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nhsister

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      nhsister
      Participant

        Very sorry, but in my previous posting, my spell-checker changed the word Remicade to Remembered,

        nhsister
        Participant

          Very sorry, but in my previous posting, my spell-checker changed the word Remicade to Remembered,

          nhsister
          Participant

            Dear Erika,

               I happened upon your comments while searching for clinical trials.

            My brother (age 52) has been taking Remicade for the past three years to control his Crohn's.

            Like you, he had a stage one melanoma removed after he had been on Remicade for about a year.

            Two weeks ago, he felt a lump in his armpit and now, having had it checked (with more extensive diagnosing),

            he is facing a most serious diagnosis of melanoma that has metastasized to his liver and beyond.

            He was instantly taken off of the Reminded and will start Chemotherapy in two days.  The outlook is grim.

            He is facing a prognosis of succumbing to this shitty disease within two to nine months.

               We haven't given up hope.

            We are looking for clinical trials that are now really the only good hope beyond chemotherapy.

               I guess that when he made the choice to 'go for the Reminded' , it was the immediacy of the benefits

            that pushed the decision.  The relief seemed so good.

              Melanoma is just so quiet.   

            Until the lump, there were no symptoms. It is only now that I am reading about

            the dangers in-depth. The longer you take it, the higher your chances of  not only melanoma,

            but a host of other possibly fatal consequences,

                If you decide to take it, please be vigilant about checking yourself  and read read read about it. 

            There is a host of information out there.  If you have a physician that is sort of wishy-washy,

            perhaps you need to speak to an oncologist beforehand. It is your very life that you are talking about.

            Best of luck to you all.

            Crohn's sucks, but cancer is worse.

            nhsister
            Participant

              Dear Erika,

                 I happened upon your comments while searching for clinical trials.

              My brother (age 52) has been taking Remicade for the past three years to control his Crohn's.

              Like you, he had a stage one melanoma removed after he had been on Remicade for about a year.

              Two weeks ago, he felt a lump in his armpit and now, having had it checked (with more extensive diagnosing),

              he is facing a most serious diagnosis of melanoma that has metastasized to his liver and beyond.

              He was instantly taken off of the Reminded and will start Chemotherapy in two days.  The outlook is grim.

              He is facing a prognosis of succumbing to this shitty disease within two to nine months.

                 We haven't given up hope.

              We are looking for clinical trials that are now really the only good hope beyond chemotherapy.

                 I guess that when he made the choice to 'go for the Reminded' , it was the immediacy of the benefits

              that pushed the decision.  The relief seemed so good.

                Melanoma is just so quiet.   

              Until the lump, there were no symptoms. It is only now that I am reading about

              the dangers in-depth. The longer you take it, the higher your chances of  not only melanoma,

              but a host of other possibly fatal consequences,

                  If you decide to take it, please be vigilant about checking yourself  and read read read about it. 

              There is a host of information out there.  If you have a physician that is sort of wishy-washy,

              perhaps you need to speak to an oncologist beforehand. It is your very life that you are talking about.

              Best of luck to you all.

              Crohn's sucks, but cancer is worse.

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