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Thomas Garrod

Bustinyourballs

Fundraising for The Cancer Treatment and Research Trust CIO - Charing Cross Hospital
£3,089
raised
by 71 supporters
Donations cannot currently be made to this page
We Fund research into different cancers to Extend and improve the lives of patients

Story

Thanks for taking the time to visit my JustGiving page.

 I have decided to change the Charity that I raise money for.

CTRT (The Cancer Treatment And Research Trust) Charing Cross Hospital

I feel very passionate about this charity as they're based where I was originally treated and are also a smaller charity but still do a massive amount in cancer research

Here's a little about them.

The Cancer Treatment and Research Trust (CTRT) was founded in 1985. Its main role is to raise funding for research into why and how cancers develop; better ways of detecting and monitoring cancers; and finding and testing new treatments.

CTRT has played a key role in funding the world class research work undertaken by consultants and their teams at Charing Cross Hospital and Hammersmith Hospital in west London.

The teams at Charing Cross and Hammersmith have made significant contributions to combat cancers affecting the ovaries, the placenta, testes, brain, kidneys and lungs. But whilst more life are being saved, the number of cancer patients in increasing because people are living longer and some cancers develop with age.

Our mission is to enable our consultants and scientists to continue turning research ideas into exciting research studies and new life-saving treatments.It helps patients and supports research for (1) choriocarcinoma/gestational trophoblastic disease where Charing Cross is the world's largest centre (2)lung cancer with research at Hammersmith Hospital (3) testicular and ovarian germ cell tumours

Please copy and paste this link to see the event I'm competed/competing in to raise funds them and to raise awareness for Bustinyourballs.org

 

www.bustinyourballs.org/racing-to-raise-awareness-2


Below you will find my story

Well it all started in the autumn of 2004 when I was only 27 years old.

I started getting a really bad pain in my lower back. I thought nothing of it at first I just thought it was because my job at the time involved a lot of heavy lifting.

So I started taking Nurofen Plus. The pain went away for about 2 weeks but then came back, but this time it was much worse and it wasn’t just in the lower back it was in the upper back as well. So I went to my local walk-in centre to see if they could help.

I waited for 6 hours before I was seen, then they asked me what my symptoms were, they did a chest x-ray and took a sample of my blood.

I waited for the results and they told me not to worry and gave me some painkillers.

As I left the centre I thought to myself that this can’t be right. So I rang my mum (A retired GP) who was in Australia visiting my sister who was living there.

She explained that she was coming home the next day and said she would arrange for me to see my GP.

We spent the following week seeing two doctors. After seeing the first one we asked for a second opinion that led to being booked to see a specialist in two months time.

My mum insisted that I was seen straight away because she had a feeling that I had cancer, although she didn’t tell me so as not to scare me.

The next day we saw the specialist and had a chest x-ray and a blood sample was taken, both results came back very abnormal and the specialist wanted to admit me to hospital the same day.

I spent the weekend under observation with codeine as my painkiller…(Not really helping a great deal).

Monday 15th November 2004, I was told I had testicular cancer stage 4 and my parents were told that I would die, Sadly for me there is no way I could have known about the cancer earlier as there was no lump to feel in my testicle. The primary growth there was so tiny that even when scans showed it up the doctors themselves still could not feel it.
That day I was transferred to Charing Cross Hospital London and put on a 3 and a half week course of chemotherapy.

The doctors there later said they hoped that I would have a 60/40 chance of survival.

Then I was put on a new course of chemotherapy, this time it was 5 months of seven 3-day courses of chemotherapy intravenously. As well as being admitted to hospital for some of these I also had two emergency admissions for complications (Infections)

By the end of these I had been able to stop taking morphine for the pain, but the bad news was that all my hair had gone including my eyebrows and eyelashes….not a pretty sight. After that stage my veins had become so inactive a Hickman line had to be inserted.

In April I moved to the Dacie Ward at the Hammersmith Hospital for a 3 and ahalf week course of high dose chemotherapy and a stem cell transplant. This was possibly the worst 3 and a half weeks of my life mainly because I couldn’t eat for the majority of the time, I even had to be given a drug called Valium because I was feeling so depressed and anxious.



By this time I had had a Hickman line in for several weeks. I felt so ill for part of the time, had a lot of nose bleeds and for one week I had to be fed through a tube because my mouth was full of ulcers. This is a well known side effect of the transplant.

In July I was back in Charing Cross Hospital for a major operation to remove all the glands from the back of my abdomen and one testis. We went back to see my Professor in outpatients and he was able to tell us that all the glands showed dead cancer and that he was going to continue just to watch the shadows in my lungs and liver as hopefully they were dead too.



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About the charity

We undertake research for choriocarcinoma/gestational trophoblastic disease where Charing Cross is the world's largest centre for this disease. Lung cancer research at Hammersmith Hospital. Testicular and ovarian germ cell tumour research

Donation summary

Total raised
£3,088.05
+ £580.60 Gift Aid
Online donations
£2,719.05
Offline donations
£369.00

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