Pancoast Tumour - My Story

FormerMember
FormerMember
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Hi All

I am new here and hoping for some more information, also whilst awaiting diagnoses I have been doing a lot of googling, and found so little on my type. Especially in my age group. Most posts about mine seem to be on behalf of older relatives. Apparently it's rare, and rare as hens teeth in my age group. (34 year old female). So by sharing my story here I hope to raise awareness and should anybody find themselves where I am now, they can google for some information.

I just got diagnosed yesterday (Maundy Thursday).

I also want to raise awareness to get checked, if it's not normal for you, please do not dismiss it as I did and leave it and just think it's part of getting older.

I should start by saying I am slightly more complicated as I also have an autoimmune disorder called hidradenitis suppurativa (HS I call it as spelling and saying it is a mission). This is pretty harmless, extremely painful and embarrassing condition that causes abscesses in sweat gland areas. It is not relevant to my story so do not get hung up on it, other than it helped my cancer hide behind it as I blamed this for some of the symptoms.

I noticed some stinging type sensations under my arm initially, this is not abnormal for me as I also get frequent cellulitis infections as part of my HS. It is my left axilla that is predominantly affected with the right rarely coming to the party. The stinging was on the right so I could not understand why I had no abscess, no bright red skin, no thickening. I dismissed it, it came and went intermittently I kept an eye but it never came to anything.

Around August 2017 I then noticed sleeping at night was uncomfortable to lie on my right side. This went on for a while at least a month or two and wasn't improving. I had gone numb where I was getting the stinging under my arm. Again I did not think too much of this as I had had numerous surgeries to drain abscesses and had noticed nerve damage/loss of sensation in the badly affected left so assumed it was that.

I had also been getting a lot of headaches, which I had mentioned to the doctor previously, they ran bloods and said I was low normal so put me on iron to boost me a little. This did stop the headaches.

Another thing I had noticed and was rather annoyed about is embarrassingly I did not link it and despite them saying always get checked and I didn't. My right breast had changed shape slightly. I felt like I looked a bit sagged, not being by any means are large chested woman I was most put out, but just thought ah that is what they mean about your 30s.

My other weird quirky symptom which again I didn't link is I suddenly started suffering from indigestion/belching which I had never ever had problems with in my life. I just got some indigestion remedies to try and help.

The most scary symptom for me in these couple of months was on and off 3 times the whole right side of my face went numb for a few minutes at a time. It felt just like I had had a dental local anaesthetic. Half my tongue felt thick and floppy my nose was numb down one side and my cheek. At this point I started to google and freaked myself out as it kept saying potentially MS for my symptoms. (just the numbness I didn't think to link the rest at this point). I had also noticed the numbness across my chest and at times down my arm in to my little finger and ring finger.

October 2017 I finally I went to my doctor about another one of my friendly abscesses and brought up the pain in my right chest/numbness across my chest and back of my arm and numbness of face. He suggested a trapped nerve. I was referred for an xray.

I had this the report said I had a very slight narrowing between two neck vertebra and a bone spur. Accepting this must be the cause I went to a chiro to resolve. My insurance would fund 4 sessions which I had and only felt mild benefits. 

I went back to the GP and asked what to do for the best, there had been mention of an MRI but as the Chiro had mildly helped I went for physio which was unlimited on my insurance.

I had seven sessions in total, in the middle I had 3 sessions of acupuncture in one week and that really made me feel better I was getting more and more pain by now and so fed up as I had gone in October and it was now January/February. I thought finally I would be fixed, then we slowed back down to once a week and the pain was intolerable again. 

The physio agreed he had done all he could and referred me back to my GP and pain specialist who would organise an MRI and maybe an injection to the nerve if needed.

I sore the pain man who was lovely, organised an MRI of my neck suspecting a protruding disc. February 2018 I went for my MRI so relieved I would finally be getting fixed. He said that a couple of my symptoms didn't fit that diagnosis but some people are wired differently, He also said that after six months a protruding disc should have healed itself by now, or very near to it.

It was a Wednesday and I was to meet with him the following Monday to discuss. Within half an hour of getting out of the MRI I had a text to ask me to go that evening to see him and bring someone with me. It was at that point my world came crashing down. I knew I was in for bad news and something serious had been found. I was very tearful at first but then went into a seriously calm slightly surreal state about it.

