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#37359 04-22-2004 07:17 AM
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I'm wondering what chemo therapy options have been offered, what it felt like to get through the therapy, and how things are progressing...
Thanks for any info...


Wife of John, 40yo, SCC R Tonsil (3/10/04), s/p resection and rad neck, forarm falp, taxolx3 pre rad, rad (30 txmnts) & taxol/carbo. Now he is 49 and doing well!!!
#37360 04-22-2004 08:58 AM
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Traditional forms of chemotherapy have not shown to be very effective with head and cancers. There may be clinical trials for new types that I am unaware of.

Cisplatin, or Platinol, is the most common chemotherapy used for head and neck cancers. It is an alkylating agent that enhances oxygenation of the tissues to make radiation more effective. It adds as much as a 10% higher survival rate when used as a adjunct to radiation. Radiation is the primary treatment modality, the chemo is secondary to it.

I had Cisplatin. Orignally they had scheduled 3 treatments (or infusions) every three weeks. The infusion process itself was no big deal. They hook you up to an IV in a comfortable, reclining chair. Most of the chairs at my hospital had TV's also. They also provided juices, snacks and a heating pad for the arm with the IV -makes it much more comfortable. Many sleep through the infusion. It was a half day or less deal. The nausea, for me, wasn't a problem until as much as 3 days later and that situation improved the further away from the infusion. They shortened my infusion protocol to 2. I am not positive why. The tumor responded extremely well - not being visible (i.e., completely melted) at all on a CT scan 3 weeks into treatment. I had a rough time with nausea after the second treatment, was briefly hospitalized twice for rehydration, and this may also have played a role. I kind of remember the oncologist mentioning that the complete response, so early, was why they decided that the last infusion wasn't necessary.

Everyone has a different experience so take everything I say with a grain of salt. Your experience may be much less intense. Some respond very well to the anti-emetic (nausea) meds and some don't (which are the minority).

I'm doing great now - life is back to normal. Very minimal side effects now. If I could go back and start over, I would have taken the same path.


Gary Allsebrook
***********************************
Dx 11/22/02, SCC, 6 x 3 cm Polypoid tumor, rt tonsil, Stage III/IVA, T3N0M0 G1/2
Tx 1/28/03 - 3/19/03, Cisplatin ct x2, IMRT, bilateral, with boost, x35(69.96Gy)
________________________________________________________
"You are a mist that appears for a little while and then vanishes" (James 4:14 NIV)
#37361 04-22-2004 09:42 AM
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I had a combination of taxol and carboplatin during once-a-week IV infusions over six weeks. It was roughly a 4 hour ordeal each week. I was put in a small room with a bed and TV and they would bring me warm blankets, drinks and munchies. They pumped 4 different "pre-meds" into me before the actual chemo drugs. These included a steriod, an anti-nausea agent, an antihistamine and an anti-acid. The anti-acid made the arm in which the IV was stuck ache. The antihistamine simultaneously made me sleepy and restless. It then took an hour for the taxol and 30 minutes for the carboplatin. The taxol burned some when it was going in. Inbetween each drug, the IV was flushed with cool saline for about 5 minutes. I grew to really appreciate the cool saline! I didn't have any problems with nausea, but I would wake up every morning with stomach cramps and my daily energy became less and less as the process progressed. Over all I tollerated the protocol very well and I had a good response to it. The chemo shrunk my primary tumor to nothing and significantly shrunk my lymph node tumor. This all went on to help the radiation to be more effective and hopefully prevent any distant micro-mets.

I'm four and a half months post-treatment and I'm doing quite well now. My hair has grown back (except where it was radiated), although it's come back even curlier than it was -- and it was pretty curly to start with. There's also considerably more gray hair than before treatment. I still have a little residual numbness in the fingers and thumb of my left hand, but very recently I have noticed the feeling slowing coming back.

I'm glad I did it and I would do it all again the same way. In fact, from a purely side effects stand point, if I had my choice of six more weeks of chemo or the planned six weeks of radiation, I would have taken the chemo.

-Brett


Base of Tongue SCC. Stage IV, T1N2bM0. Diagnosed 25 July 2003.
Treated with 6 weeks induction chemo -- Taxol & Carboplatin once a week followed with 30 fractions IMRT, 10 fields per fraction over 6 more weeks. Recurrence October 2005.
#37362 04-22-2004 10:20 AM
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Amen Brett,

Just my opinion, but if I had the choice between Chemo and Radiation. I'd take chemo. Gary phrased it well, too.

I don't say this to mean you should do one instead of the other. I say it to make the point that chemo sometimes is not as bad as people make it out to be.

