Onco Life Hospitals

What to Bring, How to Prepare, and What to Expect

Follow-up visits help us monitor recovery, manage side effects, and check for any early signs that need attention after surgery / chemotherapy / radiotherapy / targeted or immunotherapy.

What to Bring (Checklist)

Your treatment file (most important)

  • Treatment summary (if you have it)
  • Surgery papers: discharge summary, operative note (if available), final histopathology/IHC reports
  • Chemotherapy records: cycle dates, regimen name (if known), last cycle summary, any admissions during chemo
  • Radiotherapy details: number of sessions, completion date, any radiation summary card/notes
  • Any ongoing medicines list (photo of strips is fine)

Reports since last visit

  • Recent blood tests (CBC, LFT/KFT etc. as advised)
  • Any new scans (CT/MRI/PET-CT/USG) or reports
  • Any reports from other doctors/hospitals (if consulted)

What you should note down before coming

  • New symptoms (when started, how often, what makes it worse/better)
  • Side-effects you are facing (pain, fatigue, appetite, sleep, bowel/bladder issues)
  • Weight changes (if possible)
  • Questions you want answered (write 5 points)

Practical

  • Photo ID
  • One attendant/family member (recommended)

Before You Come (How to Prepare)

  • If the doctor has advised tests before follow-up, get them done 1–3 days prior (so reports are ready).
  • Carry all reports in date order (newest on top).
  • If you have diabetes/BP/thyroid medicines, take them as usual unless your doctor advised otherwise.
  • If fasting tests are needed (like fasting sugar/lipids), follow the fasting instructions provided.

What to Expect in a Follow-Up Visit

  • Registration & vitals
    Weight, BP, and basic checks.
  • Symptom review
    Doctor asks about recovery, side effects, appetite, sleep, pain, bowel/bladder habits, etc.
  • Physical examination
    Depending on cancer site: surgical area check, lymph node exam, mouth/throat exam, breast exam, abdomen exam, etc.
  • Report review
    Blood reports + scan reports + treatment documents are reviewed together.
  • Plan for next steps
    • Medicines adjusted (pain, acidity, nausea, supplements, etc.)
    • Supportive care (nutrition, physiotherapy, speech/swallow therapy, stoma care, lymphedema care)
    • Next tests (if needed) and next follow-up date is decided
  • Scheduling & guidance
    The team helps with appointments, investigations, and any scheme/insurance paperwork if required.

Typical Follow-Up Timelines

(This varies by cancer type, stage, and treatment—your doctor will personalize it.)

  • First follow-up after completing treatment: often 2–6 weeks
  • Then commonly: every 3–6 months initially, and less frequent later if stable

Common Things Patients Ask in Follow-Up

  • “Are these side effects normal, and when will they improve?”
  • “Do I need any scan now or later?”
  • “What diet and activity should I follow?”
  • “When can I return to work/driving/exercise?”
  • “What symptoms should not be ignored?”
  • “When is my next review and which tests should be done before it?”

When to Contact Us Immediately / Come to Casualty

Do not wait if you have:

  • Fever (especially after chemo)
  • Severe breathlessness, chest pain, fainting
  • Uncontrolled vomiting/diarrhoea or dehydration
  • Uncontrolled bleeding / black stools / blood in urine
  • Sudden severe headache, weakness in arm/leg, confusion, seizures
  • New rapidly increasing swelling/lump, severe pain, or wound/port site infection signs
  • Severe burning urine or not passing urine

Disclaimer

Follow-up schedules and tests are individualized. The goal is early support and early detection of issues, please follow the plan shared by your treating team.

Explore More Patient Preparation Guide

We also recommend you to read: