Mass found Suspected Stage 4 Esophageal Cancer squamous cell

Posted by tbkomparda @tbkomparda, Jan 17 5:21pm

Hello,
My Husband had a colonoscopy/endoscopy yesterday a mass the suspects esophageal cancer while we await biopsy results we have been referred to a medical oncologist who specializes in this type tomorrow his symptoms over the last 5 months have been anemia, weight loss and most recently a lot of belching he can swallow fine our hospital is NW Chicago who has a proton center as an Ovarian Cancer Survivor myself I a bit familiar with chemo but not with this type as I’m very scared would appreciate any info on treatment protocol and survivor stories thank you!

Interested in more discussions like this? Go to the Esophageal Cancer Support Group.

@tbkomparda

My Husband had his routine Endoscopy/Colonoscopy also last week he was immediately referred the next day to an oncologist a day later he had a CT Scan tomorrow a Pet Scan and next week an endoscopy with CT to stage. Our center has a Patient Coordinator that scheduled all of them perhaps you can inquire with your center to speak with one.

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Thank you!

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@mlyles

I had an upper GI scope last Thursday. The general surgeon came in told me that I had a malignancy in my esophagus. He then took a biopsy and told me he would get the results the next week (this week), but didn't schedule an appointment with him until January 30th. In many of the posts I've seen, the patient was immediately referred to an oncologist. I have not yet. Should I take the initiative and contact someone to get into an oncologist? I'm a little freaked out and it was a tough weekend and I feel like I should do something.

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Where our healthcare is concerned, we need to be our own advocate, plus anyone else who can help you. My sister had a esophageal cancer diagnosis which turned out to be stage IVb, for one reason or another it was over a month before her chemo started (to which she is reacting well) and during this time, the spots (mets) on her liver multiplied. She got into City of Hope and seems to be doing better…she can now eat and swallow, has appetite 2 months into her treatment.

I sure hope things go well for you…..there are many, many encouraging tales of survival on this forum. Don’t get discouraged, just don’t delay in getting treatment. The things I’ve seen here are inspiring. I can’t help but think and pray we’re on the brink of finding a cure.

All my best to you,
Aimee

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@aimeevuk

Where our healthcare is concerned, we need to be our own advocate, plus anyone else who can help you. My sister had a esophageal cancer diagnosis which turned out to be stage IVb, for one reason or another it was over a month before her chemo started (to which she is reacting well) and during this time, the spots (mets) on her liver multiplied. She got into City of Hope and seems to be doing better…she can now eat and swallow, has appetite 2 months into her treatment.

I sure hope things go well for you…..there are many, many encouraging tales of survival on this forum. Don’t get discouraged, just don’t delay in getting treatment. The things I’ve seen here are inspiring. I can’t help but think and pray we’re on the brink of finding a cure.

All my best to you,
Aimee

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Hi Aimee,
So happy to hear your Sister is doing better City of Hope is supposed to be excellent we've been going thru a lot of tests which were scheduled right away after his routine endoscopy I'm sure that could be why it takes a month before you start treatment. I can't thank you enough for giving me hope and the stories you've heard are inspiring.

I'm finishing my last treatment on Friday for an Ovarian Cancer recurrence I'm back in remission seems surreal to me I'm thankful that I've learned how to navigate a cancer journey.

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@aimeevuk

Where our healthcare is concerned, we need to be our own advocate, plus anyone else who can help you. My sister had a esophageal cancer diagnosis which turned out to be stage IVb, for one reason or another it was over a month before her chemo started (to which she is reacting well) and during this time, the spots (mets) on her liver multiplied. She got into City of Hope and seems to be doing better…she can now eat and swallow, has appetite 2 months into her treatment.

I sure hope things go well for you…..there are many, many encouraging tales of survival on this forum. Don’t get discouraged, just don’t delay in getting treatment. The things I’ve seen here are inspiring. I can’t help but think and pray we’re on the brink of finding a cure.

All my best to you,
Aimee

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Thank you Aimee!

