Cancer and Luck

2 minute read time.

I've mentioned 'luck' a few times in the past month following some more 'cancerversary' milestones - these tend to make me reflect on my experience. Even though I was metastatic at diagnosis, I think of myself as lucky on the basis that my tumours were found by 'chance' or to be more accurate, found following an innocuous set of circumstances. As we know, Neuroendocrine Cancer (NET Cancer), it can sometimes be very difficult to discover and diagnose. However, sometimes with a bit of luck or a chance event, it can be intercepted leading to a much better outlook for the person concerned. But sometimes there is also a cost and I don't mean financial (although that is also a very real problem). Even though I do consider my diagnosis lucky, the 'little suckers' had burrowed their way into many places and I now deal with those consequences following significant treatment to get rid of as many as possible. So there can be a cost.

With my blogging activity, I get to hear other people's stories, some of which have tweaked my emotions from 'man style leaky eyes' to wide-eyed surprise and astonishment, but very occasionally with smiles. I had one such exchange with Mary who subsequently agreed to let me use her story in a blog. Mary's story immediately caught my eye because it not only triggered a wide range of emotions but it made me reflect on the cost aspect I described above but a totally different type of cost.


Mary's is a lung NET Cancer patient and her tumour was caught early. Although it was a totally chance discovery, it was in really unfortunate circumstances. Her brother Dan was fighting leukaemia and needed a life saving stem cell transplant. During the checks for her suitability as a donor, the lung tumour was discovered. Clearly a very worrying time for Mary as she had gone to the hospital to try to save her brother's life and ended up being admitted with her own cancer diagnosis. I cannot begin to imagine how that felt for the whole family. Fortunately Mary's sister was found suitable and was able to donate, Their brother later had a successful transplant but uunfortunately the cancer recurred and he passed away a short while later.


That's an amazing human interest story which invokes a wide range of emotions. It's also a very inspiring story about a family coming together in time of crisis. Mary went to hospital that day to try to save Dan's life and despite her own diagnosis, she still felt guilty that she was unable to fulfil that task. However, before his passing, Dan let it be known that he must have gotten sick to save her life. That's a heart-warming thought - RIP Dan


I'm very thankful to Mary who agreed to let me publish her story here. It was actually featured a couple of years ago in their local newspaper - you can read it here - <Click here>


I'd love to hear from others who had a lucky or chance tumour find.


Thanks for reading


Ronny Allan


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Anonymous
  • FormerMember
    FormerMember

    Hi Ronny.

    I'm a runner and was training for the Manchester marathon. I was doing very long runs, which required me to put vaseline on my nipples to stop them bleeding. I found a lump and although it took a lot of persuading my doctors to take it seriously, it turned out to be breast cancer. I was very lucky that I found it early. How many men check their nipples? If it wasn't for my running I might still be unaware of the lump and be in serious trouble.

    Best wishes

    Mike

  • FormerMember
    FormerMember

    I had an operation on my shoulder (under general) and a few days later I was experiencing chest pains. My wife wanted to ignore me making a fuss. The paramedic was not sure. The ambulance crew were less convinced. The doctor said there was nothing on the X-ray. But did arrange for me to come back next day.

    CT scan revealed a large mass in chest which turned out to be a Primary Mediastinal Seminoma. I was checked in the more usual places but nothing. Just a large lump sitting between my lungs and in front of the heart and not really damaging.

    We often looked back at the number of times I could have slipped through the net and I think myself lucky that we found it.

  • FormerMember
    FormerMember

    Hi

    I don't know if it was luck, but I found a small lump in my breast one day while shaving. I just happened to press in the right area. I only checked my breasts about once a year. I assumed it was a cyst as was breastfeeding but knew make a doctor's appt in case.

    It took two weeks for a GP appt and then another two to see the breast clinic.

    By then, I had two large (2-3cm) lumps that were cancer.

    It was already in the lymph nodes by then and so close to mets, but they just got it in time.

    I have had chemo, surgery and radiotherapy and am now on hormone treatment. Glad to be alive. 

    I was 33, in perfect health and zero family history of breast or ovarian cancer.

  • FormerMember
    FormerMember

    I had a job with non-standard hours, so I was driving to work one day listening to Radio 4, as usual. This time, it was Women's Hour and there was a piece about prostate cancer. Although I didn't actually have any symptoms, as I listened to the show I resolved to ask for a PSA blood test next time I saw my GP.  I did, and my PSA was a little bit raised.  I then spent the next two and half years being monitored by the hospital, and so when my PSA suddenly increased to 5.6, they were quickly onto it, and a biopsy and an early stage cancer found, and subsequently treated.  That was about 8 years ago. If I hadn't heard that radio show, by now I might have an advanced cancer. 

  • FormerMember
    FormerMember

    My periods stopped suddenly when I was 40. I considered myself very lucky as self diagnosed an early menopause with no symptoms. After a few months a colleague had nagged and nagged me to see a doctor as she felt it wasn't right. Blood test confirmed it was not the menopause so was sent up to hospital for scans to check womb and ovaries etc. Nothing at all untoward picked up with all that but they did accidentally find a bladder tumour which I had no symptoms for at all.

    Then after 13 months my periods started again, literally in the same week as they found the tumour. If I had got my period 5 days earlier I might not have even gone for the scan!

    We have never found out why I didn't have a period for all that time but it was absolutely nothing to do with the bladder cancer.

    Anyway cancer was caught fantastically early and I'm all clear now.