Mark – Interview18
Mark had been feeling ill for five months with urinary problems. After going to A&E in 2009 he saw a urologist who without a detailed explanation performed a dorsal slit. Now, with a diagnosis of cancer he went on to have a total penectomy and subsequent lymphadenectomy.
At 46 years old Mark had been ill for five months. His penis was hard and misshapen, he was in severe pain, had a lump at the base of his penis and had haematuria and pyuria (blood and pus in the urine). He had told neither his family nor friends but had confided in his female work colleagues who had pleaded with him to seek help. Whilst getting ready to go to work one day he suffered difficulty with urination. He went to his local A&E department where he was referred to a urologist. He saw the urologist that day who gave him the news that he would need an urgent operation the next day. He was told he was to have a dorsal slit but the urologist offered no further explanation of this procedure. When post operatively he saw that his penis had been slit from base to tip of his foreskin, he collapsed.
Mark was told that the tissue that had been excised was ulcerated and cancerous and that the surgeons had been unable to remove it all. He would have to go to a Specialist Penile Cancer Centre for further surgery no one explained why. He was discharged into the care of the district nurses and four weeks later he was seen at the Specialist Penile Cancer Centre where he was told he had penile cancer and would need a total penectomy. He thought he was going to die. He underwent his penectomy and six weeks later a lymphadenectomy. This second operation he found more painful and traumatic than the first. Unfortunately Mark had to readmitted twice when his wounds developed infections. On both occasions he was nursed in isolation for a number of weeks.
Two years on he considers his major problems to be behind him. He still gets very tired and feels completely emasculated. He won’t wear jeans or shorts for fear that people will notice he doesn’t have a penis. He sits down to urinate and can’t bring himself to look at his genital area. He no longer has a sex life and shuns romantic involvement. But he has his life, something he is extremely grateful for. He has re-prioritised his life and realises that material possessions are no longer as important to him as they once were. He wants to start raising money for the department where he received his treatment.
He is currently seeing a counsellor and awaiting reconstructive surgery (this entails undergoing up to five operations). It will be another two years before he gets the all clear’.