(NAPSI)—According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, some 42,000 Americans develop head and neck cancers every year. Here’s a look at one of them:
Lewis’ Story
Lewis was a busy man. He and his wife, Amy, were running an aerobic exercise group in their community and also volunteering throughout the north Florida area. On a hot and dry day in June of 2011, when the air was filled with smoke from nearby wildfires, Lewis came home from tennis coughing and clearing his throat. He also had sores in his mouth, so he decided to go to his doctor.
“The doctor looked at my tonsil and told me, ‘That’s either the worst case of tonsillitis I’ve ever seen in an adult…or it’s something else,’” Lewis says. The doctor recommended more testing. After the tests, Lewis was told that it was a malignant (cancerous) tumor.
“When you hear the word ‘cancer,’ your world changes in an instant,” says Lewis.
More testing showed that it was an advanced stage of cancer—Stage IV—and to have surgery on it would require breaking his jawbone and taking out a lot of tissue, permanently changing his appearance and ability to swallow and eat. Oncologists told him that there was just as good a chance that the tumor would shrink with radiation and chemotherapy as it would with surgery. Lewis had seven chemotherapy treatments and 35 radiation treatments over the course of the next seven weeks. By the end of treatment, he could no longer swallow and had to use a feeding tube. But the tumor had shrunk to the point that doctors could no longer detect cancer.
Out of a sense of gratitude for all the help they got, Lewis and Amy decided to start a support group for people with head and neck cancers. They contacted a national organization and got the materials to start a chapter where they live. Lewis and Amy handed out flyers to local doctors’ offices and hospitals. At the first meeting, six people showed up—including some they already knew but had no idea were dealing with head and neck cancers. Now, meeting attendance ranges from 25 to 45 people.
Then, in December of 2015, Lewis found a sore on his tongue that wouldn’t go away, even with steroid treatment. His oncologist did a biopsy and found another tumor. He was scheduled for surgery right away, because he was told that he was not a good candidate for more radiation, as he’d had very high doses during the last round four years before. Additional oncologists who reviewed his case thought he might lose his tongue and part of his jaw. But a biopsy after surgery showed no cancer cells remaining on his tongue.
“I still have a high risk of the cancer coming back but I’m still going to live my life,” Lewis says.
He recommends that if someone is diagnosed with a head or neck cancer, he or she should listen to the doctors very closely-and carry a notebook to write down details about treatment. He and Amy also say that support groups help both the person diagnosed and the caregiver.
Cancer Causes
Smoking and alcohol use are major risk factors for head and neck cancers.
Learn More
For further facts about head and neck cancers, visit www.cdc.gov/cancer/headneck.
On the Net:North American Precis Syndicate, Inc.(NAPSI)