Biopsy on lymph node positive***UPDATE
for cancer, looks like colon cancer but cant be sure until we get pathology report~usually 48 hrs.
Even though we pretty much knew this before the biopsy, it was still hard to hear. I had my meltdown while Robert was in recovery and when
I went to drive around to pick him up, a transformer had blown in the dental school across the street from patient discharge and the road was blocked and hundreds of students/faculty were lining the streets and all I could do was drive around in circles trying to find another way in. Very chaotic.
So, as soon as I get results from biopsy and PET report, we are off to go see his original oncologist to see what can be done. I have no clue, since there is only one lymph node involved. Chemo? See his surgeon to see if we can just cut it out? None of his liver tumors lit up on the PET. Does that mean they are dead? Or can they start growing again??
I'll be glad when we get a plan and some answers.
I feel a little lost right now.
Comments
-
I am sorry to hear that. I
I am sorry to hear that. I have never had lymph node involvement but I have heard form others that it can be treated in a number of ways depending on the location. I have heard surgery SBRT, and ablation used on nodes. PET of the liver sounds promising but I think that is something that needs to be discussed with the oncologist to be sure.
0 -
So sorry you didn't get
So sorry you didn't get better news. My husband had some para aortic nodes light up at diagnosis over 2 yrs ago. They were removed , tested positive and he hasnt had any other nodes light up since. If they were biopsied, were they not removed?
0 -
It never ends does it?
I'm so sorry you are going through this, I can relate. My hsband was told in March he had two suspicious lymph nodes after he recovered from his 2nd resection in January. First resection in December 2012 in colon, second occurrence in small intestines removed in January. This was kind of a shock to us since no one had talked about this before. Former oncologist told us this from the hallway after we'd been waiting an hour and he had a phone in his ear. Great bedside manner. As we waited for him to come in, I said to my husband "It's time for that 2nd opinion" and the next day we switched to a bigger much better cancer center. They said the lymph nodes were distant from his original colon cancer and could not be removed in surgery. I kept asking why for several months. During his horrendous 21 day hospital stay in January, the surgeon did not even tell us it was cancer. The former oncologist finally came in to see him 5 days after surgery and I had called his office (connected to the hospital he was in) to tell them they removed another tumor. Mis-step after mis-step by pathetic hospital staff and former oncologist. I seem to be focusing on all those issues lately and wonder why there is so much needless suffering.
They told him the lymph node tumors were treatable but not curable, he started Folfiri in March.
Your husband's case will all depend on where the lymph nodes are. Hang in there, that's all we can do, right?
Linda
0 -
The proceeduejen2012 said:So sorry you didn't get
So sorry you didn't get better news. My husband had some para aortic nodes light up at diagnosis over 2 yrs ago. They were removed , tested positive and he hasnt had any other nodes light up since. If they were biopsied, were they not removed?
was an endoscopy with a needle aspiration. It could not be accessed from outside so they had to go thru his stomach. Very quick and uneventful proceedue..
0 -
Well, that is some good newsaggie0053 said:i had only one so they put me
i had only one so they put me on folfox with avastin for 12 treatments just finished last month, i've had 2 ct treatment 6 and 12 ned they can't find it so no surgery
Hope you did okay with the FOLFOX. Robert hasn't ever had it. He did FOLFIRI without the pump, and did okay...nausea, fatigue and hair loss.
Angela
0 -
Yup, hanging in thereLindaK. said:It never ends does it?
I'm so sorry you are going through this, I can relate. My hsband was told in March he had two suspicious lymph nodes after he recovered from his 2nd resection in January. First resection in December 2012 in colon, second occurrence in small intestines removed in January. This was kind of a shock to us since no one had talked about this before. Former oncologist told us this from the hallway after we'd been waiting an hour and he had a phone in his ear. Great bedside manner. As we waited for him to come in, I said to my husband "It's time for that 2nd opinion" and the next day we switched to a bigger much better cancer center. They said the lymph nodes were distant from his original colon cancer and could not be removed in surgery. I kept asking why for several months. During his horrendous 21 day hospital stay in January, the surgeon did not even tell us it was cancer. The former oncologist finally came in to see him 5 days after surgery and I had called his office (connected to the hospital he was in) to tell them they removed another tumor. Mis-step after mis-step by pathetic hospital staff and former oncologist. I seem to be focusing on all those issues lately and wonder why there is so much needless suffering.
