← Return to Side effects from medication or progression of glioblastoma?

Discussion
Comment receiving replies
@ninawibb

My husband stopped them from giving any prognosis. He’s an ultra positive person and didn’t want to hear about it, at least initially. His symptoms are actually quite mild overall and the tumor was small to begin with so we’re hopeful that additional treatment will help. We will find out more about the treatment plan tomorrow when we meet with the MDA neuro oncologist. That must have been so hard for you and your husband, to have lost him so quickly. I hope they can find better treatments for people with glioblastoma and if we are able to tap into any clinical trials at MDA I will update.

Jump to this post


Replies to "My husband stopped them from giving any prognosis. He’s an ultra positive person and didn’t want..."

Your situation sounds much better than ours did. I knew the moment they called me in the waiting area after the surgery that he wouldn’t live long. We went into the surgery alert knowing he had two fairly large tumors. They didn’t know what type they were so they did the craniotomy to see what type of tumors they were. For the surgery, they said they could just go in there and remove them and he would be fine. But they discovered they were GBM. Since he wasn’t in the best of health I knew he wouldn’t have long.