Rectal Cancer: Habr-Gama Watch and Wait Strategy to Avoid Surgery

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susie0915
Posts: 945
Joined: Wed Aug 02, 2017 8:17 am
Facebook Username: Susan DeGrazia Hostetter
Location: Michigan

Re: Rectal Cancer: Habr-Gama Watch and Wait Strategy to Avoid Surgery

Postby susie0915 » Mon Feb 18, 2019 4:06 pm

I was instructed to do two fleet enemas a couple hours before the sigmoidoscopy.
58 yrs old Dx @ 55
5/15 DX T3N0MO
6/15 5 wks chemo/rad
7/15 sigmoidoscopy/only scar tissue left
8/15 PET scan NED
9/15 LAR
0/24 nodes
10/15 blockage. surgery,early ileo rev, c-diff inf :(
12/15 6 rds of xelox
5/16 CT lung scarring/inflammation
9/16 clear colonoscopy
4/17 C 4mm lung nod
10/17 pel/abd CT NED
11/17 CEA<.5
1/18 CT/Lung no change in 4mm nodule
5/18 CEA<.5, CT pel/abd/lung NED
11/18 CEA .6
5/19 CT NED, CEA <.5
10/19 Clear colonscopy
11/19 CEA <.5

prs
Posts: 201
Joined: Sat Dec 12, 2015 7:09 pm
Location: Central California

Re: Rectal Cancer: Habr-Gama Watch and Wait Strategy to Avoid Surgery

Postby prs » Mon Feb 18, 2019 5:30 pm

Yes, liquid diet for 24 hours before the procedure, followed by two Fleet saline enemas, two hours before the procedure. The two enemas to be about 1/2 hour apart. I usually do an extra enema the evening before.
Peter, age 65 at dx
DX 4 cm x 4 cm very low rectal adenocarcinoma into the sphincters 01/15
Stage III T3 N1 M0 with two suspicious lymph nodes
26 sessions IMRT radiation with 1,000 mg Xeloda twice per day 03/15 to 04/15
Complete clincal response to the chemoradiation...the tumor shrank completely away 06/15 :D
No surgery...Habr-Gama watch and wait protocol instead
Xelox chemotherapy 07/15-12/15
MRI and rectal exam every three months starting 07/15
MRI and rectal exam every six months starting 07/17
NED

Jolene
Posts: 180
Joined: Wed Jan 23, 2019 10:17 am

Re: Rectal Cancer: Habr-Gama Watch and Wait Strategy to Avoid Surgery

Postby Jolene » Mon Feb 18, 2019 8:46 pm

Re: Enema for sigmoidoscopy

Thanks all for the replies ! The doc didn't brief me on the procedure of sigmoidoscopy so I'm kinda curious and it's a little complicated to try and reach him now.

Oh gosh.. enema is horrid at least the ones I had a while back which was unpleasant ! It was for an ultrasound scan of the rectum - one shot up and it took about 5 mins for it to take effect. Never have I felt so wretched ! Lol !

More questions...

Does the sigmoidoscopy requires a full operating theater preparation and admission(in-patient) like the colonoscopy does ? Or is it simply done at the doctor's clinic (out-patient) ? Were you under sedation ? I just googled and it says typically not, but with a scope up in the bum for 10-20 mins that sounds pretty agonizing even though its supposed to be painless. The regular 30 second anal check is already very uncomfortable for me ! Lol !

I was not advised to have a clear liquid diet at all, why is that so.. hmmm !
Dx @ 39 F on WW managmeent
Nov 18 - Dx of a mid-rectal tumour at T3N1M0 (2cm) 7cm from AV
Dec 18 - CRT, 28 sessions + Capecitabine at 3000mg daily
Jan - Mar - WW in place (12 weeks)
Mar'19 - MRI, PET, sig flex and biopsy ordered to determine being a WW candidate.
Apr - CCR, surgery on hold. 6 cycles of Xelox.
Aug - 6 cycles of Xelox completed
19 - Flex sig, biopsy, PET/MRI
2019 - 2023 - Every 6 mths - Full scope / Flex sig / biopsy, PET / MRI / CT every 6 months
Dec 23 - All clear 5 years on ! Thank god !

