My son's neuroendocrine tumor
My 17yr old son suffered a ruptured appendix. After surgery to remove his appendix, pathology found a neuroendocrine tumor in it. And 1 of the 3 lymph nodes that came out with the appendix had less than 3 percent cancer cells in it. We are waiting 6 months for things to heal inside then having a pet scan done to see if it had spread anywhere else. Has anyone else had this? If so did it spread? I understand this is pretty rare for a child to get this tumor.
Interested in more discussions like this? Go to the Neuroendocrine Tumors (NETs) Support Group.
@lendries
Since my NETs were in the duodenal bulb (upper part of the digestive tract) they were only found with an upper endoscopy. They put an endoscope down the the esophagus (it has a camera on it) and they pass it through the stomach and through the duodenal bulb. Then they can see and biopsy the NET.
Yikes. THREE in the same place? Has your specialist ventured any theories why you keep getting them? Does the small size of yours mean, as in my case, the likelihood it has spead is small? Do you have an annual upper GI like I have an annual colonoscopy?
No, @mgreene. My upper endoscopies are done every two years now, unless a new one is found, then it is done six months after the surgery. The small size is considered to have a low metastasis threat. However, all the medical folks were a little surprised by the last one in 2016 as it had been over 13 years since the last surgery. I was considered free of recurrence after 10 years however, that was not the case. NETs are very slow growing so I don't know if anyone of us should ever stop checking for them. However, that is just my opinion and is based on my own situation and it is definitely not a medical opinion.
That is so great that you advocated for yourself and found a NET specialist, @mgreene. Yes, those "errant cells" can cause problems.
@hopeful32250 I reviewed the list of Mayo NET Specialists and my doctors name is not on it (Dr. Henry Pitot). Now this bothers me.gaylejean
Well, I imagine this is a blow. You will have to trust your mother’s instinct. I was not treated at Mayo so I cannot offer you personal experience. Perhaps someone else knows this doctor? As someone who went through this twice and had to educate my own local non-specialist docs (admittedly in 2005), however, I felt vast relief when I consulted with a specialist on that list. If nothing else, I would tell your son’s doc that you are seeking a second-opinion consult with someone on that list. If you decide you feel more comfortable with the specialist, then switch. If all the insurance issues are in your favor, of course.
@gaylejean, I'm guessing that your doctor is consulting with the NETs specialists at Mayo, but to be sure, why not ask?
@gaylejean, here is a link to Dr. Pitot Mayo Clinic profile https://www.mayoclinic.org/biographies/pitot-henry-c-m-d/bio-20053913 His specialties include:
- Gastrointestinal cancers
- Esophagus/gastroesophageal junction or gastric cancers
- Pancreatic cancer
- Neuroendocrine cancer
Important to keep in mind is that specialists at Mayo Clinic work together in multi-disciplinary team with the patient at the center of the care team. This means that every patient at Mayo benefits from the expertise, experience and knowledge of a collective group of experts. You can read more about Cancer Care at Mayo here: https://www.mayoclinic.org/tests-procedures/cancer-treatment/care-at-mayo-clinic/pcc-20393350
Maybe the list is not up to date.
You're probably right, @mgreene. Lists like these can be a challenge to keep up to date. Organizations appreciate being notified when there are updates to help maintain them.
@hopeful33250, you or I could send them a note. I had to smile when I went to their contact page https://www.carcinoid.org/contact/
This was their latest tweet
https://twitter.com/CarcinoidNETs/status/1064960539649064962