when the cancer returned. She preferred to battle the disease again rather than the anxiety.

Now after sweating bullets through my first post-remission imaging, I can’t help but wonder how much scanxiety is reinforced by our broken healthcare system’s reliance on an endless stream of patients whose wellness would pose a threat to their business model.

I’ve said it before and I’ll say it again: the cancer industry thrives on a culture of fear, intentional or not. I’m certain that’s why patients gratefully say “yes” to every treatment offered without blinking. And that’s why I was looked at like I had two heads when I questioned every proposed therapy, relied on my own research, did everything integratively and said “no” to most of my provider’s drugs, scans and (over) treatments.

Sadly, my scanxiety began the moment I attained remission. My oncology surgeon -- who’s still terrified because I didn’t go with her standard-of-care surgery, even though studies support that as a complete responder I had a better chance at surviving without it – told me to do twice weekly breast exams. She then attempted to comfort me by assuring we’d do surgery after the cancer grew back. Those hyper-vigilant exams made me so tender my coordinating nurse told me to back off.

As my initial every-three-month imaging neared, scanxiety reared its ugly head and seriously messed with my health. I stopped sleeping restoratively and was plagued by nightmares. Obsessing on the worst outcome, I started getting severe headaches while my IBS went through the roof.

My terror went into hyper-drive when I found an inflamed lymph node in my neck, the same side as my former tumor. This fright didn’t just infect the patient.  John developed body-wide hives that looked like eczema on steroids, and my close girlfriends felt like they were having nervous breakdowns.

After my breast scan was clean, I rejoiced with John about how we deliberately made all the right choices. My surgeon broke up the party when she entered the examining room voicing her concern about my neck lymph node. Due to its location being a few inches higher than my breast area and healthcare being its dysfunctional self (every department can only scan a small area of the body), I had to wait another WEEK to find out if the cancer had metastasized.

During that soul-rattling scan the imaging technician said the node was abnormal and that I’d hear from my doctor soon. While John wheeled me to the car, I lost my shit and began screaming in the parking garage. I knew “abnormal” meant I was going to die and that six grueling months of chemotherapy hadn’t helped me in the least. How could I have been so wrong?!

I continued screaming in the car until my screamer gave out, while my stomach knotted and head throbbed. Mercifully, my doctor’s call late the next day told me all was clear. That both relieved and angered me; relief because I was assured another three months on the planet, but deeply pissed off because this healthcare-induced trauma was majorly messing with my cancer-fighting terrain. I make it my priority to practice healthy life-style choices to keep my body and mind well and in harmony.

Toxic Medicine

But the body keeps the score. After that last scan, I got a chemo-induced bladder infection from hell, one that’s still knocking me out despite a week on Cipro. With this infection that appears to be moving into my kidneys, multiple chemo side effects have re-roosted; fatigue, heavy heart throbbing, tinnitus and labored breathing. I find myself in the midst of my most recent outcome of fear-based medicine, and I remain snared in their illness-inducing, money making system.    

Deeper reflection leads me to believe that even my “innocuous” port flushes are part of this web of toxic medicine. Every seven weeks (though they push for four), I visit the infusion center where the nurses honestly seem put off, even hostile, that I’m doing well, smiling and in good spirits.

Apparently my role is to be fearful, inferior and vulnerable, and my upbeat, empowered demeanor rattles them. Rather than celebrating winning my life back or chiming in about simple pleasures like fashion and hair color, they drill me about how my post-treatment is going (what post-treatment?!) and what horrors my next scan might bring. My medical oncologist there is so buried in the fear culture, I schedule my appointments to avoid him.

Breathe.

Thankfully, I saw my saint of an integrative doctor last week who set me straight. Dr. Taw was visibly disturbed when I shared my run-ins with these healthcare providers, and was concerned that their behavior might stir things up and create cancer sparking “stagnation” in my body. Several times, he gave me his full support to stay away from these toxic people as much as possible to hold wellness. I couldn’t agree more.

