A Greater Manchester, England, resident, named Glynn who was diagnosed with an advanced stage of cancer and given a year to live is now cancer-free. The 51-year-old patient was given a customised treatment regimen in the UK, and this development took place after that.
Welder by trade, Robert Glynn, 51, received his intrahepatic bile duct cancer diagnosis in June 2020, just before he turned 49. Small tubes called bile ducts link the liver, gall bladder, and small intestine. They let bile out into the human digestive system, which aids in the breakdown of fat. After feeling excruciating shoulder discomfort, Glynn was diagnosed with cancer, which had spread to his liver and adrenal gland. With stage 4 cancer, Glynn had the lowest chance of surviving for more than a year.
Glynn was rated a strong candidate for a clinical trial of an immunotherapy medication
“I asked my consultant to be honest and tell me how long I’d got if I carried on as I was, and she said 12 months,” he was quoted as saying by The Guardian. According to Liver Cancer UK, only one in 50 people live for at least five years after being diagnosed with bile duct cancer.
According to reports, Glynn was rated a strong candidate for a clinical trial of an immunotherapy medication that has already received approval for use in treating lung, kidney, and oesophageal cancer. Immunotherapy works by assisting the body’s immune system in identifying and eliminating cancer cells. The drip-based therapy, which supports the body’s immune system in the battle against cancer, was paired with conventional chemotherapy. His adrenal gland tumour reduced from 7 cm to 4.1 cm, while the tumour in his liver shrank from 12 cm to 2.6 cm. Following this, Glynn was able to have his tumours surgically removed in April.
His three-monthly scans reveal that he is cancer-free
Only dead tissue was apparently discovered by the surgeons, indicating that all cancer cells had been eradicated by the procedure. “No live cancer cells were discovered at all. Because they found it so unbelievable, they tested the tumours twice” Glynn stated. Glynn has not required additional treatment since his surgery in April of this year, and his three-monthly scans reveal that he is cancer-free. (Xanax Online) With the aim of altering the course of treatment for biliary tract cancer and raising the associated survival rate, additional studies are currently being conducted in the UK with a larger patient population.