Treatment Question. Pleae Help me.
I was diagnosed with Anal Cancer on July 7th. I am just now getting ready to start treatments. I have a question about treatment plan for 5-FU. I am being told that I will be getting 5-FU for 4 weeks straight then one week off and one more week after that. Everything I have read has lead me to believe it is given for one week at first and then another week at about the 5th week of treatment. Please let me know if I am just losing it or if I really need to question what is going on.
Comments
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Sunflower Lady
So sorry your diagnosis has brought you here. Please go to the following site, register, and then you'll have access to the most up-to-date treatment guidelines for anal cancer. www.NCCN.org The usual schedule for the 5FU is week one and week five. Please print out the guidelines from the NCCN site and discuss this with your doctor. If there is a different schedule for delivery of 5FU, I'm not aware of it and it does not appear in the guidelines. I wish you all the very best.
Martha
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Thank you all for your input.
Thank you all for your input. I am definitely going to go talk to the doctor before we start this process next week. My gut is telling me to get an answer asap. I did get a copy of 20115 protocol from a peer.
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Treatment
I had mytomycin and 5 FU in week one and week 5FU(wore fanny pack 24-7 I or 5 days) of treatment process. I was diagnosed as Stage 2 anal cancer in 2008.
Mike
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Sunflower Lady
Hi Sunflower Lady,
Where are you being treated/
i wonder if your Dr is planning to use Xeloda, which is the pill form of 5-Fu and is usually given 5 days a week concurently with radiation. I had mitomycin and Xeloda on day 1 (and radiation) and then Xeloda and radiation M-F. For some reason, I didn't get the second infusion of Mitomycin in the last week.
This was the third protocol listed in the NCCN guidelines; I think it's Canadian.
I requested Xeloda because I thought pills would be easier than a fanny pack. I read that Sloan-Kettering had been using Xeloda for the last few years and found it resultd in less heme toxicity.
DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.ijrobp.2014.05.141 (article abstract of Memorial Sloan Kettering studyConclusions
An adequately powered non-inferiority comparison of cape vs 5-FU is not numerically feasible in ASCC. Our data suggest that cape is associated with decreased Grade 3/4 heme toxicity when compared to standard 5-FU for pts undergoing definitive CRT for ASCC. The reduction in treatment breaks due to heme toxicity may be expected to yield improved outcomes. Moreover, since cape with MMC appears to be better tolerated, this regimen may serve as a backbone for further studies evaluating novel agents with CRT for ASCC.
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I am on 5-FU. My doctor chosetanda said:Sunflower Lady
Hi Sunflower Lady,
Where are you being treated/
i wonder if your Dr is planning to use Xeloda, which is the pill form of 5-Fu and is usually given 5 days a week concurently with radiation. I had mitomycin and Xeloda on day 1 (and radiation) and then Xeloda and radiation M-F. For some reason, I didn't get the second infusion of Mitomycin in the last week.
This was the third protocol listed in the NCCN guidelines; I think it's Canadian.
I requested Xeloda because I thought pills would be easier than a fanny pack. I read that Sloan-Kettering had been using Xeloda for the last few years and found it resultd in less heme toxicity.
DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.ijrobp.2014.05.141 (article abstract of Memorial Sloan Kettering studyConclusions
An adequately powered non-inferiority comparison of cape vs 5-FU is not numerically feasible in ASCC. Our data suggest that cape is associated with decreased Grade 3/4 heme toxicity when compared to standard 5-FU for pts undergoing definitive CRT for ASCC. The reduction in treatment breaks due to heme toxicity may be expected to yield improved outcomes. Moreover, since cape with MMC appears to be better tolerated, this regimen may serve as a backbone for further studies evaluating novel agents with CRT for ASCC.
I am on 5-FU. My doctor chose this protocol because he has found that the side effects are much less. Also he explained that the medicine only lives for 30 minutes in your system. So getting all of it in one week is not much help when doing radiation. They feel having the chemo in your system while doing radiation helps. I am getting the same amount of medicine in 4 weeks that I would have gotten in one week. It is just spread out over time and in much smaller doses. I have had my chemo for 2 weeks. I have not been sick once yet. (Knock on woood) I am just now starting to feel the effects of radiation. Still have a long way to go but am glad to be on the right path.
I hope that this may help others that may have to go through this. Something to talk to you doctors about. I will let you know how it all turns out.
Thanks again for all the support.
