Surgery, radiation, prognosis questions about my dad
Hello, my dad was recently diagnosed with stage IV non-small cell lung cancer. He had his first chemo/immunotherapy treatment (carboplatin, Alimta, Keytruda) a few days ago and is handling it well. I have gone to his doctor appointments with him and I am not crazy about how the doctor is approaching the conversations. My dad asked if he can fight this and the doctor told him he has seen cases of remission. That is the only information regarding prognosis. I would like to ask a lot of questions, but I’m honestly afraid of the answers and my dad hearing them. Right now he believes he can fight this and I want him to stay in that mindset. I want to ask about surgical options, radiation, as well as prognosis. After the first doctor appointment, I asked my dad about getting a second opinion, but he would prefer not to.
I am left reading and rereading his visit notes and test results and using Google as my guide. Not the smartest approach I know!
He has “Mediastinal and hilar lymphadenopathy: Rather extensive, large size. Due to lung cancer metastasis.” Brain MRI was negative thankfully. The tests that show whether or not he can have a targeted therapy were all negative.
I am here to see if anyone had surgery is a similar situation?
Should I just ask the questions at the next appointment?
I have seen some conversations here that people have been on Keytruda for a long time which is encouraging!
Any other words of wisdom are welcome.
Grateful for a place to share.
Interested in more discussions like this? Go to the Lung Cancer Support Group.
Yes, he had the testing, but no targeted therapy options exist “yet”. 🙂
So happy to hear your cancer isn’t spreading. Thank you for sharing.
Take care.
Thank you! He definitely likes the steroid boost he gets during his infusion visit. 🙂 That gives him some good energy for a few days!
Hi Lisa,
Thank you for this information. I read it when you first posted it and have taken your advice. I talked to my dad about how he wanted my help. He has since been asking more questions during the visits. If his doctor says something that I don’t understand I ask for clarification since my parents are probably wondering, too. It has been better.
The treatments are causing fatigue, but he has been a trooper. Not an easy one to keep down.
Thank you for sharing where you are in your cancer diagnosis and treatment. It definitely helps knowing how others are doing.
🤍
Hi Colleen, thank you for checking in. It took me a while to log back in here. I think I’m finally through the shock phase.
I so appreciate all the replies, helpful ideas, and those who have shared their own experiences.
My dad has had several appointments since my initial post and he’s getting answers and hope. We definitely had some miscommunications at the start. He was expecting four treatments and done. Looking back, that seems unrealistic, but again, we were in shock. He knows it’s a long road now.
Thank you again.
@supportfordad, Misconceptions during the initial diagnosis stage are very common. We can't know everything right up front, and the doctors can't know everything either. Patients react to treatments differently. I'm glad that he's settling into his treatment schedule and seems to be tolerating the treatment fairly well. Hugs.