They told him the lymph node tumors were treatable but not curable, he started Folfiri in March.
Your husband's case will all depend on where the lymph nodes are. Hang in there, that's all we can do, right?
Linda
We did get an appt with his first oncologist for next week. His trial doc is a lung oncologist and the colon onc. we saw for second opinion 2 years ago is a holier than thou pompous a$$.
Robert did FOLFIRI back when he first started tx in 2009. He tolerated it pretty well.
Its pretty frustrating when you have to deal with incompetence from your medical team...things are stressful enough.
Angela
0 -
I had
a lymph node false alarm. There was an attempt to do an endoscopic biopsy but when they got in there they got gun shy because it was near a large vein and artery. They didn't want to poke around with the biopsy needle. The biopsy doc also had a hard time even seeing which node they were talking about. It was gone in the next 2 scans! ( a high contrast ct and a pet. ) They all looked at me and shrugged. Even with gazillion dollar procedures and equipment the system is still not foolproof.
I was told however if it were positive the best thing to do is to cut it out.
Good Luck,
Easyflip/Richard
0 -
didn't lose my hair the pillsmukamom said:Well, that is some good news
Hope you did okay with the FOLFOX. Robert hasn't ever had it. He did FOLFIRI without the pump, and did okay...nausea, fatigue and hair loss.
Angela
didn't lose my hair the pills they gave me worked good against nausea, i really didn't have fatigue i worked thru it all. the only thing was cold, after treatment no cold drinks till about a week for me everyones different. good luck
0 -
Sorry
Sorry for the news and hoping that your oncologist will give you a good plan to get rid of that for good. It's a good thing that it sounds like you caught it early without it spreading to other nodes. You are in my thoughts.
Kim
0 -
Angelamukamom said:Yup, hanging in there
We did get an appt with his first oncologist for next week. His trial doc is a lung oncologist and the colon onc. we saw for second opinion 2 years ago is a holier than thou pompous a$$.
Robert did FOLFIRI back when he first started tx in 2009. He tolerated it pretty well.
Its pretty frustrating when you have to deal with incompetence from your medical team...things are stressful enough.
Angela
What were the biopsy results? Did you get them yet?
Have they given him an option to have it removed?
Lin
0 -
Biopsy wasAnnabelle41415 said:Sorry
Sorry for the news and hoping that your oncologist will give you a good plan to get rid of that for good. It's a good thing that it sounds like you caught it early without it spreading to other nodes. You are in my thoughts.
Kim
positive for metestatic colon cancer in that lymph node. We saw his onc. today and brought all his scans and labs and he recommened to start a new chemo mix of Zaltrap, irinotecan, and 5FU, the 5FU being on a 48 hr pump every 2 weeks. First infusion is next Tuesday.
Robert is happy to have a plan. We will assess with a scan in 8 weeks.
I wonder if he can have another port put in??
0 -
Zaltrapmukamom said:Biopsy was
positive for metestatic colon cancer in that lymph node. We saw his onc. today and brought all his scans and labs and he recommened to start a new chemo mix of Zaltrap, irinotecan, and 5FU, the 5FU being on a 48 hr pump every 2 weeks. First infusion is next Tuesday.
Robert is happy to have a plan. We will assess with a scan in 8 weeks.
I wonder if he can have another port put in??
Hey Angela be careful with this drug and keep vigilant and keep watch. It can be a tough drug to do I had some bleeding and discontinued it and it stopped. I could not find one nurse who did not get funny faces when I told them I was on it....they were concerned.
just wanted to give my buds my experience:)
good luck with it and I hope it works for you.
best to you both!
-Craig
0 -
Wishing Robert well
Muckamom,
My Oncologist recently threw the Zaltrap thought onto the table and I have a lot more research to do on that one. I have not had lymph node involvement myself and it sounds yucky. Please keep us updated on your progress.
Respectfully,
Art
0 -
I had my port put in twice,mukamom said:Biopsy was
positive for metestatic colon cancer in that lymph node. We saw his onc. today and brought all his scans and labs and he recommened to start a new chemo mix of Zaltrap, irinotecan, and 5FU, the 5FU being on a 48 hr pump every 2 weeks. First infusion is next Tuesday.
