Hi Tina
I am hopefully in what we would call the remission stage as I have been declared cancer free although I declined the last rounds of chemo which were recommended by my oncologists.
I had esophageal cancer but had to have chemo before my operation to remove the cancerous section of the esophagus as I could not eat or drink anything even to the extent of not being able to keep my saliva down. I was told it was stage IV but not sure really as luckily it had not spread anywhere but did have an operation to remove a suspect ovary which thankfully was fine it was just carrying cysts.
The chemo worked really well on the tumour at the base of my esophagus and the pathology results for the removal of the section and also the lymph nodes all came back as being no evidence of cancer cells so I class myself as really lucky, hence why i declined the following rounds of chemo, which the oncologist sort of agreed with after another CT scan. I am now on 6 monthly check ups with CT scans prior to each appointment with the oncologist and still have to await another appointment with my surgeon and hopefully he will discharge me from his care after the next appointment. I am very lucky as I have responded well to everything they have given me and even recovered very well to the major surgery I underwent, most people have a 4 week stay in hospital but I was discharged after 2 weeks. At the time I felt things were difficult but now after reading a lot of stories on here I feel a bit of a fraud as i seem to have gotten off lightly compared to some although I 10 hour op and then an emergency 3 hour op the following day seems a little dramatic but I have survived and life carries on.
when it was all happening it seemed very intense but it seems longer than the 5 months since my op but i have been very lucky with excellent support form my husband and family and I have the future to look forward to including becoming a grandma in October.
Apparently I am 20 years to young and the wrong sex to have had this cancer but I like to be different. My mum had breast cancer 17 years ago and is still going strong so I knew that cancer was not necessarily a death sentence and that is what kept me going throughout all this.
I am glad all went well with the PICC line and I hope the chemo goes well, I was lucky and did not have to have radiotherapy so I cannot help with advice on that but I can say chemo was definitely a positive experience for me as I went from not being able to eat to actually putting on weight before my op, even to the stage where when i went to appointments the nurses said it was strange to see someone looking better from chemo, but then i went from being fed o n a feeding tube to eating properly in a short space of time. I hope your experience is as positive as mine although you will experience extreme tiredness at times and that cannot be helped but if it kicks this horrible disease out of our systems then every bit of suffering is worth it for it to be gone. Good luck and keep me updated. I send you my best wishes and keep smiling no matter how difficult it gets x
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