Daily Mail

MILK OF HUMAN KINDNESS

Pioneering lung op saves milkman with cancer – and leaves just 2in scar

- By Xantha Leatham

FOR decades, surgery to treat lung cancer could take at least five hours followed by months of painful recovery and a lengthy stay in hospital.

But for Raymond Page, 74, it involved a pioneering keyhole operation in only half that time – and he was up and out of bed just hours after the procedure.

The retired milkman has made history as the first patient in the world to have a lung removed through a small cut in his stomach – leaving him with a scar measuring only 2in.

Mr Page had been diagnosed with stage 4 lung cancer – the most life-threatenin­g form of the disease – after a scan revealed two tumours in his right lung. The two-and-a-half-hour procedure last november involved detaching his lung and compressin­g it into a ‘fishing net’ bag before pulling it out of his belly.

Remarkably, he was free of pain, walking and chatting shortly after the operation at the Royal Papworth Hospital in Cambridges­hire.

Mr Page, from nearby Peterborou­gh, said: ‘I was worried when I heard I was going to be the world’s first. [But] within a matter of hours after the operation I was up.’

The procedure has been hailed as revolution­ary, with experts predicting it could become widespread and pave the way in noninvasiv­e surgery.

Surgeons usually treat lung cancer patients by making an incision of up to 8in in the side of the chest. In Mr Page’s case, they made a small cut between his abdominal muscles. during the procedure, he was able to breathe without a ventilator and was kept in hospital for just six days.

Mr Page, who is now undergoing chemothera­py as a precaution, said: ‘I feel brilliant, if they had done it the normal way I would still be in hospital.’

His wife Jo, 69, with whom he has three children and eight grandchild­ren, said: ‘ The first thought you have when you think about someone in intensive care is all [these] tubes going into people, but he was sat up talking to the nurses. We just thought this was unbelievab­le. We were so shocked to see him sitting there.’

dr Giuseppe Aresu, the surgeon behind Mr Page’s operation, credited the procedure’s success to

‘I feel brilliant’

the team of surgeons, anaestheti­sts, nurses, therapists, dieticians, registrars and radiograph­ers who come from all over the world, the Sunday Times reported.

Every year, about 40,000 people are diagnosed with lung cancer in the uK, 6,000 of whom are treated surgically. Some of the rest are treated with radiothera­py and chemothera­py but most are simply offered palliative treatments.

 ??  ?? Leading the way: Raymond Page, 74, with consultant thoracic surgeon Giuseppe Aresu, centre, and members of the lung transplant team at Royal Papworth Hospital
Leading the way: Raymond Page, 74, with consultant thoracic surgeon Giuseppe Aresu, centre, and members of the lung transplant team at Royal Papworth Hospital
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