Jordan – Interview 27
Jordan delayed going to see his GP after finding a swelling on the end of his penis. When cancer was eventually diagnosed he underwent a partial penectomy with reconstructive surgery. He is currently waiting for his first post-operative check-up.
In early 2010 Jordan noticed a swelling on the end of his penis. Twenty eight years earlier he had noticed a small patch in the same place but had been told by his GP that it was nothing untoward, and then three years ago his foreskin had become very tight and sore. He had been feeling uncharacteristically lethargic lately but had attributed this to his age (fifty eight). His wife noticed blood on his underpants and saw the lump. Being very worried she encouraged him to see his GP, but he was frightened of what might happen so delayed for three months.
Jordan finally saw his GP in January 2011 when thrush was diagnosed and topical treatment prescribed. When the swelling failed to respond to treatment he was referred to his local hospital. Within a week he was seen and a biopsy was carried out under general anaesthetic. Immediately after, he went on holiday to Spain with his daughter, returning to find a hospital appointment waiting for him. It was at this appointment he was told he had penile cancer.
The news left him devastated. He had never been seriously ill before and had never been in hospital. He thought it would only be a matter of time before he died and before that he would have to face problems with urinary and sexual function. He feared the cancer would spread. He found it difficult to talk about, but when he did, people were very sympathetic. He was referred on to a Specialist Penile Cancer Centre.
In the meantime he and his wife carried out as much independent research as they could. They trawled the Internet for help and advice and Jordan saw an alternative therapist. He changed his diet and asked his surgeon if phototherapy would cure him. The surgeon thought not. The only option was surgery which Jordan delayed for as long as he could as he felt he needed a lot more information.
The consultant at the specialist centre explained in great detail about the options for surgery, from the very best to the very worst case scenario. At his point he fainted.
Jordan’s wife, daughter and alternative therapist managed to convince him that surgery gave him his best chance of survival and he finally agreed. He could have had his operation in April 2011, but because he delayed, it was September before the operation took place.
On the morning of the operation, he had to ring the hospital to make sure there was a bed for him. He was secretly hoping there wouldn’t be and he could delay once again but there was one! Jordan underwent a partial penectomy with reconstructive surgery after which he experienced discomfort rather than pain and his penis looked much better than he had expected.
He feels he is getting better every day. He finds it awkward to urinate and has to sit rather than stand and his sexual function is impaired. However, he is confident that both of these will improve. He now walks his dogs about two miles every day and feels good about himself. Initially, he saw the operation as a threat to his masculinity but his wife has helped him through that. The scans he has had so far have detected no spread of the cancer and he has the first of his six monthly check-ups coming up.