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Although at 93 I would question chemo and radiation, I am not a doctor, nor do I have any first hand experience with cancer.
I do know my Dad at 92 who has had many different skin cancers over the years continues to have them either removed or treated with a chemo cream.
My Uncle has cancer, he is 84 and decided to take treatment. Other than the cancer he is fitter than more 50 year olds. He had a scare in December and had to have emergency surgery, but is still kicking. He just sold his Harley, but still has his hot rod.
My Mum is 87 and I know she would refuse any treatment if she was given a cancer diagnosis. She still has most her marbles and lives completely independently.
My late grandmother in law, had a hysterectomy when she was 93, I do not know if she had any additional treatment.
I have a couple friends who had chemo and radiation and said if they got cancer again they would refuse treatment. It truly is an individual choice.
I'm sad that you haven't had the opportunity to discuss with your father what he would do in situations like this as he aged and health crises were going to arrise.
I am sorry you don't have a physician who understands health care must consider quality of life.
Given all of these hard-but-important components to aging care, it strikes me that your father may not have written a Living Will and established Powers of Attorney for his medical and financial needs which does clarify exactly these things. I realize this is already a hars time, but these document need to be thought through and completed right away.
The doctor is simply offering options. It is the patient who needs to be prepared for how they plan to live out their life. Perhaps the process of looking honestly at end of life care, your father and your family can get clarity on what steps to pursue.
WHY SUBJECT HIM TO ALL OF THE NEGATIVE SIDE EFFECTS OF CHEMO/RADIATION...WHICH IMHO AS A RETIRED NURSE AND A CAREGIVER...COULD VERY WELL SEND HIM OVER THE EDGE AND SHORTEN HIS REMAINING DAYS INSTEAD OF GIVING HIM AN EXTRA 6 MONTHS OR SO. THE CHEMO/RADIATION WILL NOT GIVE HIM A GOOD QUALITY OF LIFE. I SAY LEAVE HIM ALONE AND LET HIM ENJOY THE TIME HE HAS LEFT WITHOUT PADDING THE DOCTOR BILL AND THE HOSPITAL BILL. JUST MAKE SURE THAT HE HAS PAIN MEDICATION AVAILABLE FOR WHEN HE MIGHT NEED IT.
FYI...HAVE YOU AND HIS WIFE CONSIDERED GETTING HOSPICE IN FOR HIM WHEN THE TIME COMES?
IF HE IS A MAN OF FAITH, HAVE YOU ALL TALKED TO HIS PASTOR AS A SOURCE OF END OF LIFE PREPARATIONS? VERY IMPORTANT TO DO.
I don’t know if the oncologist was solely motivated by greed, or whether it was that she couldn’t accept not ‘rising to the challenge’ - ie that all her skills couldn’t help much at all, and she couldn’t defeat death. Whichever was the reason, it was appalling. It stressed my mother, me and my sisters, and everyone else involved. Supported by a very competent GP, we got her out of hospital. She died 4 weeks later at home, with me beside her. It was what she wanted.
Let your father pass in peace.
I had a relative who refused all treatments because people told him horror stories about how sick someone got - even though it was many years and many old protocols before. There are meds to help with nausea and other side effects these days. In the end my relative had to have some radiation just to shrink a tumor causing unbearable pain.
Try it/stop it if need be.
We haven't seen the test results (presumably the doc has shown them to you both.) Even if we were the doctors, tests can only show so much. A lookup of this type of cancer shows that stage IV is the worst, and in general there is no cure:
"In stage IV lung cancer, chemotherapy is typically the main treatment. In stage IV patients, radiation is used only for palliation of symptoms. The chemotherapy treatment plan for lung cancer often consists of a combination of drugs."
https://www.lungcancer.org
The big concern with this stage is whether or not it has metastasized, which is common. If they don't know, they can't really predict how well treatment will work. If they do know, they most likely would also know how badly this will affect someone your dad's age. His age and other medical issues are also a concern.
I would likely come up with many more questions if I'd been faced with this, but for starters:
1) Radiation, chemo or both?
2) How long will these treatments go on?
3) What can one expect during treatment (side effects)?
4) If he stops treatment, how long before side effects go away, if they do?
5) What is longevity with AND without treatment?
6) What can one expect without treatment?
7) What other options are there for maintaining relative health w/out tx?
Your dad has other issues, not to mention his age. I would want him to know everything they could possibly tell us before saying okay dad, it's your choice.