I went to see him as requested and he was gutted I could tell to tell me that the MRI of my neck had actually picked up a mass on the Apex of my lung. I now know that this is a Pancoast Tumor and that it ties exactly with my symptoms.

Also in hindsight looking at my MRI and comparing it to my Xray, it was there all along on my Xray and it was missed! It should have been found 4 months earlier. I am angry about that at times, but also realise being angry won't change it. It was missed and a four month earlier diagnosis could have made all the difference. I had read tumours double in size in four months. But it wasn't and it can't be changed.

He advised I would need to go for several more MRIs of my brachial plexus, thorasic inlut, my spine, chest and head ( I had also been getting a lot of headaches so they were now being ultra precautious). with contrast and a thorasic CT with contrast.

These showed the mass as suspicious and of about 9cm with enlarged lymph nodes.

I was then referred for lung function tests, blood tests a lung biopsy and a PET scan which I had to travel to the UK for was we have limited facilities in my small island.

The biopsy confirmed it was positive for cancer, I have Adenocarcinoma the most common type. The PET scan showed some other 'hot' areas areas for concern. So I need to have more tests, though the enlarged lymph nodes in other areas I think will all be due to my HS as the areas are both Axillas, my groin (which I have had an ultrasound on and need to have a biopsy on to be sure) and my bowels, which seem fine but need a polyp removed, so likely what the scan was finding.

Providing none of these other areas are affected I am a stage III B and they believe at least an N2 as the node in right side looks malignant, so does the node of my Trachea and they are questioning the left side node which would make it an N3.

If it's spread elsewhere I will be a stage 4. Here is a post to how the TNM stages are spilt over the different stages and how they categorise them. cancer relief lung cancer stages

They believe due to the multi layer node involvement it is inoperable, which I am a little relieved about as it's major lung removing surgery and potentially ribs too.

I will have to go back to England to see the Oncology specialist there hopefully within a week or two, by which all my other areas results will hopefully be in. But all being well it looks like I will receive Chemoradiation. I have been told it will be the highest dose they give. Which is where my questions come in please, how long for, how often? We do not have radiation facilities where I am from so again this would have to be done in the UK. I need to plan around this life/animals/work etc and do not relish being in a place for too long where non of my home comforts or friends/family are. 

Sorry it was long, I wanted it to be as informative as possible for anybody else going through a pancoast diagnosis.

But please the main point of my post was, laying all those symptoms together it's obvious, but them appearing separately over several months and being such a rare lung cancer (only 5% of all) and usually affecting men in their 60/70s I am the hen's teeth diagnosis that you see people dismissing all over the internet when people google and panic that they have shoulder pain. Get checked, if it's not normal for you, just check it out!

  • Gina

    Please remember you have had major surgery so wobble as much as you like!! You’ve been through such a lot, and you still need to heal. I think it would be abnormal not to wobble!

    Great news they have got it all out, and no spread. Makes the op all worth while. Wish I could get these buggers removed from my lungs, but no chance of that for me. 

    Remember it’s still early in your recovery, and don’t try to do too much at once. 

    “Try to be a rainbow, in somebody else's cloud” ~ Maya Angelou
    Chelle 

    Community Champion badge
  • FormerMember
    FormerMember in reply to FormerMember

    Hi Gina

    I have just sat and read through what you have gone through over the past months and am completely humbled! I am shuffling about trying to get comfortable because of pains around my right chest, but reading about your struggles has put it in to perspective - my turn to 'suck it up'!

    You seem to have had both excellent and very lacklustre treatment and care, which makes me realise how lucky I have been at West Suffolk Hospital (treatment), the old Papworth hospital (CT guided needle biopsy) and Addenbrooke's (Pleurodesis).

    Glad to hear that there are lots of positives and they have correctly identified it as a 'Little Fecker'!

  • FormerMember
    FormerMember in reply to FormerMember

    Thank you all for your kind replies. I hope you are all doing well...

    Well here is my latest long winded instalment, so get comfy again.

