36 Rads
Just an observation... seems the standard is 35 rads. I wonder why they are having my husband do 36 . I don't know how many GYs.
Comments
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how many?
Chicklette,
I had 35 and I was always a pleasure to be around. Were you?
Just kidding, if it takes 36, than 36 it shall be. Some have less than 30 (what is up with that).
Maybe, this is an indicator of things to come and your husband will have less side effects. I do hope so.
Time for a snack.
Bye.
Matt
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Of course!CivilMatt said:how many?
Chicklette,
I had 35 and I was always a pleasure to be around. Were you?
Just kidding, if it takes 36, than 36 it shall be. Some have less than 30 (what is up with that).
Maybe, this is an indicator of things to come and your husband will have less side effects. I do hope so.
Time for a snack.
Bye.
Matt
Everyone loves the pleasure of my company . My husband will start treatments on Monday so we will see how he does. It could just be the standard for this particular doctor or hospital. It's a major cancer center. They also never put in feeding tubes as a general standard. They said that 80% of their patients don't end up needing them. Of course, if you do, they will get you one. I know many hospitals just put them in before you even start treatment.
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Rads
Your chemo and rads work to enhance each other. So when your chemo ends, usually its about 3-5 days of radiation left. I truly don't believe the # of rads differ to much. If your getting 7 weeks of chemo you are probably going end up with at least 7 weeks of radiation. Heck maybe the last one is the important one. Don't sweat the small stuff.
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33 rads
My husband had 33 days of IMRT, Gy of 66, along with 3 doses of concurrent Carboplatin. He had stage IV tonsil cancer, HPV and P16 positive. I think the dose/days is based on the pathology report as to the type of tumor, the extent of the cancer's spread and the chemo of choice. This, along with your oncologist's prefrences and the equipment used, would explain the variation in days of treatment. I would trust the oncology team as to what totals work best for your particular situation. We are 2 years out and grateful to be NED. Best of luck with your treatment
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50 rads
My husband had 50 rads. Two a day while in patient with a concurrent chemo IV for 5 days over a time period of 10 weeks. He did not have a feeding tube. I don't know what is standard, but this is what the University of Chicago recommended. He is now 4+ years post treatment and doing great.
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