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Treating Ovarian CancerBy:
Can stage 3 ovarian cancer in a 76-year-old woman be successfully treated with surgery and chemotherapy? If a patient refuses any blood transfusions, will this hamper her recovery, or can synthetic blood products be used?
--Gloria
The success of treatment for ovarian cancer depends more on how advanced it is than it does on the age of the patient. In fact, stage for stage, a healthy, nonsmoking 76-year-old with a good attitude would likely do better than an overweight 55-year-old two-pack-a-day smoker.
In terms of blood transfusion, yes, sometimes alternative blood "substitutes" may be used, but in the case of massive hemorrhage, they are not as good as the real thing. Refusal of blood transfusion can make a difference in recovery; anemia makes it more difficult to heal, and infection may be more common. If a patient refuses a blood transfusion for religious reasons, as Jehovah's Witnesses do, then that must be respected. However, if one is refusing blood out of fear, then that fear needs to be addressed by the doctor -- today, where I live, the chance of contracting hepatitis from a unit of blood is about one in 5,000 and the risk of HIV is about one in 700,000.
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