Hello
My brother has just turned 60 and has been diagnosed with oesophageal cancer and the hospital has said that they will treat the oesophageal cancer with view to operation but they suspect that he has a small area in the liver that could be cancer.
Basically they are saying that he will receive chemotherapy treatment with view to operate the oesophagus
but because they have not done a biopsy to confirm the liver cancer they told us that if after the first 4 treatments if the spot in the liver shows to have become smaller they will not continue with chemotherapy to operate the oesophageal cancer but then only proceed with palliative treatment instead as we have been told that is not their practice.at that hospital ? Or perhaps the trust ?
I was wondering if this is a wide practice in all other NHS Trusts or is this an approach to this specific hospital ? Or NHS Trust for this specific area ?
please can someone tell me if anyone is familiar with this practice? I would like to hear if liver cancer has been addressed and treated if another cancer is present in another part of the body ?
i am wondering if is it unique to this specific hospital? Or Trust ?
we are all aware that it is not curable but to give up treatment and go into palliative care and not operate the oesophageal cancer but to just leave and provide just palliative care leaving a 60 years old with only a few months?
thanks