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Alive and "oh well" in the North

Posted: Tue Mar 12, 2019 11:09 am
by CanadianGirl
It has been awhile since I have been here but thought I would give an update on how the "do nothing" approach has been working for me. I try to jump in periodically at least around the anniversary of my HIPEC operation to update those who remember me and give hope to those who have unfortunately found it necessary to become a member of this site. I was diagnosed stage III eleven years ago and stage IV nine years ago. I had chemo and then HIPEC in 2011 but the cancer returned six months later. I chose not to do chemo pills or radiation at that time and opted to take the wait and see approach. This worked well for two years as the tumours were growing slowly. By 2013 the inoperable tumour reached a size that my doctors and I felt we should try to do something about. I did about 26 rounds of radiation and we successfully shrunk the tumour down. Last month marked the 8th anniversary since HIPEC and the 6th since radiation. My CEA has always been a good indicator of growth and has remained stable. However my latest scan has shown growth so we threw me through another PET scan which showed that my tumour was growing substantially again. We have discussed several options and surgery is not possible, radiation again is out of the question and aggressive chemo probably is not a great idea because I didn't complete all rounds the first time. We are thinking about Xeloda or alternatively, five consecutive days of 5FU injections then 23 days off for 3 months. Has anyone else done this? In any case, I have already had ten more years than expected, my QOL has been wonderful and this is not over yet. There are lots of long term survivors out there and there is always hope. Keep on Living Life!

Re: Alive and "oh well" in the North

Posted: Tue Mar 12, 2019 12:59 pm
by Kbee816
So sorry you are to the point of needing treatment again, but what an amazing story! Even a year without treatment seems like a dream to me, that you’ve had several gives me hope to keep dreaming:)! Did you do any other alternative therapies during your “wait and see” period? Prayers for clarity as you look for your next step...

Re: Alive and "oh well" in the North

Posted: Tue Mar 12, 2019 7:27 pm
by CanadianGirl
Hi,
I did not do any other treatments of any kind...completely drug free...unless you count beer. I hope things go well for you too. It is a struggle but thanks to chemobrain I seem to have forgotten the bad parts. Reading through some of these post brings some things back though and it is good for me to remember what to expect for example, I still have some neuropathy but I hope I won't need mittens to open the fridge this time.

Re: Alive and "oh well" in the North

Posted: Tue Mar 12, 2019 8:04 pm
by Pyro
You signature says terminal in 2010??

Re: Alive and "oh well" in the North

Posted: Wed Mar 13, 2019 2:49 am
by stu
Fantastic to hear from you . Despite a difficult diagnosis some people just keep defying the odds . You have a wonderful approach and I am sure there is many good times ahead once you are over this latest bump ,

My mum does that weird thing too where all the bad bits seem to be quickly forgotten. I find it really strange as they are still etched firmly in my mind . But it has allowed her to really enjoy her life .

Take care,

Stu

Re: Alive and "oh well" in the North

Posted: Wed Mar 13, 2019 7:32 am
by Maggie Nell
Pyro wrote:You signature says terminal in 2010??



Reckon the doctors back then didn't count on CanadianGirl taking their pessimism and telling them to
stick it where the sun don't shine. :twisted:

Re: Alive and "oh well" in the North

Posted: Sat Aug 10, 2019 5:51 am
by Siti
Our oncologist have also suggested a wait and see approach. My husband had his colon resection 3 weeks ago but several distant lymph nodes seem to lit up in his PET scan. They can’t confirm metastasis without biopsy.

The oncologist said perhaps we should wait to see if the lymph nodes grow, if it does, we could start the chemo then to see if they shrink so that we know for sure the chemo works.

I found that approach to be extremely risky because if it does shrink, ok good, but what if it doesn’t? Wouldn’t that run the risk of further spread and time totally wasted before they try a different treatment?

Re: Alive and "oh well" in the North

Posted: Sat Aug 10, 2019 8:38 pm
by Canada777
I'm just seeing this post now. Thank you so much for sharing your story. It gives me hope! My husband is stage IV, had Hipec, and a small recurrence 9months after. So glad to know that several more years is a real possibility sometimes! It will be 4 years since diagnosis for him at the end of this year.