Sunday 25 January 2015

CANCER 2

Following the previous week's post on cancers, I did get many responses, comments, suggestions, cancer stories that made me cry  e.t.c. Of note was a message from 'Brian'(not his real name), one of my cancer patients aged 21. He messaged to ask why I had not included his story in the post. I had actually written about him but deleted the paragraph the last minute because I needed his consent first. I met Brian in April-May 2014. By that time I was working at Meru Hospital and would only come to Chaaria during my free time. He came for his histopathology report for stony hard masses that had developed in his abdomen. The report read  'Desmoplastic Small Round Cell Tumor'. What was that? I had never heard of such a name. There is a chance that it was somewhere underlined or highlighted in my pathology textbooks and notebooks during medical school but I couldn't remember what it was. Are these not things we read just to pass exams and quickly forget about them because they are rare? Was it malignant or benign? What was it's nature? I dashed to my boss's office where we have a mini-library. I couldn't get it in the first book I checked and almost immediately my boss and our most senior surgeon Dr. Pietro walked in and I informed them of my dilemma. They informed me that it's a rare type of soft tissue sarcoma that mostly affects males at the adolescent age or early 20s. It mostly presents as abdominal masses of no known origin. The sarcoma responds very well to chemotherapy. Armed with this information, I dashed back to my office and explained what I had just learned to him. He had not come with his parents so i counseled him the best I could like a younger brother. Brian was surprised but he had the motivation to seek specialist help without delay. I wrote his referral letter and took down his number because I wanted to follow up. He was very brave and I could see determination on his face  to conquer this illness. I naturally expected review in KNH after a few months but because of his drive and enthusiasm, Brian was able to get booked for chemotherapy without delay. We keep in touch at least once a week and he is well, almost done with Chemotherapy. He is responding very well to treatment but he tells me that sometimes he gets very weak after Chemo sessions. The journey he says, has not been easy. There are times he messages me that his white blood cells get down and he has to boost them with Neupogen, there are times his Chemo drugs run out of stock in KNH and he has to wait longer for his sessions, during the KNH doctor's strike he had problems getting doctors to administer his chemo,he has lost weight etc. Brian gives me the motivation to face life positively. He is doing very well and responding well to Chemo.  He tells me that he is the first person in his family to have cancer but he has taken it positively. He tells that the KNH oncology clinic is always flooded with patients and he only gets seen in the afternoon despite coming in very early due to the long queues.  Brian's is a success story,he says his life has not changed. He refused to let cancer change his life.  I'm praying hard he becomes cancer-free and becomes a motivation to other cancer patients.  I hope we all learn from him. I'm so glad our paths crossed and he is truly a source of inspiration.


   The next person who messaged me about her story validated something that a surgeon had asked me in theatre one day. We were doing a thyroid lumpectomy and the  surgeon asked me if we had done cytology or needle-biopsy of the thyroid lump. I had not thought about it because we were going to send the removed lump for histopathology anyway and thyroid cancer is extremely rare in our setting. I have never seen any case of thyroid cancer since i graduated. All our histopathology reports gladly come back negative for malignancy.  The incidence in Africa is  1 case out of 200,000 population per year. This friend messaged me that she was touched after reading my post. She had lost a close relation to Thyroid Cancer in the age-gap of early 30s last year. It was a thyroid lump that was never investigated properly and in the end the lady lost the battle to metastatic thyroid cancer. It's a mistake that all of us in the society and us doctors make by presuming that any thyroid swelling or Goitre is benign. The message made me think deeply and conclude that all thyroid swelling must be biopsied before surgery and still sent for histopathology after surgery . The cancer might be very rare in Africa but that one life lost is a lost generation, a lost parent, child, sibling, friend e.t.c.  We should not take chances with thyroid swellings no matter how rare the cancer is.


 This week, we had a class by Fr. Gaido about Esophageal cancers. He mentioned to us that it was so common among men from the North to the extent that any male patient from the North presenting with painful or difficulty in swallowing is almost always esophageal cancer . I have had arguments with some of them when I recommend OGD, they insist it's not necessary only for most of them to turn out to be cancer.  We discussed why it was a common disease in that area of the country and especially on men. Is it because of taking very hot burning tea? Does the resulting corrosive injury lead to cancer? Women only get to take the tea after the men have had their share so their tea is usually cold by then. Is this why the cancer hardly occurs among women of the same region? Think about it and tell me. 'Tafakari hayo.'  I'm considering doing a research on this.  Similarly, Liver Cancers are so common among Kambas especially those from drier parts of the region. Is it because of aflatoxins from poorly stored maize? Have a good week ahead. I pray that the blog-posts impact positively on each reader's life. 

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