Robin Roberts' Doctor Answers Your Breast Cancer Questions
GMA anchor received a flurry of viewer e-mails after disclosing her illness.
Aug. 13, 2007 — -- When "Good Morning America" anchor Robin Roberts announced she was battling breast cancer and would seek treatment, countless well wishes poured in from viewers.
Some questioned when she would return to work after having her surgery. Roberts' doctor and others she met through e-mails said getting back to work would be the best medicine.
Roberts returned to work today, but she is just one of the many women fighting cancer and trying to maintain a normal life.
Dr. Lauren Cassell, chief of breast surgery at Lenox Hill Hospital in New York and Roberts' doctor, said patients can expect to feel different after various forms of treatment. She addresses some common treatment questions below.
My goal is to give my patients back their life. Everything we do is geared toward helping them do that.
It depends on the woman and the kind of treatment she has, but there's no reason why a woman can't go back to work during her treatment.
A patient gets chemotherapy every two or three weeks and there will be a few days around the treatment when she won't feel well.
However, we now have great meds that minimize side effects, so even if she has chemo Friday, she can be back at work Monday. Therefore, most women can miss one day of work and feel good enough to go back.
The biggest issue for women who undergo chemo is hair loss. As a doctor it's important that I make sure my patients are prepared for that to happen.
Most of my patients get wigs. I'll tell them to get a wig before they lose their hair, so the wig maker can match their natural hair, or to bring a picture with them. Other women choose to wear a bandana or scarf. I have one patient who sewed bangs into a scarf so that she would have the look of hair without the hotness of a wig.
Not all chemo regimens cause women to lose their hair.
Most patients just fit radiation into their regular schedule. They can go before work, during lunch or after work. Fatigue is the biggest side effect.
No one has to know you're having radiation. You can choose to keep it private. Not everyone wants to share what they're going through.