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What happens after cancer treatment can be different for each patient.

You might:

  • Be going through treatment right now, thinking about next steps
  • Just finishing treatment
  • Have finished treatment a while ago
  • Be coming back to the cancer centre for follow-up

During all of these stages you may need to see your cancer care team or benefit from some support. The support you need as you transition away from cancer treatment can change at each stage.

Follow-up at the Cancer Centre

When you finish cancer treatment, you may be booked for a follow-up visit with your cancer healthcare team.

Follow-up visits can be spaced out from months to a few years after you finish your treatment. These visits might include:

  • Talking with your Oncologist and Oncology Nurse
  • Getting blood work taken
  • Medical imaging tests that look for changes to your health (X-Ray, CT, MRI, mammogram, ultrasound etc.)
  • Review of any problems you have had since the last follow-up

Follow-Up With Your Family Doctor

Your cancer team knows all about cancer, cancer treatment and treatment side effects. They do not always know how to manage your other health needs beyond cancer (e.g. diabetes, heart disease, gastrointestinal problems).

You should continue to follow-up with your family doctor for your regular healthcare needs. When you are done your cancer treatment and care with your Oncologist, you will go back to your family doctor for:

  • Regular healthcare follow-ups
  • Health screening
  • Healthcare needs to prevent or treat illness

There can come a time when you may no longer have follow-up with the cancer centre. Your cancer care plan might transition to your family doctor to manage in the community. Each patient has a different timeline for this transition.

If you are having any trouble with this change let any member of your healthcare team know.

Support with the transition

As a patient, care partner, or family member, you may have a number of different feelings after finishing cancer treatment. Some people feel relieved while others may feel:

  • Happy or sad
  • Anxious or scared
  • Angry or moody
  • Weak

These feelings are normal. There are community counselling services offered to patients and their family members or caregivers.

Recovery & Survivorship

This is a phase of the cancer journey that involves living beyond cancer. Learn more about how to recover after treatment and what to think about as you continue life after treatment.

End-Of-Life Care

As cancer progresses, your healthcare team may determine that the cancer can no longer be controlled. This may involve stopping treatments and medical testing. You are not alone. Your healthcare team will emphasize maintaining your quality of life to make sure you are comfortable as time goes on.