← Return to Liver metastasis after oropharyngeal squamous cell carcinoma (OPSCC)

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I had a wedge resection of my liver on January 30th. I received the results today. The biopsy showed that it was a metastasis from my OPSCC, they removed the entire tumour and it had clear margins. The oncologist says that I am “cancer-free” with no evidence of disease. He said we will continue to follow up with scans every 3-4 months, but for now, I do not require any treatment. He said that he believes that this is an oligometastasis and he obviously can’t make any guarantees, but said that I could potentially not have any further occurrences of metastases. He even used the term potentially cured. I am happy but still concerned about the future. I have a scan coming up, so we will see where we stand at that point but now I have some hope and am cautiously optimistic.

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Replies to "I had a wedge resection of my liver on January 30th. I received the results today...."

@scottmcf1431 Good news. The liver tends to regenerate as well. The worry about reoccurrence just means you are quite normal, as I don’t think any cancer survivor ever stops thinking about it. Glad they found what they found and had it removed. Good health to you.

Hello @scottmcf1431, I also have metastatic SCC. Beginning 18 mos after my initial surgery I have had 2 to my lung, one to a muscle sheath, and the last to a kidney and surrounding lymph nodes. While the lung wasn't surprising to the medical team, the kidney certainly was as it is an uncommon location for a met. While the original 3 were all removed surgically, the last was treated with Libtayo, an immunotherapy that works like Keytruda on the same pathway but proven to be more effective against skin vs mucous membrane sourced SCC. Mine began in my ear canal, not oral. In a year on Libtayo my new met was gone and I was on it for another year plus then stopped due to the appetite suppression side effect. I just had scans and still clear after 3 years off the drug. That is very encouraging to me. Years ago I had read that Metastatic SCC was not curable, and my Mayo oncology fellow at the time agreed. Perhaps with these new immunotherapies that will change and cure may be possible?
By staying on top of your condition with frequent scans and rechecks you are giving your medical team the opportunity to treat issues early and successfully. It is 14 years this spring for me, and I hope you are successful in maintaining control of your cancer for many more years than that. With new treatments being approved we continue to find success in living with cancer.