Okay. I’m a lung cancer survivor. I’ve had cancer and I’m not dead.
The non-small cell adenocarcinoma they removed March, 2017, along with the lower lobe of my left lung, was stage IA. That’s damn good. Statistically, that means I have a 49% chance of living another five years. Of course statistics are not applicable to individuals. The five year stats are always five years out of date.
(Lynne Eldridge, 2017)Most lung cancers that recur do so in the first five years following diagnosis. That said, the risk of recurrence never returns to zero.
So October, 2017 I had my six-month CT scan with contrast. A very small nodule showed up in my lower right lung. Ugh! At five millimeters, it’s too small to attempt a biopsy. They are doing another CT scan with contrast in December to see if there is any change. It could be gone. It could remain the same. It could be bigger. It could be nothing. It could be cancer.
If it is cancer, it could be an entirely new (primary) one or it could be a recurrence of the same one they took out. If it is a new primary, I will still potentially be in the 49% statistical group for five year survival. If it is a recurrence of the carcinoma they removed, the odds get worse. If only the METS was just a baseball team.
I am a Vietnam veteran. The VA considers the lung cancer to be a service connected disability since I was apparently exposed to Agent Orange. I was a smoker too so who knows? I feel that my care at the VA hospital has been nothing short of great. My oncologist is on a fellowship at Moffitt Cancer Center and he works one day a week with cancer patients at the Tampa VA hospital.
I'm here in this forum to openly share my experience and learn from others. I feel that is what true humanity is all about. Simple but difficult. A change for me. A change for the better, though.
Rick