In Praise of Immunotherapy

1 minute read time.

Last week I was told that the results of my latest CT scan showed a Complete Response and that I would now stop my ongoing immunotherapy treatment around 9 months earlier than the planned two year course.

Complete Response is defined as - The term used for the absence of all detectable cancer after your treatment is complete response (CR). Complete response doesn't necessarily mean that you are cured, but it is the best result that can be reported. It means the cancerous tumor is now gone and there is no evidence of disease.

I will now continue to have CT scans at regular intervals over the next three years to keep a check. 

I’m writing this blog because when I faced the start of immunotherapy treatment back in late 2018 I was pretty nervous, worried about the side effects, the damage it would do, and of course if it would work. It was an agonising time, but there was no alternative, I had multiple lesions in my lungs, the largest of which were 16mm in size.

Throughout my cancer journey I’d tried to prepare myself to be strong enough to face it, quite a rigorous regular exercise regime, a mainly vegetarian diet, daily doses of manuka honey and goji berries, a positive mental outlook, helped by studying philosophies like Stoicism and Zen, and meditation to keep a calm mind.

That was my part, all I could do, the rest was down to treatment, the monthly infusions of Nivolumab. I don’t know to what degree any of my preparation helped, but I have gone through immunotherapy with little reaction. It’s taken the pigment out of my hair and skin so I’ve gone quickly to grey/white, and I’ve had some ongoing itchiness on my arms and legs, but that’s a small price to pay for getting rid of the cancer.

This treatment of course can affect different people in different ways, all I can offer is my own case. In my opinion if anyone is facing this now, do trust and believe in this treatment, and consider what you can do yourself to help it succeed. I think we can play a bigger part than we might believe we can, by our mindset and our actions. Immunotherapy is the science we must be very thankful for, but the hidden science is what is within us to help it to succeed.

Anonymous
  • Thats good news  I'm pleased it's going well.

  • Tim, Great to hear this news.  My partner Colin has just started Nivolumab after having throat cancer where he had chemotherapy and radiotherapy only to find that after the second follow up scan the throat cancer had spread to his lungs.  He has had two treatments and so far ho major side effects but he is very low in mood and i am sure reading this for him will be so encouraging and i cant wait to go and show him now.

  • Hi, Thankyou for the comment and very best wishes to you both for this challenging time. It's now a year since I received the "complete response" news, and in that time, all the CT scans I've had have showed no change. My next scan is coming up in a fortnight, and I'm always apprehensive, but I have been pretty fit and healthy in the last 12 months. I do a few workouts a week and cover quite a few miles walking, and last summer I also challenged myself to ride 1,000 miles on my old mountain bike, which I did, but I haven't been back on it since! I have suffered with a lot of skin rashes that may or may not be related to the treatment with Nivolumab. During the treatment I did get itchiness on arms, legs and head, which are a side effect, but I'm told also a sign that it's working. I have had this a lot worse since the treatment stopped, but with anti histamines and creams it can be tolerated much better. Really it is minor compared to how effective the immunotherapy has been. I hope this offers some hope to be positive about the treatment and I would just say embrace it, give it time and think positively.