Still, I am wary of my next scan. Despite every logical indicator telling me I’ll likely be A-ok, these people and their diet of fear embed me with dread. I see more than ever that this doesn’t just apply to my last year plus of cancer care; it also applies to my 38-year wrangling with high-impact pain. These western medicine devotees, while they claim to be healers, are the polar opposite for me. And their negative energy creates illness, rather than mitigating it.

Let’s not have to take a bungie jump off a building to overcome our latest medically-induced trauma. I implore you to stay away from these healthcare providers and their dysfunctional, money-based system as much as possible. To be fair, they do some good – but by a long measure, they hurt us beyond repair, again and again.  And again.

Please seek out integrative healing that is non-invasive and wellness (rather than fear) based. Your body and mind will thank you.  

Cynthia Toussaint is the founder and spokesperson at For Grace, a non-profit dedicated to bettering the lives of women in pain. She has lived with Complex Regional Pain Syndrome (CRPS) and 15 co-morbidities for nearly four decades, and became a cancer survivor in 2020. Cynthia is the author of “Battle for Grace: A Memoir of Pain, Redemption and Impossible Love.” 

Miss Understood: A Taste of Remission

By: Arlene Grau, Columnist

If you ask me to plan something, almost anything that requires me being somewhere on a certain day for any amount of time, I would have to decline because I never know how I'll be feeling on any given day.

Now ask me to plan a family vacation that would take me to Hawaii, where I would be 5 hours away from my doctor by plane – well, that would be insane.

However, I did just that and the results were better than expected.

I had my Rituxan infusion a month prior to leaving in hopes that it would kick in just before I left. My body, however, had a different agenda. I began feeling ill the week after my treatment. On top of that, I suffered a bad fall at home. I sprained my ankle, bruised my hip, and hurt my knee.

Instead of making progress, I was taking several steps backwards. I had tried to prepare my body for months and it was beginning to feel like it was all in vain.

But my husband and doctor didn't allow me to give up. My doctor prepared an emergency plan for me before I left. He prescribed backup antibiotics in case I became ill, started me on a temporary prednisone dosage, printed up my most recent patient summary (since I was taking so many medications with me), and gave me contact information for a rheumatologist in Hawaii in the event that I needed to be seen. He even called the other doctor ahead of time and told me to email him for anything.

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Although my body wasn't completely ready, I felt like I had the tools necessary to handle any medical emergency I may have.

Now, I don't know if it was the simple fact that I removed myself from all the stressors in my life, but I felt so much better while I was in Hawaii during that one week than I have since I was first diagnosed with rheumatoid arthritis eight years ago.

My theory is that the change in climate helped with the inflammation I was suffering from. I know that when it's very cold and dry, I tend to flare up and feel very ill. And when it's really hot and the sun is pounding down on me, I feel my weakest and just as sick.

But out there I was met with humidity and sunlight that didn't feel like it was stripping away every ounce of energy I had.

I had one or two trying days; granted I was doing a lot more than I've ever done at home as far as activities and walking go. But I was extremely proud of everything I was participating in. I even got to enjoy my 30th birthday in Hawaii, one I never thought I would live to see.

I knew as soon as we got home that something was different because I woke up feeling like I had been hit by a truck. As quickly as the swelling and inflammation left, it returned. My insomnia is back and my migraines are more intense.

But I got taste of what remission might be like.

It was a great vacation with a bittersweet ending because, instead of dreaming about the visual paradise I was in, I'm left day dreaming about the physical paradise I felt -- the one that had less limitations and more of my old self.

Arlene Grau lives in southern California. She suffers from rheumatoid arthritis, fibromyalgia, lupus, migraine, vasculitis, and Sjogren’s disease.

The information in this column should not be considered as professional medical advice, diagnosis or treatment. It is for informational purposes only and represent the author’s opinions alone. It does not inherently express or reflect the views, opinions and/or positions of Pain News Network.