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TreatmentSunflowerLady said:I am on 5-FU. My doctor chose
I am on 5-FU. My doctor chose this protocol because he has found that the side effects are much less. Also he explained that the medicine only lives for 30 minutes in your system. So getting all of it in one week is not much help when doing radiation. They feel having the chemo in your system while doing radiation helps. I am getting the same amount of medicine in 4 weeks that I would have gotten in one week. It is just spread out over time and in much smaller doses. I have had my chemo for 2 weeks. I have not been sick once yet. (Knock on woood) I am just now starting to feel the effects of radiation. Still have a long way to go but am glad to be on the right path.
I hope that this may help others that may have to go through this. Something to talk to you doctors about. I will let you know how it all turns out.
Thanks again for all the support.
I am so glad you have started treatment.
Are you taking the 5 fu in pill form?
have you had the mitomycin?
what stage are you?
I hope you pass thru treatment without or minimal side effects.
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Treatment
It's been almost two years since my treatment for anal cancer stopped and I am NED. As I recall I had six (6) weeks of radiation, 5 times a week for about 15 minutes a treatment. And I had chemo administered through a PiCC line, seven (7) days each for the first and sixth weeks. I honestly don't think it was the 1st and 5th for me. But crazy as it sounds, we had the Thanksgiving holiday in there and that threw a couple days off. Humph! I'm scratchin' my head because I can't remember.
You will do fine. It goes by faster than you think. And you will get so much TLC from the nursing staff. And you and other cancer patients at the hospital will find each other and bond. That's the beauty in going through the treatment, when you can offer love and support to another who you don't even know.
Jesus loves you, and so do I.
CB
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Stage 2 treatment experience
So, I was diagnosed July 7th, 2015 with stage 2 anal cancer. I followed all the protocol for treatment. I had 31 days of radiation, Monday thru Friday, I will say this was not near as bad as I had imagined it would be. the only thing I did different then any thing I read or was told to do was I soaked three to four times a week in Dr. Teals Epsom salts. I would soak anywhere from 20 minutes to an hour. My favorite kind is Ginger and clay, for detox and energize. I had very little burning with radiation. I only used desitine maybe ten times total. I truly believe the soaks made a huge difference. As for my chemo it also was not a terrible experience. I went in, had the mitomyicin, then left with a pump full of 5FU to wear 24/7 for 4 weeks. I went in once a week for blood draws and refill. I then got a two week break. I now have it back on 24/7 for 17 more days. Having my treatment done this way almost completely eliminated side effects. I never got sick, I have not lost my hair, (knock on wood). I did struggle with fatigue, and chemo messed with my depression and anxiety med, but just added zanex to off set and I can deal better. I do take Ibuprophen PM at night to help my mind settle so I sleep better.
I just wanted to share my story. Cancer is not something any of us wanted to have to face. I stayed positive and followed my doctors advice and threw in a coulpe of my own relaxing remedies. Said a prayer every day. Now I am nearing the end of treatment and will soon be looking to have a clean slate again.
God Bless any one whos life has been touched by cancer of any kind. I know the true meaning of losing some one to cancer as i lost my mother to leukemia at the age of 7. I am now 52 and was blessed my body told me there was something wrong before it grew any farther. I thank God every day for that.
May all your days be filled with love and support.
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SunflowerLadySunflowerLady said:Stage 2 treatment experience
So, I was diagnosed July 7th, 2015 with stage 2 anal cancer. I followed all the protocol for treatment. I had 31 days of radiation, Monday thru Friday, I will say this was not near as bad as I had imagined it would be. the only thing I did different then any thing I read or was told to do was I soaked three to four times a week in Dr. Teals Epsom salts. I would soak anywhere from 20 minutes to an hour. My favorite kind is Ginger and clay, for detox and energize. I had very little burning with radiation. I only used desitine maybe ten times total. I truly believe the soaks made a huge difference. As for my chemo it also was not a terrible experience. I went in, had the mitomyicin, then left with a pump full of 5FU to wear 24/7 for 4 weeks. I went in once a week for blood draws and refill. I then got a two week break. I now have it back on 24/7 for 17 more days. Having my treatment done this way almost completely eliminated side effects. I never got sick, I have not lost my hair, (knock on wood). I did struggle with fatigue, and chemo messed with my depression and anxiety med, but just added zanex to off set and I can deal better. I do take Ibuprophen PM at night to help my mind settle so I sleep better.
