March 2016
I came out of the doctors room in shock! I could have Vulva cancer! I walked out the surgery to my husband who was waiting in the car with my son, I was trying really hard not to cry. I needed to get home. I remember feeling sick and holding back the tears so my son didn’t ask what was wrong, he is only 11 and has autism so wouldn’t understand, hell I didn’t understand! I had never heard of vulval cancer , I didn’t even know the outside area was called your Vulva. I got home and then told my husband what the doctor said, he looked shocked. I had to wait for a call for an appointment to see a gynaecologist and have a biopsy. I was told it should be within 2 weeks. That night I went to bed but couldn’t sleep. I started to cry So I went downstairs so no one could hear me especially as my son and daughter didn’t know. I wanted to wait until I knew everything before I told family. I cried so hard I collapsed to the floor in my kitchen and stayed there for a while. I just wanted my mum, but she wasn’t here. I was sure it was cancer and as I had the symptoms and ulcer nearly a year so thought that it must of spread! I told myself I had weeks maybe months to live. I came to terms with death quite easy, until I thought about my family, I wouldn’t see my son and daughter grow up, get married or have kids. Help them in life. I then thought back to how I felt when I found out my mum had cancer and what it was like when she died. I realised how scared she must of been and how I felt when I was told. I didn’t want my kids to go through that. The next few weeks were a blur! I decided to sort all my stuff out so my daughter and husband didn’t have to. I packed up most of my stuff in my bedroom and sorted through all my clothes. My poor husband made about 4 trips to the tip. I took my daughter shopping and brought her lots of things, I nearly brought a couple things for myself then thought what’s the point I won’t be here to use them. I had my biopsy which was a day before my birthday. Only my husband knew, which was hard to act normal around others. I thought that would be my last birthday. I arranged my funeral in my head, found flowers and a coffin I liked and saved them on my phone. I would go for a bath most nights and just sit and cry as that was the place I didn’t hold it all in. I got my biopsy results of Lichen Sclerosus (again I had never heard that condition before either) and squamous cell carcinoma (Vulva cancer) I then had to have PET scans and MRI and wait for the results to see if it had spread. I had convinced myself it had and was having symptoms of bladder and bowel cancer. The next couple weeks seemed to go so slow but finally got the results that it hadn’t spread and surgery was in 2 weeks time to remove the tumour and sentinel nodes biopsy to test if it had gone to my lymph nodes as scans were unclear in seeing cancer in nodes. What a relief! It hadn’t spread and was stage 1b. Then the symptoms I was having all went! Surprising what you can imagine and tricks your body. I had a plan of treatment and was feeling positive and so much better. I now told my 16 year old daughter which was the hardest thing I’ve had to do! She had already lost her nan to cancer. I decided not to tell my son as he wouldn’t understand and as having autism has no empathy. I then started to tell the rest of my family and friends. I wasn’t scared or worried about the Operation just wanted it over. Surgery went ok but from my scan to operation the tumour grew aggressively so was too close to my bum to get clear margins so had to have radiotherapy to make sure. The lymph node biopsy came back clear. I stayed in hospital for 5 days and once home I had to lay in bed mostly for 4 weeks as sitting was to painful especially as all my stitches came out so took longer to heal but it was ok. Once I had healed enough I started 5 weeks of radiotherapy (August 2016) which wasn’t easy. I was tired all the time and had bowel problems and my skin on the inside of my groins started to go red and hot then the skin started to come off and weep. I found walking painful and the journey up to London on the train during the hot weather extremely hard. But I did it! After a few weeks I went back to work and tried to get back to normal but my scan showed a node was still swollen from a previous scan so they decided in December 2016 to remove more nodes to check. They removed 6 lymph nodes from my left groin and 3 came back cancerous. I was devastated again! It had already been 9 months and I was going to have to have more radiation on both left and right nodes plus my abdomen to make sure. I spent New Year’s Eve weekend in hospital because I got cellulitis while on holiday and had 2 more Operations on my groin so spent most of January 2017 in hospital because I had many problems getting the infection under control and had to have the groin drain put back in. I then started my second lot of radiotherapy in March 2017. 