Brazil's Lula is beating cancer, doctors say

Updated: 2011-12-13 09:40

(Agencies)

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SAO PAULO - Doctors in charge of throat cancer treatment for former Brazilian President LuizInacio Lula da Silva called his response to chemotherapy "impressive" and said the tumor in his larynx had shrunk by 75 percent in size.

Brazil's Lula is beating cancer, doctors say

Former Brazilian President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva (L) shakes hands with his doctor Roberto Kalil Filho as his wife Marisa (C) smiles at the Sirio Libanes Hospital in Sao Paulo Dec 12, 2011. [Photo/Agencies]

The popular Lula is undergoing his third and final round of chemotherapy on Monday, which will be followed by radiation therapy in the coming months, finishing in February.

Doctors on the team treating the former president at the Hospital Sirio-Libanes said they were "impressed".

"It was an extraordinary reduction (75 percent) that surprised the medical team," said oncologist Artur Katz, addingthat a 30 to 40 percent shrinkage would have been a positive response to treatment.

The team of physicians said that Lula would be able to return to political life by March next year if he continued to respond well to the treatment.  

He would also not likely lose any capacity in one of his defining traits as a public speaker - his burly and explosive voice - as doctor's ruled out surgery in light of the shrinkage of the tumor.    

Lula's diagnosis in late October shocked Brazilians and raised debate about political life without the charismatic former union boss, who remains an influential force in Latin America's largest economy.  

Analysts and politicians have even speculated Lula could run for president again in 2014 if President Dilma Rousseff didn't seek reelection.  

Lula, who turned 66 a little over a month ago, plays a vital role in his left-leaning Workers' Party.  

He has also been a powerful advisor and peacemaker for Rousseff this year as she deals with in fighting in her ruling coalition and weathers the resignation of now seven ministers, six of them due to corruption scandals.