neoadjuvant chemoradiotherapy
I was looking around in Dr Google for info on weither neoadjuvant chemoradiotherapy is effective at downstaging rectal cancer. It seems
while one paper may say it does another may say it does not. This is my first post so be gentle please.
I was wondering if anyone else has had this treatment and what was their results if they would care to share them.
I have a detailed journal on my journey so far but i figured you may not want to read it.
Thanks in advance for your replies.
Chickspeed
Comments
-
Perspective
I too had chemo radiation to address at T2N0M0 low rectal tumer (6 cm from anal verge). I also had a complete clinical response to treatment which was 28 radiation doses and chem of 5FU administered thru a portable infusion pump for 24x7. Had LAR surgery in April and pathology revealed I was now T0N0M0. My research showed favorable results in shrinking tumors and/or having a complete response in many cases. My dr. felt it was worth it to at least shrink the tumor to give more space to work and prevent permenant colostomy. I have a temp ileostomy now to allow healing of the connection. Expect reversal in about 3 months or so. I still had to go thru LAR as the only way to absolutely know the stage and if LN impacted. Simple excision would have left doubt about LN's. A lot to consider, but am glad I went the path of pre chemo/rad to address the tumor.
Scott
0 -
I don't want to push my luck
I don't want to push my luck with questions but could I ask what your timelines were from discovery to where you are now in treatment.
I sometimes get the idead that things should be moving a little faster, but then I am the one feeling the urgence of having the tumour.
Would it bother anyone if I posted my total experience so far?
0 -
Most of us post our storiesChickspeed said:I don't want to push my luck
I don't want to push my luck with questions but could I ask what your timelines were from discovery to where you are now in treatment.
I sometimes get the idead that things should be moving a little faster, but then I am the one feeling the urgence of having the tumour.
Would it bother anyone if I posted my total experience so far?
Most of us post our stories on our profile page, so others can easily check the details and progress. You just click on our blog name. If you want to put it all down for present and future reference, click on your name and go to the "about me" subtitle.........................Dave
0 -
Hit "edit", then "about me"..beaumontdave said:Most of us post our stories
Most of us post our stories on our profile page, so others can easily check the details and progress. You just click on our blog name. If you want to put it all down for present and future reference, click on your name and go to the "about me" subtitle.........................Dave
Hit "edit", then "about me"...................................Dave
0 -
My Case
Chickspeed - I waw Dx 10/2016 thru routine colonoscopy (had turned 50 last year). No symptoms. Started Chemo/Rad mid December and wrapped that end of January. LAR was late April. My colonoscopy dr. said at the time that I would be in for a challenging year...and he was right. I too was eager to move things along, but needed to get consults, see some surgeons, understand treatments, etc. Lots to consider and options as well as self education. My big considerations were to do chemo/rad or not and to go LAR or APR. In an effort to ensure greater success and syphincter sparing we pursued LAR but with pre chemo/rad to shrink tumor. I also could have done an excision of the tumor, which would have been thru anus and less impactful, but risk of recurrance (local/distant) and unkowns on LN were not something I could live with... I needed to know. If positive on LN I would have then done a clean up round of chemo...which thankfully was not needed. Right now in recovery mode and focused on reverals of the ileostomy. You will get thru this...take it one step at a time and educate yourself as much as you can. I think I read every study on these treatments by the time I got to the surgery. Its not easy, but you can get thru it...stay positive and best of luck!!
Scott
0 -
Ask all of the questions you want...
that is why we are here.
I was extremely satisfied with how fast things moved when I was first diagnosed. I have friends who seem to be waiting months for appointments, scans, blood work, and I am always telling them to push for faster appointments. Time is of the essence.
Tru
0 -
Please ask as many questions
Please ask as many questions as you want. It's helpful for other people, too. I think sometimes people check these forums and might never post or join but are able to get information they need. Hearing what's happened in another survivor's life is much more helpful than just getting info from your onc who has not likely had it and only hears what other patients tell them in the limited amount of time they're in their office. And they likely never discuss the day to day questions and how to live with this.
And I agree about posting your story on your personal information page. I've never read anybody else's but some people do and, if they want to know your story, then it's right there. Mine was pretty long and I hate going over it again but I've brought up parts of it to add to something I'm saying, so that it has context.
I didn't get surgery until almost 6 months after diagnosis because he wanted to shrink the tumour as much as possible with radiation and chemo. And I had to get a port and an illeostomy not long after diagnosis as well. The illesotomy was because he was scared my tumour would grow enough to block my colon off completely. And while a tumour is undergoing radiation it swells up before it shrinks. Mine was the size of a large chicken egg when it was removed.