Pyro
Posts: 305
Joined: Mon Oct 12, 2015 7:40 pm
Location: Tucson, AZ

Re: Rectal Cancer: Habr-Gama Watch and Wait Strategy to Avoid Surgery

Postby Pyro » Mon Feb 18, 2019 8:52 pm

The few I had was done in the doctors office, outpatient and probably took 10 minutes. No sedation, mine was done in front of a crowd.
Aug 2015- Stage 4 CC with liver Mets(38/m)
Sep 2015- Avastin/Folfox/Iron
Dec 2015-Not liver surgery candidate
Jan 2016- Erbitux/Folfiri, 2nd opinion at MDA in TX
Feb 2016 -MDA liver surgery
Mar 2016 -30% of left lobe rem, PVE
May 2016 - 70% of liver rem
Jun 2016-Rad
Jan 2017-perm colost @MDA
Jul 2017-Erb/FOLFURI
Nov 2017 -Lung & Liver ablations@MDA
Jan 2018 -Xeloda & Avastin mx
Jul 2018-Avast/FOLFURI
Sep 2018-Rad
Mar 2019 - Keytruda fail
Jun 2019 - FOLFURI
Aug 2019 - No more, quality time!

weisssoccermom
Posts: 5988
Joined: Thu May 10, 2007 2:32 pm
Location: Pacific NW

Re: Rectal Cancer: Habr-Gama Watch and Wait Strategy to Avoid Surgery

Postby weisssoccermom » Mon Feb 18, 2019 9:01 pm

I've had my fill of flex sigs. My guess is that they are doing a modified one.....basically it just checks in the rectum.
Here's my answers to your questions:

1. Prep: Day of procedure....2 enemas in the morning....that was it. You can see from my signature that I only had an excision...so I was on surveillance every 3 months. The ultrasound the first three months, flex sig next three months and so on. That went on for a good 2 years....then it was spaced out. NEVER was I told to be on a liquid diet....just the 2 enemas in the morning for either procedure.

2. Flex sig was done in the same room as the colonoscopy.....they both use the same equipment.

3. No sedation. Wasn't exactly pleasant but certainly manageable. I only had one that was that long (time wise)....most were significantly shorter in time. My docs were interested in the rectal area, specifically in the area where I had the excision. I've had one polyp removed while wide awake and was surprised that it didn't hurt. The worst of it is the pressure.

When I had my excision, it was not at all common (Dr. Habr Gama had communicated with me and my doctor about the protocol back then) and I went along with the surveillance which was very thorough. It's a trade off for not having the more radical surgery. You can get through it....just take it one test at a time.
Dx 6/22/2006 IIA rectal cancer
6 wks rad/Xeloda -finished 9/06
1st attempt transanal excision 11/06
11/17/06 XELOX 1 cycle
5 months Xeloda only Dec '06 - April '07
10+ blood clots, 1 DVT 1/07
transanal excision 4/20/07 path-NO CANCER CELLS!
NED now and forever!
Perform random acts of kindness

prs
Posts: 201
Joined: Sat Dec 12, 2015 7:09 pm
Location: Central California

Re: Rectal Cancer: Habr-Gama Watch and Wait Strategy to Avoid Surgery

Postby prs » Mon Feb 18, 2019 11:35 pm

Jolene wrote:Does the sigmoidoscopy requires a full operating theater preparation and admission(in-patient) like the colonoscopy does ? Or is it simply done at the doctor's clinic (out-patient) ? Were you under sedation ? I just googled and it says typically not, but with a scope up in the bum for 10-20 mins that sounds pretty agonizing even though its supposed to be painless. The regular 30 second anal check is already very uncomfortable for me ! Lol !

I was not advised to have a clear liquid diet at all, why is that so.. hmmm !