33 sessions over 8 weeks. I knew what to expect this time and as it was higher up walking this time was much easier. Still having bowel problems and so tired all the time. By the time I had my next scan it had been 16 months of scans and treatment and finally in July 2017 I was given the all clear! In remission, cancer free. It had spread to my lymph nodes so I beat stage 3 vulval cancer! Yes I was happy and relieved but I had been on autopilot the last 16 months so now it was over? I can get back to normal? No, now I have to deal with the side affects of the surgery’s and the radiation. It put me straight into the menopause, I then had lymphedema confirmed in my legs, pelvis and abdomen. I have nerve damage and pain in my left groin , still have bowel problems and is tired all the time But yes I beat cancer! For now! I still have Lichen Sclerosus which is the skin condition that caused my cancer and was left untreated for many years as seems I’ve had since a child but numerous times was missed and misdiagnosed as cystitis and thrush multiple times over the years. I had swobs and blood tests but Lichen Sclerosus was never mentioned. If a doctor or nurse had recognised the symptoms I would have been diagnosed much earlier and been using the steroid, so I might not have got cancer as there is only a 5% chance of Lichen Sclerosus turning to cancer if the skin is left to thicken, and the cancer would not of had time to spread to stage 3 Cancer. I would not have had to have radiation which caused all my life changing side affects. If I had known about LS and Vulval cancer I would have gone back to the doctors and not given up going. If I hadn’t seen all the adverts for thrush and vagisil for vaginal itching and thinking this must be normal. If the nurses that did my smear tests had been trained in LS and vulval cancer. If midwives had also been trained in LS and Vulval cancer then it would have been diagnosed on one of the multiple times I’ve seen a nurse or midwife. It’s now been 1 year since I was given the all clear but life hasn’t gone back to normal it never will. I have to find my new normal and accept every new sore or red area or pain that it Could be back! I worry that other symptoms are a different cancer. Worry every scan they find something. Feels like a ticking time bomb. Worry that my family will get cancer too. The depression and bad days. I still go for a bath and have a good cry. The guilt you have for surviving and others don’t. The anger of so little awareness of both conditions. Why the medical profession don’t know or misdiagnose. Just because it is commonly in the older women they dismiss it if you're younger. So now I’m trying to raise awareness as much as I can especially as Vulval cancer doesn’t have any charity’s of there own or a Awareness day/week of its own or official ribbon or any celebrities to help or have tea party’s. More awareness and research is needed in LS, VIN ,Vulval and Vaginal cancer. I don’t want anyone to go through what I have and am still going through. Nurses and GP’s need training in All these conditions especially those that do smear tests. Vulva cancer needs it’s own awareness week to make any impact. More Research is needed I like to help who ever I can, whether is tips, support or just someone to talk to who is going through the same as you. We need to use the word Vulva more!
3 Comments
Janet
16/8/2018 08:51:27
LS is a sword hanging over those of us that have been diagnosed. Any itch, any flare up... how bad will it be? How long will it last? How much will this affect my life? How much will this impact on my marriage? It’s a lot to contend with. It’s a ticking time bomb in your pants! All of us praying we don’t have to face the horror that you’ve been through but knowing only time will tell. Dreading the smear test with tough nurses and the time it takes to recover from all the tearing... The list goes on. My thoughts and good will wishes go out to any woman suffering from LS or vulval cancer in any form.
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Licjen Sclerosus
16/8/2018 18:35:17
I couldn't agree more Janet. I'm trying to get a few changes made regarding treatments that help available on the NHS such as stem cell. There is also a research project happening soon in Nottingham with patient participation. Hopefully this will give us more answers and better treatments. Fingers crossed.
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Charlotte Starchuk
13/8/2023 02:04:04
I’m reading your story and can’t help but feel complete shock at your comment about your autistic son having no empathy due to being autistic. I hope this many years later you are able to understand him and see how empathetic our beautiful children can be!
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