Jan
0 -
Thanks everyone. I may post
Thanks everyone. I may post my song and dance to my personal area. I just have difficulty accepting
this at times, then other times it seems overwhelming. If you were to look at me you would not no I had cancer, and I see others who don't look sick as well.
I exercise a lot and eat healthy.
My cancer is:
cT2 early T3, NX, MO
ct scan with a drinkable contrast and something injected into my arm resulted in this:
Dec 29 2016
Staging CT scan (with both drinkable and iv contrast) of chest, abdomen and pelvis showed irregular bowel wall thickening, approximately 2.5 cm long at the rectosigmoid junction. There were no suspicious enlarged lymph nodes in the abdomen or pelvis. There was no evidence of distant metastatic disease in liver or lungs.
Jan 19th 2017:
Pelvic MRI (with iv contrast) confirmed a mass approximately 10 cm from the anal verge, decribed as 5-6 cm long. The lesion was circumferential with evidence of tumor invasion into muscularis propria and minimal invasion into the mesorectal fat (ct2 early t3). There was a 6 mm mesorectal lymph node; a 5 mm right pelvic lymph node; and an 8 mm left pelvic lymph node.
I was and still am concerned about what stage this is at but they tell me it would be iresponsible for them to stage before surgery pathology.
They say every case is different and for my scenario the treatment plan is the gold standard
I guess I just figured this whole thing could be dealt with in a week but clearly it can't be.
0 -
staty positive
It is very overwhelming. Sounds like the course of treatment is appropriate for what you state, but again everyone is different. From my standpoint the gold standard was LAR surgery and pre chemo radiation. At this time that seems to be the best avenue given your TNM scoring. Your dr's are right in that final pathology is what really determines staging and any next steps wtih chemo, etc if needed. I felt things moved quickly, but it was still about 6 months from Dx to surgery. And its not really a one and done...I have ileostomy reversal coming and all that can bring...i.e. LAR syndrome. Need to take it day by day and keep on fighting.
0 -
I will be 6 months and 5 daysscohow66 said:staty positive
It is very overwhelming. Sounds like the course of treatment is appropriate for what you state, but again everyone is different. From my standpoint the gold standard was LAR surgery and pre chemo radiation. At this time that seems to be the best avenue given your TNM scoring. Your dr's are right in that final pathology is what really determines staging and any next steps wtih chemo, etc if needed. I felt things moved quickly, but it was still about 6 months from Dx to surgery. And its not really a one and done...I have ileostomy reversal coming and all that can bring...i.e. LAR syndrome. Need to take it day by day and keep on fighting.
I will be 6 months and 5 days from discovery via colonoscopy to LAR surgery June 20. I have never had surgery and I am feeling a little uneasy about it. Both the radiation and medical oncoogist have stated i caught it early and they are taking curative aproach. I am uneasy over the MRI report saying I have three larger than normal LN's but the oncologist say they anticipate shrinkage after chemoradiation and it could be infection causing the enlargement. thats why they chose to call them Nx in the clinical report.
I read in a couple papers on the internet that low pretreatment CEA levels play a roll in prognosis?
0 -
One step at time
6 months between diagnosis , with chemo/rad in between, than surgery is about right, that would've happen to me, if I didn't have full response. I did psych myself for surgery, but once mentioned no need, no way anybody would drag me to the OR.
Re-staging would give you some answers, about your response to theray, but the surgery is definitlly the best known approach at this time.
Good luck!
0 -
Chemoradiation
I had 25 chemoradiation treatments in Dec '16/Jan '17 followed by 10 weeks of recovery. I was surprised at how long the recovery period was for getting the full effect. My surgeon felt I had a very good response to treatment. They were trying to shrink the tumor to make the robotic assisted surgery more manageable. Even with shrinking, my tumor was still very low, so required the full APR surgery with a permanent colostomy, but I didnt have anything like collateral bladder damage etc with the surgery.
0 -
HI JanJanJan63 said:Please ask as many questions
Please ask as many questions as you want. It's helpful for other people, too. I think sometimes people check these forums and might never post or join but are able to get information they need. Hearing what's happened in another survivor's life is much more helpful than just getting info from your onc who has not likely had it and only hears what other patients tell them in the limited amount of time they're in their office. And they likely never discuss the day to day questions and how to live with this.
And I agree about posting your story on your personal information page. I've never read anybody else's but some people do and, if they want to know your story, then it's right there. Mine was pretty long and I hate going over it again but I've brought up parts of it to add to something I'm saying, so that it has context.