My first flex sig and anal exam was at a Tumor Board meeting right after I was diagnosed. My tumor was right at the end of the anal canal, and it's not often Drs get to actually touch a tumor, so I discovered there were four Drs donning their rubber gloves and queuing up to have a feel. I later found out this was a teaching hospital, and two of the Drs were interns, maybe that's why they were up there so damned long!! :wink:

My wife said I was as white as a sheet when I emerged from the examination room. It's a good job she was there because I was so drained from the experience I missed most of the following treatment option discussion.

After that ordeal ordinary flex sigs seem like a piece of cake!!! :lol:
Peter, age 65 at dx
DX 4 cm x 4 cm very low rectal adenocarcinoma into the sphincters 01/15
Stage III T3 N1 M0 with two suspicious lymph nodes
26 sessions IMRT radiation with 1,000 mg Xeloda twice per day 03/15 to 04/15
Complete clincal response to the chemoradiation...the tumor shrank completely away 06/15 :D
No surgery...Habr-Gama watch and wait protocol instead
Xelox chemotherapy 07/15-12/15
MRI and rectal exam every three months starting 07/15
MRI and rectal exam every six months starting 07/17
NED

Jolene
Posts: 180
Joined: Wed Jan 23, 2019 10:17 am

Re: Rectal Cancer: Habr-Gama Watch and Wait Strategy to Avoid Surgery

Postby Jolene » Wed Feb 20, 2019 11:09 am

Thanks to all who responded about the sig flex procedure. Feeling a little more at ease now knowing what's coming up although it would have been nice to be sedated albeit only 10 mins !

@PRS - Lol @ 4 doctors trying to get a feel up there ! I would have been freaked out if there were doctors queuing one after another to get their fingers up in there !! Kudos to you for getting through it ! I'm already feeling very uncomfortable with just 1 doctor doing it at just about every appointment but if and when I get onto the watch and wait programme - it would be all worthwhile and happy to have them do whatever they want with me ! Hah !
Dx @ 39 F on WW managmeent
Nov 18 - Dx of a mid-rectal tumour at T3N1M0 (2cm) 7cm from AV
Dec 18 - CRT, 28 sessions + Capecitabine at 3000mg daily
Jan - Mar - WW in place (12 weeks)
Mar'19 - MRI, PET, sig flex and biopsy ordered to determine being a WW candidate.
Apr - CCR, surgery on hold. 6 cycles of Xelox.
Aug - 6 cycles of Xelox completed
19 - Flex sig, biopsy, PET/MRI
2019 - 2023 - Every 6 mths - Full scope / Flex sig / biopsy, PET / MRI / CT every 6 months
Dec 23 - All clear 5 years on ! Thank god !

prs
Posts: 201
Joined: Sat Dec 12, 2015 7:09 pm
Location: Central California

Re: Rectal Cancer: Habr-Gama Watch and Wait Strategy to Avoid Surgery

Postby prs » Thu Feb 21, 2019 2:58 pm

Here's hoping it all works out for you Jolene.

I was very uncomfortable talking about my rectal cancer when first diagnosed, and we only told those people who would have been curious about my absences for treatment. :oops: Three years later the number of people who have seen my bare backside is in the triple digits, and all modesty is out the window!!! :D Now I have no problem telling anyone who'll listen why regular colonoscopies are a very good thing. :)
Peter, age 65 at dx
DX 4 cm x 4 cm very low rectal adenocarcinoma into the sphincters 01/15
Stage III T3 N1 M0 with two suspicious lymph nodes
26 sessions IMRT radiation with 1,000 mg Xeloda twice per day 03/15 to 04/15
Complete clincal response to the chemoradiation...the tumor shrank completely away 06/15 :D
No surgery...Habr-Gama watch and wait protocol instead
Xelox chemotherapy 07/15-12/15
MRI and rectal exam every three months starting 07/15
MRI and rectal exam every six months starting 07/17
NED

lakeswim
Posts: 229
Joined: Sat Mar 31, 2018 9:37 am

Re: Rectal Cancer: Habr-Gama Watch and Wait Strategy to Avoid Surgery

Postby lakeswim » Fri Feb 22, 2019 2:54 pm

I wrote a lengthy post about my appt @MSK this week but the draft I had saved disappeared. Here's an abbreviated replacement. (I have my first cold post-treatment and it's quite a doozy so I don't have much energy.)

