How long have you survived
Comments
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47 years since total parotidectomy due to a Mucoepidermoid Carcinoma in the left Parotid Gland followed up with External Beam Radiation Therapy 7,000 RAD max [70 Gray] three times a week for 6 weeks. The concern of osteoradionecrosis has been present the whole time, but so far has not been an issue. My story is not over as a recent MRI for another reason identified a mass on my right parotid. A fine needle biopsy classified as a Benign Pleomorphic Adenoma. Surgery is scheduled with the hope it the pathology remains classified as a non-cancerous tumor.
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Hello Dr. Roz, and welcome to the CSN H&N discussion forum.
I would recommend you check out the Superthread at the top of the page there are loads of information in there with links and you will find it helpful.
I believe you are the only person on here and probably almost any forum that would go back that far, 47 years ago for cancer treatment. You had the hardcore radiation in those days. I am sorry all these years you have been cancer-free and now some kind of growth has shown up. Hopefully, it is as they say it is benign and can be easily excised. Praying for a smooth operation with no complications. And you mentioned osteoradionecrosis, I believe that is all head and neck patients' worst fear. Dr. Roz are you a doctor? If so what kind of doctor are you? Just wondering and good to have you on the forum.
Our Motto On Here is NEGU (Never Ever Give Up)
Take Care, God Bless
Russ
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Good news - My surgery was last week and the lab analysis confirms the mass in my right parotid was a Benign Pleomorphic Adenoma. I am happy it is out of my body so it does not grow any bigger (Graded as a "T2 hyperintense mass"), or turn malignant at a later date. The Surgeon was great and I have very little nerve function loss at the one-week mark. Much better than the one done 48 years ago this month on the parotid on the left side which was bigger and malignant.
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Well, Dr_ROZ, this is good news. It is nice to have good news here on the forum. Not only was your tumor benign but was removed by surgery successfully with very little nerve function loss. You must have had a very good surgeon. Hopefully, this is the last time you have to go through any tumors or surgery, who needs it anyway. I am so glad that this turned out so well for you.
I celebrate with you.....
Wishing You The Best
Take Care, God Bless
Russ
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BryanB, welcome, and so glad you hit the 4-year mark, that is surely a good feeling the farther you get away from treatment. You will soon be at the 5-year mark which is supposed to be a good thing because I think they feel the odds are pretty slim for a recurrence if you make it that far.
Wishing You The Best
Take Care, God Bless
Wishing You The Best celebrate with you
Russ
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Ten Years
Post SCC Base of Tongue with Neck Lymph Nodes Involved
33 rounds of radiation and 8 weeks of Cetuximab. It took several years and therapy for my swallowing function to return to almost normal, but it's good now. My advice is to stay hydrated. It will help you feel better now and protect your kidneys for the future.
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6 years post tx.
BOT SCC HPV+. Tx was 3 rounds of cisplatin and 35 radiation treatments.
So far the only lasting side effects are a little bit of neuropathy in the hands and feet, and a little dry mouth. The skin on the right side of my neck, where most of the radiation was concentrated, is a little more weathered looking. But so far only noticeable if you're looking for it. Teeth are in great shape, kidneys are functioning well. At my last follow-up the NP upped my levothyroxin dosage from 75 to 88 mg. Also just had a CT Scan (first one since one year out, maybe 🤷♂️), and all is good there, too.
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I had base of tongue Mucoepidermoid Carcinoma back in 2011. Surgery removed the tumor and had rads with a right neck dissection, as it had spread to my lymph nodes. My doctor wanted to see me for 15 years, not 5, like HPV. After 8 years of checkups, he finally told me that if it hasn't come back in the first 4 years, it won't. So all I do now is get a chest x-ray yearly because he said it sometimes goes to the lungs.
So far, I've been free of cancer since then. Good to see someone else here with this rare cancer. I was very fortunate that it had clear margins.
Tom
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