I just wanted to share my story. Cancer is not something any of us wanted to have to face. I stayed positive and followed my doctors advice and threw in a coulpe of my own relaxing remedies. Said a prayer every day. Now I am nearing the end of treatment and will soon be looking to have a clean slate again.
God Bless any one whos life has been touched by cancer of any kind. I know the true meaning of losing some one to cancer as i lost my mother to leukemia at the age of 7. I am now 52 and was blessed my body told me there was something wrong before it grew any farther. I thank God every day for that.
May all your days be filled with love and support.
Thanks for sharing the details of your treatment protocol with us. I'm glad your side effects were not as bad as what I and other have experienced. Perhaps the info you have provided will help someone in the future. I hope you continue to do well and that your recovery is a smooth journey back to good health!
Martha
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waitingSunflowerLady said:Stage 2 treatment experience
So, I was diagnosed July 7th, 2015 with stage 2 anal cancer. I followed all the protocol for treatment. I had 31 days of radiation, Monday thru Friday, I will say this was not near as bad as I had imagined it would be. the only thing I did different then any thing I read or was told to do was I soaked three to four times a week in Dr. Teals Epsom salts. I would soak anywhere from 20 minutes to an hour. My favorite kind is Ginger and clay, for detox and energize. I had very little burning with radiation. I only used desitine maybe ten times total. I truly believe the soaks made a huge difference. As for my chemo it also was not a terrible experience. I went in, had the mitomyicin, then left with a pump full of 5FU to wear 24/7 for 4 weeks. I went in once a week for blood draws and refill. I then got a two week break. I now have it back on 24/7 for 17 more days. Having my treatment done this way almost completely eliminated side effects. I never got sick, I have not lost my hair, (knock on wood). I did struggle with fatigue, and chemo messed with my depression and anxiety med, but just added zanex to off set and I can deal better. I do take Ibuprophen PM at night to help my mind settle so I sleep better.
I just wanted to share my story. Cancer is not something any of us wanted to have to face. I stayed positive and followed my doctors advice and threw in a coulpe of my own relaxing remedies. Said a prayer every day. Now I am nearing the end of treatment and will soon be looking to have a clean slate again.
God Bless any one whos life has been touched by cancer of any kind. I know the true meaning of losing some one to cancer as i lost my mother to leukemia at the age of 7. I am now 52 and was blessed my body told me there was something wrong before it grew any farther. I thank God every day for that.
May all your days be filled with love and support.
Just got diagnosed anot now have to wait two weeks to see the radiologist....seems so long. Thanks for yourr post...it helped to know you were diagnosed in July and did not start till September...is that right ?
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csalekcsalek said:waiting
Just got diagnosed anot now have to wait two weeks to see the radiologist....seems so long. Thanks for yourr post...it helped to know you were diagnosed in July and did not start till September...is that right ?
I was officially diagnosed on June 22nd. (back in 2008) and didn't start treatment until July 28th., about 5 weeks later. It was a very long wait, so I feel your anxiety. However, keep in mind that it takes time to get all of the preliminary things done prior to beginning treatment, such as staging, set up with an oncologist, etc. I know it seems like things are moving slowly right now and you just want to get started with treatment and get it done, however, you want the treatment to be correct and effective. Know that your medical team is gathering as much information as possible to get it right.
Martha
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Thanks Martha-I will try tomp327 said:csalek
I was officially diagnosed on June 22nd. (back in 2008) and didn't start treatment until July 28th., about 5 weeks later. It was a very long wait, so I feel your anxiety. However, keep in mind that it takes time to get all of the preliminary things done prior to beginning treatment, such as staging, set up with an oncologist, etc. I know it seems like things are moving slowly right now and you just want to get started with treatment and get it done, however, you want the treatment to be correct and effective. Know that your medical team is gathering as much information as possible to get it right.
Martha
Thanks Martha-I will try to relax. I did not know if it was longer then most....I know it was hard to get a radiologist appt...that is my longest wait. It iwll be about 6 weeks probably by the time I start treatment-right around Christmas !
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HiSunflowerLady said:Thank you all for your input.
Thank you all for your input. I am definitely going to go talk to the doctor before we start this process next week. My gut is telling me to get an answer asap. I did get a copy of 20115 protocol from a peer.
i had the pump for 4 days at the beginning and 4 days at the end. 5FU
along with 30 days of radiation.
Question them
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