Interesting things to note about MSK:
- My MRI @ MSK was a RECTAL MRI vs. the 3 PELVIC MRIs I have had locally. Apparently, there is a difference. Rectal MRIs provide better scans. They also use a special drug to slow down motility to get better pictures. Rectal MRIs are not available everywhere....
- MRI@ MSK is read by a radiologist who specializes in reading colorectal MRIs.
- Tumor board who will hear my case next week is made up of doctors who deal STRICTLY with colorectal cancers. It is not a general cancer tumor board like the one locally.
(*Please note: I truly value my team locally, but these are important distinctions when you have big decisions to make.)

I saw Dr. G-A, the Head of Colorectal Surgery, the next day. In his opinion, the flex sig is the MOST IMPORTANT data point for him (moreso than the MRI), in terms of determining a complete response. So, after a digital exam, he did a flex sig. I was awake and watched. (This was my 3rd flex sig, but my first without anesthesia and it was really no big deal. I actually prefer the flex sig to the digital exam. And why go through anesthesia if you don't have to?) He had to really look around to find the tattoos. He remarked how everything looked good.

Dr. G-A had spoken to the radiologist on the phone the previous day after my MRI and the radiologist said the entire primary tumor is gone and she was "unimpressed with infiltration of the uterus."

(Note: I did chemo first and then chemo/rad. I am now 3 months out from chemo/radiation. I had a Pelvic MRI after chemo, which found the tumor had shrank "significantly" and then another Pelvic MRI last month - 6 weeks post radiation - that showed the tumor was completely gone. My local team wouldn't offer me W&W due to their opinion that the latest Pelvic MRI was "mushy" and the "indistinct fat plane" may indicate invasion of the uterus. They did NOT consider mine a complete response so didn't see me as a candidate for W&W and recommended surgery.)

Dr. G-A considers my response a complete response and he'd consider me, if I were on his trial, as a candidate for W&W. He did say it is best to do W&W on a clinical trial to assure compliance to the protocol, which is rigorous. But, he said that if I were compliant with the protocol, he considers my response complete and, in his opinion, I may consider W&W. (The MSK protocol is Flex sig - quarterly. Rectal MRI - every 6 months. I need to check my notes on the CTs.) The tumor board will meet next week to discuss my case but the post-doc fellow told me after Dr. G-A left that the board usually shares his opinion. (Also, he said my case is "not complicated.")

Dr. G-A said that their experience shows that salvage surgery is "typically" no more complicated than having surgery now (there are the few that are more complicated, but that's a minority).

There were also a few minor differences in how he would approach my surgery vs my surgeon here if I were to choose surgery. And he also added some info that I hadn't yet heard - specifically that my bladder function will be affected should they need to take my uterus. (So, surgery may affect both bladder on top of bowel function.) Lastly, he refused to make any prediction about the extent I will have LARS (my local team made predictions that it "wouldn't be that bad") as he said it's not easy to predict.

The post-doc fellow brought up all the female side effects of treatment/surgery and told me they have a team @MSK that helps patients deal with these side effects. The team had, in fact, just presented at the tumor board last week. This was nice to hear, given I had to learn about those side effects on this forum while my Rad Onc team here said little/nothing about it.