I didn't get surgery until almost 6 months after diagnosis because he wanted to shrink the tumour as much as possible with radiation and chemo. And I had to get a port and an illeostomy not long after diagnosis as well. The illesotomy was because he was scared my tumour would grow enough to block my colon off completely. And while a tumour is undergoing radiation it swells up before it shrinks. Mine was the size of a large chicken egg when it was removed.
Jan
Hi Jan, My name is Brad here in New Jersey, Great photo of both you and your beautiful horse! I read your post and just wondring what you went through and I wanted to hear about your surgery. I have rectal cancer stage 2-3 withT3 in the lower rectum which is the worst place becuase surgery can have consequences. I went to the top hopsital here in NYC, Sloan Kettering and was seen by the Chief of colon rectal surgery. After evalauation, he is suggesting that we try to save the rectum by doing chemo/radiation treatments to try and totally eliminate the mass. This is his goal. Surgery even with the best Da Vinci robotic device, I risk having a bag or even if surgery is a success, he did say I would have bowel contol issues for the rest of my life, meaning, urgency to go, going often etc...Please tell me about your experience and what your surger entailed.
I hope to hear from you. Brad, 51 in New jersey
0 -
Hi Mozart,mozart13 said:Very effective!
In my case was very effective.I had 25 sessions of chemo/rad, xeloda pills were my chemo, received 50gy of radiation, had Complete Clinical Responce(cCR).
If you have any more questions feel free to shoot, good luck to you!
Hi Mozart,
Just read your post, my tumor is 5cm from verge.
I have rectal cancer stage 2-3 withT3 in the lower rectum which is the worst place becuase surgery can have consequences. I went to the top hopsital here in NYC, Sloan Kettering and was seen by the Chief of colon rectal surgery. After evalauation, he is suggesting that we try to save the rectum by doing chemo/radiation treatments to try and totally eliminate the mass. This is his goal. Surgery even with the best Da Vinci robotic device, I risk having a bag or even if surgery is a success, he did say I would have bowel contol issues for the rest of my life, meaning, urgency to go, going often etc...Please tell me about your experience and how you are doing.
Thanks, Brad
0 -
Hi ChickChickspeed said:I will be 6 months and 5 days
I will be 6 months and 5 days from discovery via colonoscopy to LAR surgery June 20. I have never had surgery and I am feeling a little uneasy about it. Both the radiation and medical oncoogist have stated i caught it early and they are taking curative aproach. I am uneasy over the MRI report saying I have three larger than normal LN's but the oncologist say they anticipate shrinkage after chemoradiation and it could be infection causing the enlargement. thats why they chose to call them Nx in the clinical report.
I read in a couple papers on the internet that low pretreatment CEA levels play a roll in prognosis?
My name is Brad, I am 51 just discovered 3cm mass in lower rectum, and I went to Sloan Kettering the top rated cancer hospital in NYC and the world, and they suggested, to try and save rectum by doing chemo/radiaiton to see if it totally disappears. Another surgeon at a diffrent facilty wants to radiation then chemo followed up by surgery. All of this is confusing to me, tell me about your story and surgery. Surgery is my fear, Sloan Kettering told me, that I risk of having a bag and if they can re-connect me, I will have bowel control issues for the rest of my life..meaning, I might have to go very often and at any time or may not go for a day or two...tell me about your story. Where are you from?
0 -
Just a quick follow up. My
Just a quick follow up. My growth was 5-6 cm before treatment began. Pathology after LAR puts the growth and less than 0.5 cm. Surgeon said operation was textbook from start to finish. 10 weeks between last radiation/chemo and surgery
0
Discussion Boards
- All Discussion Boards
- 6 CSN Information
- 6 Welcome to CSN
- 121.9K Cancer specific
- 2.8K Anal Cancer
- 446 Bladder Cancer
- 309 Bone Cancers
- 1.6K Brain Cancer
- 28.5K Breast Cancer
- 398 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
- 794 Liver Cancer
- 4.1K Lung Cancer
- 5.1K Lymphoma (Hodgkin and Non-Hodgkin)
- 237 Multiple Myeloma
- 7.1K Ovarian Cancer
- 63 Pancreatic Cancer
- 487 Peritoneal Cancer
- 5.5K Prostate Cancer
- 1.2K Rare and Other Cancers
- 540 Sarcoma
- 734 Skin Cancer
- 654 Stomach Cancer
- 191 Testicular Cancer
- 1.5K Thyroid Cancer
- 5.9K Uterine/Endometrial Cancer
- 6.3K Lifestyle Discussion Boards