A special welcome to members in or from the UK, especially if you're visiting the forum for the first time.
It always feels strange to "welcome" people. After all, we'd all rather not have a need to be here, but you have found a great place for information and support during your journey (or that of a loved one) through testicular cancer. TC-cancer.com is a great community full of great people.
In recent months there has been a marked growth in traffic to this site - hopefully this reflects more people finding us, not an increase in incidence of TC. We've also seen more and more people from the UK joining, so we felt it would be a good idea to have a thread to help explain some UK specific issues, and to explain some of the differences between the way things work in the UK and and how they work in North America.
One common cause of confusion is terminology. The word "teratoma", for instance is used to describe a certain cell type in the UK, and a different type in the US. Thankfully the UK is now beginning to use the US terms more and more, but there is still the potential for confusion, so for handy reference, here is a list of comparative terminology:
UK/US Terminology
British __________________________US
Seminoma________________________Seminoma
Teratoma_________________________Non-seminoma
Teratoma differentiated______________Mature teratoma
Malignant teratoma intermediate______Embryonal carcinoma with teratoma
Malignant teratoma undifferentiated____Embryonal carcinoma
Yolk sac tumour___________________Yolk sac tumor
Malignant teratoma trophoblastic______Choriocarcinoma
In addition to this, there are also differences between the way various treatments are administered in the UK. The most striking example is that BEP chemotherapy is usually given over three days here in the UK, whilst in the USA it is the norm to give the treatment over five days. Full details of the BEP regimen used in the UK are listed on the TCT website.
UK Literature and Information
General
An introduction to testicular cancer from The Guardian's website
TC statistics from the BBC
Testicular Cancer Guidelines
NICE guidelines about urological cancers (current, but not very detailed)
NHS Choices - TC information
NHS treatment guidelines to doctors
The Royal Marsden's guidelines about follow-up schedules
Welsh guidelines for urological cancers
EU Guidelines - Probably all the info you'll need, in 18 pages...
...or read the full 50 page version here
Testosterone
UK Guidelines Thanks to Nick O'Hara Smith for this
Financial
The Dept of Health website confirms that from 1 April 2009, cancer patients will not have to pay fro prescriptions which relate to their cancer
(Thanks to Chris [ukboyuk] and Jon [jonwil] for many of these links)
Financial note: If you have a life insurance policy with critical illness cover (possibly an endowment as part of your mortgage), claim! I did, and it paid off my mortgage.
Please feel free to use this thread to discuss any UK related issues. Equally, please do not feel that you should avoid talking about UK stuff elsewhere on the forum - the entire forum exists for all members, so we should all feel free to continue posting wherever we feel is most appropriate.
I hope this thread will prove to be useful to our growing UK community.
I continue to add info to this thread as relevant literature is brought to my attention, so any suggestions as to what we should include would be most welcome.
It always feels strange to "welcome" people. After all, we'd all rather not have a need to be here, but you have found a great place for information and support during your journey (or that of a loved one) through testicular cancer. TC-cancer.com is a great community full of great people.
In recent months there has been a marked growth in traffic to this site - hopefully this reflects more people finding us, not an increase in incidence of TC. We've also seen more and more people from the UK joining, so we felt it would be a good idea to have a thread to help explain some UK specific issues, and to explain some of the differences between the way things work in the UK and and how they work in North America.
One common cause of confusion is terminology. The word "teratoma", for instance is used to describe a certain cell type in the UK, and a different type in the US. Thankfully the UK is now beginning to use the US terms more and more, but there is still the potential for confusion, so for handy reference, here is a list of comparative terminology:
UK/US Terminology
British __________________________US
Seminoma________________________Seminoma
Teratoma_________________________Non-seminoma
Teratoma differentiated______________Mature teratoma
Malignant teratoma intermediate______Embryonal carcinoma with teratoma
Malignant teratoma undifferentiated____Embryonal carcinoma
Yolk sac tumour___________________Yolk sac tumor
Malignant teratoma trophoblastic______Choriocarcinoma
In addition to this, there are also differences between the way various treatments are administered in the UK. The most striking example is that BEP chemotherapy is usually given over three days here in the UK, whilst in the USA it is the norm to give the treatment over five days. Full details of the BEP regimen used in the UK are listed on the TCT website.
UK Literature and Information
General
An introduction to testicular cancer from The Guardian's website
TC statistics from the BBC
Testicular Cancer Guidelines
NICE guidelines about urological cancers (current, but not very detailed)
NHS Choices - TC information
NHS treatment guidelines to doctors
The Royal Marsden's guidelines about follow-up schedules
Welsh guidelines for urological cancers
EU Guidelines - Probably all the info you'll need, in 18 pages...
...or read the full 50 page version here
Testosterone
UK Guidelines Thanks to Nick O'Hara Smith for this
Financial
The Dept of Health website confirms that from 1 April 2009, cancer patients will not have to pay fro prescriptions which relate to their cancer
(Thanks to Chris [ukboyuk] and Jon [jonwil] for many of these links)
Financial note: If you have a life insurance policy with critical illness cover (possibly an endowment as part of your mortgage), claim! I did, and it paid off my mortgage.
Please feel free to use this thread to discuss any UK related issues. Equally, please do not feel that you should avoid talking about UK stuff elsewhere on the forum - the entire forum exists for all members, so we should all feel free to continue posting wherever we feel is most appropriate.
I hope this thread will prove to be useful to our growing UK community.
I continue to add info to this thread as relevant literature is brought to my attention, so any suggestions as to what we should include would be most welcome.
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