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A real second opinion — not a second guess

Before you travel or agree to surgery, a named specialist reads your entire file and returns a written report with a clear, recommended treatment pathway. In-depth by design.

Depth is the point

Most "online opinions" are a glance. Ours is a full review.

A superficial opinion looks at one scan and repeats what you were already told. An in-depth opinion re-reads everything, questions the diagnosis, and gives you real options — which is exactly what changes outcomes.

A superficial opinion

  • Skims one report or image
  • Confirms the first diagnosis without questioning it
  • Generic answer, no named doctor accountable
  • No treatment pathway or alternatives
  • You still don't know what to do next

Our in-depth second opinion

  • Reviews your full file — every scan, lab, biopsy and prescription
  • Independently re-assesses the diagnosis
  • Written report signed by a named accredited specialist
  • Compares treatment pathways with pros, cons and cost
  • Ends with one clear recommended path and next step

How it works

From your reports to a clear plan in 4 steps

Free to start · no travel required · your records stay encrypted and in your legal jurisdiction.

  1. 1

    Share your full file

    Upload every report you have — MRI, CT, X-ray, blood work, biopsy, discharge summaries and current prescriptions. More is better.

  2. 2

    A specialist reviews everything

    A named, accredited specialist in the relevant field personally reads the complete file — not a call-centre or a template.

  3. 3

    You get a written report

    Within 96 hours: an independent assessment of your diagnosis, the findings that matter, and every realistic option explained plainly.

  4. 4

    A recommended pathway

    One clear recommended treatment path, the right doctor and hospital for it, an indicative cost, and the exact next step.

See the depth for yourself

A sample second-opinion report

This is the level of detail every patient receives. (Illustrative sample — not a real patient.)

Independent Specialist Second Opinion

Speciality: Surgical Oncology · Reviewed by Dr. Priya Nair, MS, MCh (Surgical Oncology)
Report #SO-2026-4471

Case summary

Female, 54. Referred with a diagnosis of invasive ductal carcinoma of the right breast, and advised radical mastectomy with axillary clearance at the referring centre. Second opinion requested on whether breast-conserving treatment is possible.

Records reviewed

Mammography (bilateral) Breast MRI with contrast Core-needle biopsy histopathology IHC / hormone receptor panel PET-CT staging Complete blood work Referring surgeon's notes

Specialist's assessment

The histopathology confirms a Grade 2 invasive ductal carcinoma, ER/PR positive and HER2 negative. On review of the MRI, the tumour measures ~2.4 cm and is unifocal, with no skin or chest-wall involvement and no suspicious axillary nodes on PET-CT (clinical stage T2 N0 M0).

On this evidence, the diagnosis is confirmed — but the recommendation of radical mastectomy is not the only appropriate option. A unifocal tumour of this size in a breast of adequate volume is, in the majority of comparable cases, suitable for breast-conserving surgery followed by radiotherapy, with equivalent survival outcomes to mastectomy.

Treatment pathways considered

Breast-conserving surgery + radiotherapy RECOMMENDED
For
  • Equivalent survival to mastectomy for this stage
  • Preserves the breast; better cosmetic/psychological outcome
  • Shorter surgery and recovery
Against
  • Requires 3–4 weeks of radiotherapy after surgery
  • Small chance clear margins need a second procedure
Radical mastectomy + axillary clearance
For
  • May avoid radiotherapy in selected cases
  • Appropriate if the patient prefers it
Against
  • More extensive surgery than the disease requires here
  • Greater impact on body image and recovery

Recommended pathway & team

Proceed with breast-conserving surgery (wide local excision) with sentinel-node biopsy, followed by adjuvant radiotherapy and hormone therapy. Sentinel-node biopsy should be confirmed before committing to full axillary clearance.

Dr. Priya Nair
Dr. Priya Nair · Surgical Oncology Apollo Hospitals, Chennai 🇮🇳 · 3,500+ cases · English, हिन्दी · Arabic coordinator available

Questions to ask your treating doctor

  • Am I a candidate for breast-conserving surgery, and if not, exactly why?
  • Will a sentinel-node biopsy be done before any axillary clearance?
  • What is the expected radiotherapy schedule and its side effects?
  • What hormone therapy is planned given ER/PR positive status?

Indicative cost & next step

Breast-conserving surgery package at the recommended hospital: an all-inclusive indicative range is provided in your official quotation before any payment. Payment is made directly to the hospital through an RBI-compliant banking channel — Heal in India never holds or marks up your money.

Signed and dated by the reviewing specialist. This is an independent opinion to inform your decision — your treating doctor remains responsible for your care.

Every second opinion is written, signed and specific to your file. No two reports are the same.