What does your surgeon mean when he or she says: ‘I think I’ve got it all’? This expression is unfortunately often used—unfortunately because it is so misleading. I’m not sure whether surgeons say this knowing it is misleading or whether they simply don’t realise that most patients take it to mean that they have definitely been cured by the operation. What I do know is that, if it is said to you, you should ask exactly what is meant. It is certainly not a guarantee of cure. It is sometimes even said when the surgeon knows that cure is not possible!
If your surgeon says this within a day or two of the operation, it means only that he or she has removed all the cancer that was detected before and/or visible during the operation. If your surgeon says it after receiving the pathology report, it probably means that, when it was examined under the microscope, cancer cells were not seen extending right out to the edge of the removed tissue.
The fact of the matter, as you and I know, is that no one can be sure that no cancer remains in your body immediately after an operation. You can only be sure that this was true, after enough time has gone by for any remaining seedlings to activate and form detectable tumours.
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