Paraguayan President found to have second lymphoma

ASUNCION, (Reuters) – Paraguayan President Fernando  Lugo has a second lymphoma nodule in his chest, doctors said on  Saturday, a day after revealing he had cancer.

Lugo, a former Roman Catholic bishop, took office as  president of the poor, soy-exporting nation two years ago.

His doctors said on Friday a biopsy carried out in a gland  in his groin had revealed the early stages of non-Hodgkin’s  lymphoma, a type of cancer, but that an early diagnosis meant  there was a good chance the cancer could be treated  successfully.

“He also has a nodule in the mediastinum, which is an area  with glands in the chest. It is a lymphoma but it’s not that  important because this kind of disease starts this way, in  several areas,” said Alfredo Boccia, a member of the  president’s medical team.

Boccia told reporters Lugo’s diagnosis had not worsened  despite having been found to have more than one malignant  nodule and that chemotherapy can be used to treat the cancer.
Health Minister Esperanza Martinez said on Friday Lugo, 59,  would be able to conduct official business as usual although he  will travel to a clinic in Sao Paulo, Brazil next week for  further tests.