Learning to decipher language of treatment – Part 2
2/12/2007 California, USA Daniel Borenstein ContraCosta Times (www.contracostatimes.com) (Note: This is the second of a four part series.) When I began my cancer therapy, I didn't understand the differences among the doctors who would be caring for me. I didn't appreciate that when a patient receives cutting-edge treatment, he must be ready for changes in plans along the way. And I didn't understand that, in the end, I was going to have to make the tough decisions even though I started my treatment without a basic understanding of cancer treatments. I quickly learned that a "primary" is the site where the cancer originates, and that cancer can migrate, or "metastasize," to other parts of the body. In my case, the "metastasis," the site of the migration, was obvious. There was a bulge, a cyst, on the right side of my neck. But the microscopic primary was never located. The doctors didn't know where my cancer began. As a result, they disagreed on my treatment. My wife was a doctor who could explain the medicine to me in simple terms. And my oncologist, Randy Oyer, was a good friend who wasn't put off by my flurry of inquisitive e-mails. Randy planned to hit me with a heavy dose of chemotherapy and then follow with radiation to mop up bad cells in key areas of my mouth and neck. The regimen of starting with three potent chemo drugs for head-and-neck cancers like mine was new. It had been tried only for a [...]