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Hello,
I have posted in the last week regarding my Husband's diagnosis a couple of you were kind enough to give me their contact but after the barrage of tests we've went thru this week I don't have it in me we've had CT/Pet Scan/Endoscopy with CT and a lymph node biopsy on the 15th. We saw the Oncologist today as the Endo CT was staged at 3A2 she told us there are a few lymph nodes in the sub clavicle that although don't seem enlarged lit up on the Pet Scan she told us that if they come back positive, he's basically a stage 4 and incurable they don't do surgery I'm all for honesty but really did not like her demeanor I told her from what I've read and the GI guy that initially did the biopsy said squamous cell is very sensitive to Chemo/radiation and why wouldn't proton be an option for the lymph nodes this is a University hospital we do live in a Chicago suburb and could go to Mayo Rochester for a consult needless to say we are beside ourselves any positive stories I can show my Husband.

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@tbkomparda

Hello,
I have posted in the last week regarding my Husband's diagnosis a couple of you were kind enough to give me their contact but after the barrage of tests we've went thru this week I don't have it in me we've had CT/Pet Scan/Endoscopy with CT and a lymph node biopsy on the 15th. We saw the Oncologist today as the Endo CT was staged at 3A2 she told us there are a few lymph nodes in the sub clavicle that although don't seem enlarged lit up on the Pet Scan she told us that if they come back positive, he's basically a stage 4 and incurable they don't do surgery I'm all for honesty but really did not like her demeanor I told her from what I've read and the GI guy that initially did the biopsy said squamous cell is very sensitive to Chemo/radiation and why wouldn't proton be an option for the lymph nodes this is a University hospital we do live in a Chicago suburb and could go to Mayo Rochester for a consult needless to say we are beside ourselves any positive stories I can show my Husband.

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Don't worry about any doctor's demeanor... because statistically she is correct. But it matters little. What matters is getting treatments going and see how he responds... who've no doctor can predict. They just prescribe the treatments and then wait til the next scan comes in... as they live scan to scan, just like us patients do. I know many stage 4s who are doing just fine 3, 4, 5, 6 years later... totally NED! You wanna chat with a few? Just pop on our free Zoom calls... we hold these twice-weekly. Next one is Sunday at 9am Eastern. But even these stage 4s still think of themselves as stage 4s... they know their cancer got out of the esophagus and has appeared in far off lymph nodes and organs. Nothing can change that fact... other than they find a chemo and immunotherapy regimen that took care of business. They no longer do chemo, but some continue their 30 minute immunotherapy infusions every 3 or 6 weeks as they believe it is what is keeping them NED. Sure, they probably don't have to any longer... but can't say I blame them. I think one guy is on his 83rd Herceptin infusion... another is on his 103rd Keytruda infusion. But since they see little to no side effects they figure why not. Don't ask me about insurance and the 1 to 2 year infusion protocol... I have no clue! They just keep paying... nice!

Ok... I'm not a stage 4... just a plain ol vanilla stage 3, T3N1M0 staged EC patient, still on my own journey. But I'm in my 4th year post-op... gotta shot now... eating fairly normally... sleeping and pooping pretty normally too. Go figure. But... we don't sugarcoat on our Zoom calls... we give you real tangible advice and guidance... because we've talked with hundreds of our fellow patients and caregivers. Not much we haven't seen.

Hang tough,

Gary
Southern California

REPLY
@mrgvw

Don't worry about any doctor's demeanor... because statistically she is correct. But it matters little. What matters is getting treatments going and see how he responds... who've no doctor can predict. They just prescribe the treatments and then wait til the next scan comes in... as they live scan to scan, just like us patients do. I know many stage 4s who are doing just fine 3, 4, 5, 6 years later... totally NED! You wanna chat with a few? Just pop on our free Zoom calls... we hold these twice-weekly. Next one is Sunday at 9am Eastern. But even these stage 4s still think of themselves as stage 4s... they know their cancer got out of the esophagus and has appeared in far off lymph nodes and organs. Nothing can change that fact... other than they find a chemo and immunotherapy regimen that took care of business. They no longer do chemo, but some continue their 30 minute immunotherapy infusions every 3 or 6 weeks as they believe it is what is keeping them NED. Sure, they probably don't have to any longer... but can't say I blame them. I think one guy is on his 83rd Herceptin infusion... another is on his 103rd Keytruda infusion. But since they see little to no side effects they figure why not. Don't ask me about insurance and the 1 to 2 year infusion protocol... I have no clue! They just keep paying... nice!