Given I am sick, I am not making any big decisions this weekend. Plus, I will wait to hear from their board on Monday. Meanwhile, I am making my way (for probably the 3rd or 4th time) through this W&W thread from the beginning to end. Thanks everyone for your different perspectives! It's a difficult decision for sure. But I feel better (and fortunate) to have been seen by doctors at one of the premier cancer centers in the country.
Female - RC dgns @ 49 y
Adenocarcinoma
10-11 cm from anal verge ("large")
Stage 3a - T4N0M0
FOLFOX May -Sept 18
Capecetabine + Radiation - 28 sessions - Oct - Nov 18
Jan 19 - MRI & flex sig show tumor gone, Chest/ab CT no change
Feb 19 - MRI & flex sig show tumor gone
W&W (must travel)
.....W&W surveillance 2019,2020,2021,2022,2023....
Jan 24 - approaching 5 years this Spring with W&W surveillance to end.
*grateful*

prs
Posts: 201
Joined: Sat Dec 12, 2015 7:09 pm
Location: Central California

Re: Rectal Cancer: Habr-Gama Watch and Wait Strategy to Avoid Surgery

Postby prs » Fri Feb 22, 2019 4:23 pm

Great news lakeswim!!! You now have options available, and that's exactly what you wanted from the second opinion.

Do take some time to absorb all the new info, I know it can take a few days to go over what the Drs were saying, and figure out exactly what they meant in layman's terms!

The Drs on my tumor board were all colorectal specialists, and that made me more confident their advice was well founded. My Kaiser facility also developed an MRI protocol specific to the rectum, and they too have a radiologist who specializes in reading them.

I'm glad you asked about salvage surgery, it was that piece of info that really helped me make the decision.
Peter, age 65 at dx
DX 4 cm x 4 cm very low rectal adenocarcinoma into the sphincters 01/15
Stage III T3 N1 M0 with two suspicious lymph nodes
26 sessions IMRT radiation with 1,000 mg Xeloda twice per day 03/15 to 04/15
Complete clincal response to the chemoradiation...the tumor shrank completely away 06/15 :D
No surgery...Habr-Gama watch and wait protocol instead
Xelox chemotherapy 07/15-12/15
MRI and rectal exam every three months starting 07/15
MRI and rectal exam every six months starting 07/17
NED

mozart13
Posts: 158
Joined: Fri Dec 09, 2016 7:38 pm
Location: Toronto

Re: Rectal Cancer: Habr-Gama Watch and Wait Strategy to Avoid Surgery

Postby mozart13 » Fri Feb 22, 2019 6:08 pm

lakeswim wrote:He had to really look around to find the tattoos. He remarked how everything looked good.


That is great news lakeswim lady. When they did sigmoidoscopy on me after chemo/rad, was hard to find the spot, if it wasn't for tattoo they wouldn't be able to find it.
Looked like brand new.
W&W approach is pretty rigorous, they just switched me to every 6 month's exam's, finally some break.
My surgeon said that he would go the same route.

Good luck to you!
55 year at the time of diagnosis, male
Diagnosed with T1,T2 N0 M0 rectal cancer
Total neoadjuvant therapy or TNT (chemoradiation followed by systemic chemotherapy)
Negative since Feb. '17
No surgery
Watch&Wait approach 8)
I don’t come much to the forum , so if this is not updated it means I remain negative!
Wish good luck to all!

Annie50
Posts: 95
Joined: Mon Jul 16, 2018 3:44 pm

Re: Rectal Cancer: Habr-Gama Watch and Wait Strategy to Avoid Surgery

Postby Annie50 » Sat Feb 23, 2019 5:32 am

lakeswim wrote:I wrote a lengthy post about my appt @MSK this week but the draft I had saved disappeared. Here's an abbreviated replacement. (I have my first cold post-treatment and it's quite a doozy so I don't have much energy.)

Interesting things to note about MSK:
- My MRI @ MSK was a RECTAL MRI vs. the 3 PELVIC MRIs I have had locally. Apparently, there is a difference. Rectal MRIs provide better scans. They also use a special drug to slow down motility to get better pictures. Rectal MRIs are not available everywhere....
- MRI@ MSK is read by a radiologist who specializes in reading colorectal MRIs.
- Tumor board who will hear my case next week is made up of doctors who deal STRICTLY with colorectal cancers. It is not a general cancer tumor board like the one locally.
(*Please note: I truly value my team locally, but these are important distinctions when you have big decisions to make.)

