Interview 08
Diagnosed in 1995 with Hodgkin’s Disease following breathlessness and arthritis-like symptoms. His doctor also detected swollen lymph glands in his neck. Six cycles of chemotherapy put him into remission.
His illness began with shortness of breath, which didn’t respond to antibiotics and gradually worsened. This was found to be caused by fluid in the lungs and around the heart, which was drained off. After this his breathing gradually improved and he had regular lung function tests and chest x-rays.
Eleven months later one of his fingers swelled up and felt stiff. The stiffness became progressively worse, extended to other fingers, and his legs felt heavy. He had investigations for possible arthritis but this was eventually dismissed. A chest x-ray then revealed shadowing around his thymus gland, which it turned out had also been visible on the previous x-ray taken 6 months earlier, but not noticed. A biopsy confirmed that he had Hodgkin’s disease. His doctor pointed out that there were swollen lymph nodes in his neck, but he had never noticed them himself.
He was treated with six cycles of a chemotherapy combination called VEEP as part of a clinical trial, as it was a new treatment at the time. Towards the end of treatment he needed a blood transfusion to restore his blood cells to normal levels. The chemotherapy put him into remission and scans taken after his final treatment showed no evidence of cancer cells, suggesting that the disease was very unlikely to recurr. He has been attending regular follow-up appointments since and remains in remission. Neither the breathlessness or the stiff joints has ever recurred.