How long was the time between diagnosis to surgery for you?
Was diagnosed on 11/18 with colon cancer. My surgery is on 1/31. It’s not spread to other organs as seen in Ct scan. I’m
Just curious to how long it took for others to get a surgery date. Mine is 2 months and two weeks. I don’t know if that’s good or way too long to wait. They have nothing earlier available.
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Hi Everyone
I am South African and live in Johannesburg.
I had a colonoscopy on Thursday 11 August 2022 Gastroenterologist found a tumor. Biopsies were taken and the following day I was informed that it was malignant. My doctor said I needed surgery asap and he put me in touch with the top laprascopic doctor in the country. I was admitted on Monday 15th August and sent for CT scan with contrast- which was clear Bloods were pulled as well- also clear
surgery was done that afternoon. I had a right hemicolectomy.
I started preventative/precautionary chemotherapy called FOLFOX on 19 September
2022. It's been vicious and I am bed ridden for 10 days after each treatment. The Neupogen made me feel like my bones were exploding..
I'm one of the minority of people who responds very badly but I am managing my symptoms with Tramadol, ondansetron and imodium.
It's not easy but it's a small price to pay for my health.
Sending strength and courage to you all.
Dr. Keely Owen
I had surgery 4 days after diagnosis. Our private health care in South Africa is phenomenal.
I was diagnosed with stage 3 rectal cancer in May 2018. I had six months of chemotherapy and radiation. I had colostomy surgery in February 2019. In October 2022 doctor told me that the cancer had returned so I am now getting chemotherapy again.
All the best with your follow up appointment today, @ruthg. How is your recovery from surgery going?
I had my pre op yesterday and they didn’t give me an ekg. Does that seem normal? I should have asked but didn’t think if it until after the fact
Why do some people get surgery before chemo, and some, many months after? Is there an answer to this other than “that’s what the doctor thinks is best?” Are there any rules that doctors follow when coming up with their approach that are evidence based? My cousin was diagnosed a few weeks ago and they want to do chemo pills for 3 months and radiation and then I believe 6 months later, do surgery. The tumor is ~5 centimeters (I think) and they say it’s stage 2. It just doesn’t make sense to me to wait to take it out, but hey, I’m not a doctor. Thanks.
@nikodean, there are guidelines that doctors follow to help with treatment decision-making. Chemo before surgery is called neoadjuvant chemotherapy. Chemo after surgery is adjuvant chemotherapy.
This article explains some of the reasons one may be used over the other for cancer like colon cancer, rectal cancer, breast cancer, pancreatic cancer and others.
- What's the difference: Adjuvant and neoadjuvant therapies https://www.cancercenter.com/community/blog/2019/01/whats-the-difference-adjuvant-and-neoadjuvant-therapies
Many stage 2 colon cancers have grown through the wall of the colon, and maybe into nearby tissue, but they have not spread to the lymph nodes. It is possible that they wish to shrink your cousin's tumor with chemo and radiation to make sure they can extract the tumor cleanly. This is a great question to ask the cancer team.
Has your cousin started treatment yet?
Hello
I've finished my colonoscopy and they found sections that I'm told should be removed. I am hesitant about surgery and want to find other options if available but not neglect the chance of cancer. does anyone have a suggestion as to the best place to go for a second opinion? My doctor has no problem with me getting any additional advice, I've known him for several years and he's taking good care of me and understands why I may want a second opinion.
thanks for your information, trying to stay calm and focused on what is next.
C
Did they say why they recommend removing section? Is there suspicious tissue? A structure? When they say sections, that means they are recommending a bowel resection, not removal. So that’s a positive. Do you have access to a Mayo Clinic or MD Anderson? I saw both and had surgery at MD Anderson because our insurance did not cover Mayo. One thing I will say is having the surgery as a planned surgery is always better than waiting and doing it on an emergent basis. Because I had a partial obstruction, I could not edit long, but still had to wait almost a month. During that time, I had to live on a very soft diet. It was nerve wracking and stressful.
Surgery is never a fun option, but I’ve had multiple surgeries and the recovery from the planned ones has always been easier than the ones done as emergency.
no surgery. Just checking to see if I have cancer