You have asked for honesty. I have had 'the works', as my surgeon put it, for inflammatory breast cancer diagnosed last August. First 6 rounds of chemo, then mastectomy and partial clearance of axillary lymph nodes, then radiotherapy. Now I'm having Herceptin every 3 weeks until October. Chemo was predictably YUK, but it was very effective, as when I had the surgery, the tissues removed showed no live cancer cells. The mastectomy was done as day surgery and was straightforward. I had nothing but paracetamol, so I am not a wimp! The radiotherapy was just a preventative measure. I have not had such a positive experience as others on this thread. I asked the clinical oncologist what the marginal benefit of it was. He said he couldn't be sure, as too few women like me had gone through chemo and had a 'complete resolution', but on balance, he advised me to have it (the same is true of surgery, incidentally, in future, chemo might be all that is needed). I went ahead with radiotherapy scheduled for 15 sessions over 3 weeks, but stopped after session 10 because of a very painful swelling in the armpit the size of a golfball. I had read clinical literature available (having been a clinician myself) and the best available evidence for breast cancer was that radiotherapy only confers a 4 - 6 percent survival advantage over 20 years. The swelling in my armpit turned out to be inflamed tissue surrounding a haematoma left over from the surgery. Radiotherapy inflames all the tissues, and indeed, the whole of the irradiated area, which is a large area of my chest is still sore and hard 3 months after stopping. Fibrosis is a common long-term risk of RT. There are other long term risks. Given that the radiotherapy was never meant to be curative, but only preventative, I rather wish I had had the courage to say that I wouldn't bother, knowing that even without the clever chemo regimes there are today, there is only a small likelihood of it preventing recurrence. If the radiotherapy was curative, I would not hesitate, but if it is preventive, I would think carefully before agreeing. However, that was MY cancer, and MY choice. Everybody's cancer is different, and their attitude to risk is different. Good luck with your treatment, whatever you decide.