PHNOM PENH (AFP)--Cambodia's former king Norodom Sihanouk says he is showing progress in his most recent fight against cancer, according to a royal letter posted on his Web site.
The 86-year-old, who left for Beijing in July last year to receive medical treatment for other illnesses, said in late December his Chinese doctors had found a new cancer in his body.
Sihanouk said in a letter dated Feb. 27 that after treatment, "today I went to hospital to have it checked with modern equipment (PET Scan) and saw that this cancer has shrunk."
However he added that he needed to prolong his stay in Beijing for further treatment.
Sihanouk was first diagnosed with B-cell lymphoma, a cancer affecting blood cells crucial to the immune system, in 1993.
The cancer began in his prostate and recurred in 2005 in his stomach.
Sihanouk has suffered from a number of other ailments including diabetes and hypertension.
Despite giving up his role as monarch, Sihanouk remains a prominent figure in Cambodia and often uses messages on his Web site to weigh in on matters affecting the country.
The 86-year-old, who left for Beijing in July last year to receive medical treatment for other illnesses, said in late December his Chinese doctors had found a new cancer in his body.
Sihanouk said in a letter dated Feb. 27 that after treatment, "today I went to hospital to have it checked with modern equipment (PET Scan) and saw that this cancer has shrunk."
However he added that he needed to prolong his stay in Beijing for further treatment.
Sihanouk was first diagnosed with B-cell lymphoma, a cancer affecting blood cells crucial to the immune system, in 1993.
The cancer began in his prostate and recurred in 2005 in his stomach.
Sihanouk has suffered from a number of other ailments including diabetes and hypertension.
Despite giving up his role as monarch, Sihanouk remains a prominent figure in Cambodia and often uses messages on his Web site to weigh in on matters affecting the country.
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