I saw Dr. G-A, the Head of Colorectal Surgery, the next day. In his opinion, the flex sig is the MOST IMPORTANT data point for him (moreso than the MRI), in terms of determining a complete response. So, after a digital exam, he did a flex sig. I was awake and watched. (This was my 3rd flex sig, but my first without anesthesia and it was really no big deal. I actually prefer the flex sig to the digital exam. And why go through anesthesia if you don't have to?) He had to really look around to find the tattoos. He remarked how everything looked good.

Dr. G-A had spoken to the radiologist on the phone the previous day after my MRI and the radiologist said the entire primary tumor is gone and she was "unimpressed with infiltration of the uterus."

(Note: I did chemo first and then chemo/rad. I am now 3 months out from chemo/radiation. I had a Pelvic MRI after chemo, which found the tumor had shrank "significantly" and then another Pelvic MRI last month - 6 weeks post radiation - that showed the tumor was completely gone. My local team wouldn't offer me W&W due to their opinion that the latest Pelvic MRI was "mushy" and the "indistinct fat plane" may indicate invasion of the uterus. They did NOT consider mine a complete response so didn't see me as a candidate for W&W and recommended surgery.)

Dr. G-A considers my response a complete response and he'd consider me, if I were on his trial, as a candidate for W&W. He did say it is best to do W&W on a clinical trial to assure compliance to the protocol, which is rigorous. But, he said that if I were compliant with the protocol, he considers my response complete and, in his opinion, I may consider W&W. (The MSK protocol is Flex sig - quarterly. Rectal MRI - every 6 months. I need to check my notes on the CTs.) The tumor board will meet next week to discuss my case but the post-doc fellow told me after Dr. G-A left that the board usually shares his opinion. (Also, he said my case is "not complicated.")

Dr. G-A said that their experience shows that salvage surgery is "typically" no more complicated than having surgery now (there are the few that are more complicated, but that's a minority).

There were also a few minor differences in how he would approach my surgery vs my surgeon here if I were to choose surgery. And he also added some info that I hadn't yet heard - specifically that my bladder function will be affected should they need to take my uterus. (So, surgery may affect both bladder on top of bowel function.) Lastly, he refused to make any prediction about the extent I will have LARS (my local team made predictions that it "wouldn't be that bad") as he said it's not easy to predict.

The post-doc fellow brought up all the female side effects of treatment/surgery and told me they have a team @MSK that helps patients deal with these side effects. The team had, in fact, just presented at the tumor board last week. This was nice to hear, given I had to learn about those side effects on this forum while my Rad Onc team here said little/nothing about it.

Given I am sick, I am not making any big decisions this weekend. Plus, I will wait to hear from their board on Monday. Meanwhile, I am making my way (for probably the 3rd or 4th time) through this W&W thread from the beginning to end. Thanks everyone for your different perspectives! It's a difficult decision for sure. But I feel better (and fortunate) to have been seen by doctors at one of the premier cancer centers in the country.


Hi Lakeswim

Just seen this !!! Fabulous as prs and Mozart say you have options .. it sounds like a complete response to me .. do they take biopsies there ? And that rectal MRI sounds different than normal pelvic one .. what are you leaning towards ? I am on W & W now at one of the leading Cancer specialists in W&W so will be v interested to see what you do .. does anyone know the deinitive stats on how many comp clinical responses are maintained / sustained ?
Best Annie xxx

lakeswim
Posts: 229
Joined: Sat Mar 31, 2018 9:37 am

Re: Rectal Cancer: Habr-Gama Watch and Wait Strategy to Avoid Surgery

Postby lakeswim » Mon Feb 25, 2019 11:54 am

W&W folks:
- Any idea how insurance deals with W&W? It's not "accepted" so curious if you had any resistance to it in terms of insurance paying for frequent procedures, scans, etc.
- I'd prefer a Rectal MRI every 3 months (vs 6 months), but if 6 months is their protocol, think it's possible to ask for sooner? I'd be more comfortable with 3.
- How soon after your diagnostic colonoscopy did you get another one? That didn't seem to be on the surveillance radar. I need to ask about that too as mine has been nearly a year.
- What else am I missing in terms of tests? (DRE & Flex Sig every 3 months, MRI every 6 months (though I prefer 3), CT scans of chest and pelvis every 6 months, colonoscopy ?????????, ...)