I wish I'd had chemo/radiation as my protocol. Like radiation, everyone has different reactions to chemo and to the different forms of chemo.

But, as has been said before by Joanna " I want every weapon in the arsenal they can give me to fight with"

Take care and I know you'll make the right choice for yourself.

Dinah

#37363 04-22-2004 10:48 AM
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I too had the six week induction chemo (Taxol and Carboplatinum) after which I had chemo and radiation combined. My doctor also had me on Xeloda, an oral chemo drug that converts into 5-FU at the site of the tumor. My experience was a lot like Brett's and, if anything, was a bit easier. The Xeloda gave me heartburn so the oncologist put me on Nexium which I think may have helped the overall stomach issues. I got a portacath since my veins are nonexistent and that made the weekly session fairly nontraumatic; the worse part was actually the Benadryl (the antihistamine) which made me feel a bit high and quite sleepy.

My overall protocol was based on one from a study at Northwestern. I should be clear that I'm not strictly an oral cancer; my tumor originated in the supraglottal part of my larynx and extended up the hypopharynx to just below my tonsil. That said, after the induction chemo, the ENT said I had had a "complete" response. I did go on to radiation and chemo and the radiation experience was more challenging because of the extensive chemo (I was really softened up by then).

I'm now just over six months post-treatment; all is going well and my followups have all been successful. Aside from the standard dry mouth, I'm really pretty much back to normal.

Hope this helps.
Laura

#37364 04-22-2004 11:15 AM
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We went through alot of conflicting opinions and discussion when my husband was trying to decide if chemo should be added to his radiation. Because there was extracapsular spread in a lymph node, we decided he should go ahead with it. He was scheduled for chemo once per week for the 7 weeks of radiation, but was only able to complete 4 of them due to side effects. But I think he is glad that he did everything he could

He is now about 13 months post treatment and doing very well.

Anita


Husband Dx 12/02 Stage 4 Tonsil Cancer T1N2bM0; surgery, radiation, chemo 1/03 - 4/03.
#37365 04-22-2004 01:40 PM
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I was at a clinical trial given concurrent chemo and radiation. I was given 4 rounds of cisplatin on a weekly basis.My blood had to be tested prior to each treatment to make sure my white blood cell count level is all right. It was a 2 hour injection and before it , there was a shot of anti-nausea medicine. I still could read books and talk and drink water during the process. Nothing to worry about. I could even drive back home and take my lunch. The nausea effect was the worst on the following day. The chemo did not have any effect on my hair but it did affect my emotional state.

Karen


Karen stage 4B (T3N3M0)tonsil cancer diagnosed in 9/2001.Concurrent chemo-radiation treatment ( XRT x 48 /Cisplatin x 4) ended in 12/01. Have been in remission ever since.
#37366 04-22-2004 07:09 PM
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First go around I had one session of chemo each week concurrent with the radiation treatment, Cisplatin being the drug of choice.

Started with blood test and Saline drip, an anti-nausia drug, one other that I can't remember but hurt like heck if they put it in too fast, then the Cisplatin, then more saline, and another drug. All in all my treatment about 5-6 hours. Would go in for the morning rad treatment, then to the chemo session, then afterward back for the second rad treatment. First few weeks no big side effects, nausea or such. For some reason I did manage to have a very healty appetite the night of the chemo treatment. Didn't feel too good the day after, but that only lasted for a day also.

During treatment, read, shot the bull with the nurse, napped.

Second time around I had apparently reached my limit of cisplatin, had to stop after three treatments, bothering my hearing. Chemo in my case used in addition to radiotherapy to help the radiation do it's job.
Bob


SCC Tongue, stage IV diagnosed Sept, 2002, 1st radical neck dissection left side in Sept, followed by RAD/Chemo. Discovered spread to right side nodes March 2003, second radical neck dissection April, followed by more RAD/Chemo.
#37367 04-22-2004 10:11 PM
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TAXOL AND CARBBOPLATEN FOR ME 8 WEEKLY SESSIONS..


Stage 3, T3,N1,M0,SCC, Base of Tongue. No Surgery, Radiationx39, Chemo, Taxol & Carboplatin Weekly 8 Treatments 2004. Age 60. Recurrence 2/06, SCC, Chest & Neck (Sub clavean), Remission 8/06. Recurrence SCC 12/10/06 Chest.
#37368 04-23-2004 01:26 AM
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I also had taxol and carboplaten and radiation, chemo should have gone 8 weeks. Only went 4, again everyone is a little different. Also the portacath is the way to go.


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