    I returned to work after 4 weeks of surgery. I found it very hard going sitting for two long in one place and found it hard. I managed to do some reduced hours and was just getting there. I did find I got a few migraines from doing too much.

    As I said on another post I went to the out of hours GP at the weekend after another blinding migraine and throwing up which didn't go away after my usual sleeping it off trick.

    I had my scan first thing this morning. From head to pelvis... I was due to get results in a weeks time.

    So when the hospital number rang me this afternoon, I knew what I was in for! I got called in. 

    Disappointed

    They have found two spots on my brain. Though it doesn't look like what they were expecting to see. Of course it didn't I laughed it's me! So Southampton radiologists are going to look at the CT's to see what they think. They other thing they did mention is that she had a note that my skin condition is getting worse (I stopped the antibiotics in January - vein hope - I doubt it) Urgent MRI is being arranged an once all that is had they will discuss surgery and or SABR radiotherapy.

    I am bared from driving and given steroids to take until they decide on the best plan and get send me for treatment.

    Cancer is the gift that keeps on giving...… of all the places it could have spread to my brain is my big fear.

    Otherwise all seems ok. They said there may be a nodule on the lung but so close to surgery they are hard to read.

  • Gina there are no words,

    i have just been skimming through latest posts on here thinking I had missed something about a scan, was it booked already or was it arranged at the weekend, I knew there was a doctors visit coming up but I thought it was on a Thursday (think I’m living in Julie’s world). I know you won’t stop work but I think you need to think about reducing your hours, for no other reason that you are doing too much, they are long days. Till all this is sorted you should slow it down a bit, be kind to yourself, you’re only just getting yourself together after the last surgery. 

    How are you today - any headache or sickness still. You didn’t go into work this afternoon did you.

    just a thought - if you are worried about what you would do with any spare time you’ve got enough for a book nowJoy

    Take Care of yourself

    Julie
  • FormerMember
    FormerMember in reply to Justme19

    Sorry, yes I didn't mention too much about the scan. I wind myself up and know 'feel' things in the run up to them. Usually I post about them and usually am proved to be so wrong! So maybe I should have!

    It was already a booked scan as they had bought forward my next scan after they rediagnosed me to a NET rather than NSCLC Adenocarcinoma. 

    I had bloods last Thursday for the scan which I think is probably what you were thinking of.

    I feel foggy still but I did stop throwing up Sunday evening. So that is one thing. I lost about 5lbs over the weekend so hey ho, take the benefits where you can.

    I will see how it goes. I live alone and sit and dwell at home. Though concentration and doing anything tricky at work is hard for me lately. In some ways I know why know.

    Hopefully it won't be too long before they decide what to do with me. At least I can walk to work as I am a prisoner again at home not being able to drive. Boooo.

    You mean my posts for a book ? Smiley

    I am a bit unsure to know what to say until Southampton have reported on the scans. Its more waiting. It seems I may be sent to London for treatment this time. We will see. 

    I'm more worried the steroids will turn me into at the moment. I hate them!

  • Oh Gina, I am so so sorry. I’m swearing here, but I won’t type what I’m saying.

    You love driving your little car too, I hope that is only a temporary thing.

    My heart goes out to you, here for you xx 

    “Try to be a rainbow, in somebody else's cloud” ~ Maya Angelou
    Chelle 

    Community Champion badge
  • It’s summer now, you’ll find enough to fill your day, in the nice weather. If you did end up going to London, and you needed to be there for a couple of days because of travel my brother would welcome you to stay, but probably the logistics wouldn’t be right he lives in Isleworth, but you’d be more than welcome. Well things will start happening soon I’m sure so you won’t be on steroids for longSee no evil

    Julie
  • Dear Gina

    to day I’m sorry to hear this doesn’t touchbit but so many have had brain mestastis dealt with very efficiently. The woman who wrote the cancer whisperer was very inspirational on that subject.

    i pray all goes well 

    xx

  • Sorry for my typos. 

    To Say I’m sorry is what I meant and touch it!

    I will get myself in trouble one day with typos!!

  • FormerMember
    FormerMember in reply to FormerMember

    hi Gina. as you say our illness keeps on giving,  i thought you were out of the woods now and back to work..  things seem a lot more complicated for you. hope you  have good results from now on.take care