Robert is happy to have a plan. We will assess with a scan in 8 weeks.
I wonder if he can have another port put in??
and the second time I left it in for over a year after the last recurrence, just to be on the safe side. Had no problem with doing this.
I'm so sorry you guys are facing this again. I found my recurrences very hard to manage from an emotional perspective. It's so discouraging.
Big hugs to you both~AA
0 -
d' nodesmukamom said:Biopsy was
positive for metestatic colon cancer in that lymph node. We saw his onc. today and brought all his scans and labs and he recommened to start a new chemo mix of Zaltrap, irinotecan, and 5FU, the 5FU being on a 48 hr pump every 2 weeks. First infusion is next Tuesday.
Robert is happy to have a plan. We will assess with a scan in 8 weeks.
I wonder if he can have another port put in??
Our strategy for dealing with distant lymph nodes has been 24x365 oral chemo, targeted cimetidine, many natural inhibitors and more recently celecoxib with aggressive surgical removal if at all possible or findable.
0 -
Thanks Craig!Sundanceh said:Zaltrap
Hey Angela be careful with this drug and keep vigilant and keep watch. It can be a tough drug to do I had some bleeding and discontinued it and it stopped. I could not find one nurse who did not get funny faces when I told them I was on it....they were concerned.
just wanted to give my buds my experience:)
good luck with it and I hope it works for you.
best to you both!
-Craig
I did read up on zaltrap..looks like the same side effects he had with the avastin and trial drug. I will keep watch on how he's doing. We discussed all this and
Robert told me he'll fight through any side effects....I just don't think he realizes what it can do to a body.
I pray that you find relief from the pain. Thanks for taking time to reach out.
Angela
0 -
New updatefatbob2010 said:Wishing Robert well
Muckamom,
My Oncologist recently threw the Zaltrap thought onto the table and I have a lot more research to do on that one. I have not had lymph node involvement myself and it sounds yucky. Please keep us updated on your progress.
Respectfully,
Art
When researching zaltrap, the protocol was to have had a prior platiunum based regimen, and to my knowledege, Robert hasn't ever done the FOLFOX. So I called the onc office to question this, and does it make a difference...
Well, it does. As far as insurance is concerned. So, he will be starting FOLFOX next week with a pump for 48 hrs. No word yet on how many treatments or how often.
0 -
Thanks for the update.mukamom said:New update
When researching zaltrap, the protocol was to have had a prior platiunum based regimen, and to my knowledege, Robert hasn't ever done the FOLFOX. So I called the onc office to question this, and does it make a difference...
Well, it does. As far as insurance is concerned. So, he will be starting FOLFOX next week with a pump for 48 hrs. No word yet on how many treatments or how often.
Thanks for the update. Typically it is anywhere grom 8 to 12 treatments. I did 12 but have permenant nueropathy on the bottoms of my feet. It has been so long I harly notice now unless I walk outside barefooted.
0
Discussion Boards
- All Discussion Boards
- 6 CSN Information
- 6 Welcome to CSN
- 121.8K Cancer specific
- 2.8K Anal Cancer
- 446 Bladder Cancer
- 309 Bone Cancers
- 1.6K Brain Cancer
- 28.5K Breast Cancer
- 397 Childhood Cancers
- 27.9K Colorectal Cancer
- 4.6K Esophageal Cancer
- 1.2K Gynecological Cancers (other than ovarian and uterine)
- 13K Head and Neck Cancer
- 6.4K Kidney Cancer
- 671 Leukemia
- 792 Liver Cancer
- 4.1K Lung Cancer
- 5.1K Lymphoma (Hodgkin and Non-Hodgkin)
- 237 Multiple Myeloma
- 7.1K Ovarian Cancer
- 61 Pancreatic Cancer
- 487 Peritoneal Cancer
- 5.5K Prostate Cancer
- 1.2K Rare and Other Cancers
- 539 Sarcoma
- 730 Skin Cancer
- 653 Stomach Cancer
- 191 Testicular Cancer
- 1.5K Thyroid Cancer
- 5.8K Uterine/Endometrial Cancer
- 6.3K Lifestyle Discussion Boards