Home & Garden2 mins ago
Terminal Cancer
18 Answers
Hi there, I posted a while ago about my dad's stomach tumour and his remission from stage 3 bladder cancer, about a month ago he had a procedure to flush his bladder and after a Cat scan he has been told that the bladder cancer has in fact spread outside of his bladder and into his kidneys and now liver. The hospital have said there is nothing they can do, I am devastated and I am scared to ask how long he has got left, he was first diagnosed with bladder cancer in March 2018. His stomach tumour remains the same (it hasn't grown)
Answers
Best Answer
No best answer has yet been selected by Purist. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.
For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.I wasn't there as he has just called me about it, I am visiting him later, he said he has been allocated a key worker and macmillan will be in touch. other than what I originally typed, I have no other info, at the time he was diagnosed with bladder cancer we were told the cancer was very aggressive, he had two rounds of chemo and was declared in remission, I can't believe its come back and spread :(
firstly I am sorry your dad and you have had such bad news
if the question is: how does he have? None of the doctors will say because they really really dont know
Your dads stomach tumour has not grown and this is the case with some cancers - others are aggressive like the bladder
I agree Sqad months rather than years ( is the norm)
One of my relations had liver secondaries from ca colon and went on for 36 m. ( another 36 m after the secondaries had been diagnosed w/o treatment.)
so wait and see
and if he wants to do anthing - now is the time to do it
( ski parachute jump), mud wrestling a dwarf etc
( I went to Egypt when I was severly immunosuppressed, which looking back on it - seems a bit sporting)
if the question is: how does he have? None of the doctors will say because they really really dont know
Your dads stomach tumour has not grown and this is the case with some cancers - others are aggressive like the bladder
I agree Sqad months rather than years ( is the norm)
One of my relations had liver secondaries from ca colon and went on for 36 m. ( another 36 m after the secondaries had been diagnosed w/o treatment.)
so wait and see
and if he wants to do anthing - now is the time to do it
( ski parachute jump), mud wrestling a dwarf etc
( I went to Egypt when I was severly immunosuppressed, which looking back on it - seems a bit sporting)
Thank you for the lovely supportive comments, I was a bit of a mess yesterday, I have seen him and he is taking it well enough, he see's the consultant oncologist in just over a week, I am just going to focus on the now. ironically he said to the visiting nurse he was feeling very well. I think he will find out more then, there was some confusion about whether it had also travelled to his lungs. Im just glad he is feeling ok (as can be expected)