Thanks.
Female - RC dgns @ 49 y
Adenocarcinoma
10-11 cm from anal verge ("large")
Stage 3a - T4N0M0
FOLFOX May -Sept 18
Capecetabine + Radiation - 28 sessions - Oct - Nov 18
Jan 19 - MRI & flex sig show tumor gone, Chest/ab CT no change
Feb 19 - MRI & flex sig show tumor gone
W&W (must travel)
.....W&W surveillance 2019,2020,2021,2022,2023....
Jan 24 - approaching 5 years this Spring with W&W surveillance to end.
*grateful*

prs
Posts: 201
Joined: Sat Dec 12, 2015 7:09 pm
Location: Central California

Re: Rectal Cancer: Habr-Gama Watch and Wait Strategy to Avoid Surgery

Postby prs » Mon Feb 25, 2019 1:47 pm

I have a Kaiser Medicare Advantage plan so don't have to worry about insurance. If a Kaiser Dr schedules me for a procedure, then Kaiser automatically covers it.

My treatment is as you described, except I do not have CT scans of chest and pelvis. I did have a chest CT shortly after I had the CCR but when that came in fine, there was nothing after that. I do have an annual colonoscopy, also follow up exams with my oncologist that include blood work (blood counts and CEA) These are on the same time periods as my follow up appointments with my surgeon.

You might want to check what the follow up procedures would be if you had surgery. It may be those procedures are not too different from W&W, and the insurance expense might be similar. Of course, if you go on W&W, your insurance company will not have to pay for the expensive surgeries.

PS my surgeon also thinks the sigmoidoscopy is more important than the MRI for determining a CCR. Her probe has a camera and she takes photos of the treatment area, and shows them to me. I have no idea what I'm looking at, but apparently the whiter the tissue, the better.
Peter, age 65 at dx
DX 4 cm x 4 cm very low rectal adenocarcinoma into the sphincters 01/15
Stage III T3 N1 M0 with two suspicious lymph nodes
26 sessions IMRT radiation with 1,000 mg Xeloda twice per day 03/15 to 04/15
Complete clincal response to the chemoradiation...the tumor shrank completely away 06/15 :D
No surgery...Habr-Gama watch and wait protocol instead
Xelox chemotherapy 07/15-12/15
MRI and rectal exam every three months starting 07/15
MRI and rectal exam every six months starting 07/17
NED

skb
Posts: 100
Joined: Tue Mar 28, 2017 2:00 pm

Re: Rectal Cancer: Habr-Gama Watch and Wait Strategy to Avoid Surgery

Postby skb » Mon Feb 25, 2019 4:40 pm

Lakeswim,
Congratulations.

I had UHC insurance . There was no denial of payment after I hit my deductible

skb
3/21/17: Dx T3N0M0-mid rectal 4.5cm
4/18 to 5/22/17: chemoradiation- Xeloda and daily radiation (25 doses)
6/28/17: clean biopsy, clean scans
8/17: MRI - no evidence of tumor, no surgery, starts wait and watch
8/17 to 12/17: Folfox
8/19 VATS - 1cm lung nodule
7/17/21- Clean CT, CEA 15.6 !
8/24/21- PET , biopsy finds met along obturator lymph nodes
10/1/21- Surgery , 12 rounds of FOLFIRI -ended 4/22
4/15/22, 9/6/22. 1/20/23- Clean scan, normal CEA
10/23- four sub-centimeter lung nodules, all PET negative


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