Colorectal Cancer News in Brief: November 16

Briefly: African Americans are diagnosed with colorectal cancer at later stages and have surgery less often which contributes to their poorer survival.  Women have a greater risk of a missed or early colorectal cancer after a negative colonoscopy.

If you can’t have a loved one with you during a painful procedure, just looking at your partner’s picture may make it hurt less.

The American Society for Radiation Oncology has a new website for patients, and open enrollment for Medicare plan coverage begins on November 15 and extends through the end of the year.

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This news article was originally posted on November 16th, 2009 and was accurate at the time of publication. Since then, information may have changed or links may now be outdated. Please call our Answer Line 1-877-427-2111 for the latest information, or talk to your doctor before making any medical decisions.

Posted by Kate Murphy on November 16th, 2009
Tags: disparities, Medicare, pain, radiation oncology

Comments

Robin

November 16, 2009 at 12:15pm

My CEA blood test was 1.95 when I went in to surgery to have a eight inch cancerous tumor removed. After surgery and during a short bout of chemo my CEA blood test was 2.50. Now six months later it is 1.30. I don’t believe how the CEA test is an accurate indicator that cancer is there. (At age 50 I had my first colonsocopy as a routine wellness visit. Eighteen months later I had Stage IIA colon cancer having 10″ of my sigmond colon removed). The five to ten year follow up colonoscopy should not be given as a general rule of thumb. If I had waited even six more months, I shudder to think what my cancer stage would have been! I thought my symptoms were a result of something I had eaten! Not until I noticed blood in my stools did I go in to see my gastrologist. I never had a gastrolgist before my 50 year old check! I am not aware of any colon cancer in my family.

Linda Mikel

December 29, 2009 at 9:53pm

How high can the CEA numbers go up when a patient is not responding to chemotheraphy treatment? Were are the numbers usually when a patient is near death?

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