Not that it's the same, but my oldest kitty had some kind of lung tumors. She'd been going slowly down the kidney disease path (crossed the boundary at age 15), developed hyperthyroid which was treated with medication only, but she kept losing weight, so about age 17 I said enough and had the RadioIodine treatment done (vet scared me off this with the CKD and heart murmur.) She never really gained much back (lost about 5#), but was holding her own. At age 18 we found lung spots, down low in the lungs, in a Xray. I did take her to a specialty vet place, to see if there was something we could help her with. Wasted time and money - they repeated ALL the tests we had done, which they were given, and said they would need biopsy to decide what drugs could be used. That meant surgery. If I felt she would do okay with surgery, I would have had MY vet do a lobectomy and skip that waste of time and money! Of course, had we done that, the type could have been determine from the tumors in the removed section. Given her age (roughly 90 in people years!), weight loss and CKD, I opted to just wing it. No more vet visits or vaccinations (car ride was always hard on her - puked every time!), eat drink and be merry kitty, and sleep as cats do. She didn't suffer. We had a short bout of what I figure was kitty dementia (maybe it spread to her brain, who knows?) Eventually she forgot what the litter box was for, but stayed in the big kitchen, so it was just tread lightly and watch for wet spots! She was eating better than any of the other cats, until near the end. She didn't quite make it to age 22 (about 21y 8m or so - with us since spring 1999! Age est 102+) Very few coughs and passed peacefully on her own. :-(
My point is she survived at least 2 years with some type of lung tumors, which presumably spread. It wasn't the CKD that took her, that was certain.
I would suggest consulting with a palliative care doctor who could give you a better idea. They specialize in comfort in treatment. Seek as second opinion too.
I'm also reading "Farewell: Vital End-of-Life Questions with Candid Answers" by Edward T. Creagan who was the first palliative care physician at Mayo Clinic. This is a must read for anyone dealing with this question. More than once he explains that often patients accept treatment that was offered with more optimism than was warranted and the patient suffered much to the family's regret. It really helped me firm up my decision. There may be a lung cancer support charity that helps patients and families with these decisions. I found one for brain tumors; they even went over my brother's medical records and gave me more forthright information than the oncologist was willing to do. What is your goal? Comfort or longevity. Studies show that people who go to hospice early, rather than a death's door, have a longer and more comfortable life because they aren't subjecting their body to extreme treatment. Longeveity of 2 months while feeling like hell isn't worth it. Good luck.
I've been through chemo for my nhl and I don’t think my mother could handle it. But I never influenced her in any way. I never told her about my cancer as we lost my sister to brain cancer and I didn’t have the heart to tell her about my illness.
I feel my mother made the right decision. She is still of sound mind.
I want the same for myself when I am at the end of my life. I want to have meds to make the transition easier.
At 93, you can always ask about palliative care. It does not lengthen his life, but it seeks to keep him as comfortable and "able" as possible. If he is given 6 months or less to live if his cancer isn't treated, then ask for a hospice consult. You may have to talk to his primary care doctor about getting these orders if his oncologist is not willing to cooperate.
First and foremost is, after being presented with the facts, what would I/the patient like to do. I’m a realist and take a pragmatic approach to everything I do.
Second, the facts - prognosis (life expectancy) with or without treatment.
Third, Quality of Life during and after treatment. Mind you, the will to live is on a broad spectrum from ‘at all cost’ to ‘pick up my toys and go home’. I’ve lost 4 people very close to me in recent years; 1 had no choice the others made it clear to me long before what there wishes were. They all drew a line in the sand where treatment would be stopped and they stayed true to their word when the time came.
My husband had lung cancer and declined chemo as he saw no point in living longer when he'd be sick all the time anyway. Without chemo he was able to function with some normalcy for most of his remaining months.
I was sad not to have had my husband around longer, but he was the one who would have had to endure the effects of chemo. Of course the oncologist urges trying it,; that's his business. Unless your father wants the chemo, it's a "No!"
I am sorry you and your dad are facing this.
Simple question for you (maybe not so simple though)
WHAT DOES YOUR DAD WANT TO DO?
What quality of life will he have given the effects of treatment....
(By the time side effects reach the point of getting too bad it might be too late for any quality of life)
I would contact Hospice. Have him evaluated. Discuss with Hospice what they will do for him. They will offer not just supplies and equipment but education as well as medical, emotional and spiritual support.
In general doctors do not want to "give up" as they see that as a failure but there is also a side of me that looks as many treatments as a "cash cow" to some degree. I think doctors in general are not taught in Med School how much of an advantage and how beneficial Hospice can be.
Feeling tired and weak is the normal state for most 93 year old elderly. Given that this 93 y.o. gentleman has cancer of the lungs, I am sure he's feeling a lot worse than tired and weak. If he goes through the gruesome chemotherapy and radiation treatments, they would leave him feeling half dead and wish that he already was.
"In stage IV lung cancer, chemotherapy is typically the main treatment. In stage IV patients, radiation is used only for palliation of symptoms. The chemotherapy treatment plan for lung cancer often consists of a combination of drugs."
https://www.lungcancer.org
if your dad is mentally competent, this choice should be left purely to him, and you should support his decision.
This is a complicated medical issue that has lots of variables. Surely they are considering his age, mental status, overall comfort and potential outcomes in recommending treatment.
If you think their medical advice is not appropriate, seek another opinion from a qualified medical provider, not advice from strangers in a chat room.
She celebrated her 100th Birthday at the end of December, is doing well and is still home with me.