Ok... I'm not a stage 4... just a plain ol vanilla stage 3, T3N1M0 staged EC patient, still on my own journey. But I'm in my 4th year post-op... gotta shot now... eating fairly normally... sleeping and pooping pretty normally too. Go figure. But... we don't sugarcoat on our Zoom calls... we give you real tangible advice and guidance... because we've talked with hundreds of our fellow patients and caregivers. Not much we haven't seen.

Hang tough,

Gary
Southern California

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Gary Thank you your response gives us hope I don't think my Husband is up to the Zoom calls mentally trying to wrap is head around it. Do I access the Zoom calls thru this website? Also I was watching a youtube video of a survivor of stage 4 that had cryotherapy? Do you have any knowledge of this treatment? Thanks a bunch Tammy

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@tbkomparda

Hello,
I have posted in the last week regarding my Husband's diagnosis a couple of you were kind enough to give me their contact but after the barrage of tests we've went thru this week I don't have it in me we've had CT/Pet Scan/Endoscopy with CT and a lymph node biopsy on the 15th. We saw the Oncologist today as the Endo CT was staged at 3A2 she told us there are a few lymph nodes in the sub clavicle that although don't seem enlarged lit up on the Pet Scan she told us that if they come back positive, he's basically a stage 4 and incurable they don't do surgery I'm all for honesty but really did not like her demeanor I told her from what I've read and the GI guy that initially did the biopsy said squamous cell is very sensitive to Chemo/radiation and why wouldn't proton be an option for the lymph nodes this is a University hospital we do live in a Chicago suburb and could go to Mayo Rochester for a consult needless to say we are beside ourselves any positive stories I can show my Husband.

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Good morning. I would go to Mayo. I was diagnosed stage 3 in 2020, did their radiation and proton beam radiation followed by esophagectomy. I was told the same thing about not operating on stage 4 but my surgeon told me she would operate even at stage 4. 4 years later I am healthier that I was pre-diagnosis. Eating habits changed but there is life after cancer. Quality of life is good. I am 70 years young. I will pray for your husband as he deals with his battle.

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@tbkomparda

Gary Thank you your response gives us hope I don't think my Husband is up to the Zoom calls mentally trying to wrap is head around it. Do I access the Zoom calls thru this website? Also I was watching a youtube video of a survivor of stage 4 that had cryotherapy? Do you have any knowledge of this treatment? Thanks a bunch Tammy

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I'll take this privately...

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@tbkomparda

Hello,
I have posted in the last week regarding my Husband's diagnosis a couple of you were kind enough to give me their contact but after the barrage of tests we've went thru this week I don't have it in me we've had CT/Pet Scan/Endoscopy with CT and a lymph node biopsy on the 15th. We saw the Oncologist today as the Endo CT was staged at 3A2 she told us there are a few lymph nodes in the sub clavicle that although don't seem enlarged lit up on the Pet Scan she told us that if they come back positive, he's basically a stage 4 and incurable they don't do surgery I'm all for honesty but really did not like her demeanor I told her from what I've read and the GI guy that initially did the biopsy said squamous cell is very sensitive to Chemo/radiation and why wouldn't proton be an option for the lymph nodes this is a University hospital we do live in a Chicago suburb and could go to Mayo Rochester for a consult needless to say we are beside ourselves any positive stories I can show my Husband.

Jump to this post

Thank you Henry
Great News! Thank you for your prayers can you tell me the name of your surgeon?

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