Dr. Rajandeep Singh Sethi
Experience: | 3 years |
Education: | Bhagwan Mahaveer Cancer Hospital & Research, Centre, Jaipur |
Academic degree: | None |
Area of specialization: | I am a surgical oncologist by training, and yeah, I guess my focus keeps spreading across a pretty wide field. I deal with most solid organ cancers – breast cancer with oncoplasty (where form matters as much as function), head & neck cancers including oral, throat and tongue surgeries (plus reconstruction when needed), thyroid lumps or malignancy, and also a lot of gynecological stuff—like ovarian, endometrial, cervical cancer.
Gastrointestinal cancers like stomach, colon, rectal, esophageal and hepatobiliary ones—liver, gallbladder, pancreas—are a major part of my work too. Urological tumors including kidney, bladder, prostate and even rare ones like penile cancer also fall into my circle. I handle sarcomas and skin cancers as well, and yeah—laparoscopic cancer surgeries and robotic-assisted ones are part of my skillset where appropiate. Chemoport insertion? That’s something I do often to make chemo less of a hassel for the patient.
My aim is always to keep treatment centered around the patient, not just the disease. Every plan has to be tailor made. |
Achievements: | I am trained in FMAS, FALS with focus on oncology & robotic surgery, also did FSSO and MNAMS... each step kinda pushed me deeper into understanding cancer care from all angles. Robotic surgery changed how I look at precision—it’s not just tech, it's timing, control, tiny decisions that matter. FSSO helped sharpen my perspective toward evidence-based oncosurgery. These aren’t just degrees, they shaped how I operate. not perfect, not rigid—just constantly evolving with what’s needed. |
I am a surgical oncologist and yeah it’s a long road – DrNB in Surgical Oncology, MS in General Surgery, FALS in Robotic Surgery, FMAS, MNAMS, and FSSO training in the U.S. All that basically means I’ve spent a good chunk of my life learning how to operate safely on cancers across different organs, with a focus on precision, not just cutting. My work covers a lot—breast cancer including oncoplasty (that’s where we try to preserve shape and aesthetics while removing tumor), head and neck cancer surgeries (oral, throat, tongue – often challenging because they involve talking, breathing, eating…), thyroid lumps or thyroid cancer (a tricky zone between nerves and vessels), gynecological cancers like ovarian, cervical and endometrial ones, plus GI cancers—stomach, colon, rectum, esophagus, liver, pancreas, gallbladder. Add urological ones too—kidney, bladder, prostate, penile, and soft tissue sarcomas and even skin cancers. I also do laparoscopy and robotic cancer surgeries whenever indicated—it’s not about being fancy, but about doing the right thing for faster recovery and less pain. Chemoport insertions? Yeah, those too, to make chemo smoother. Every case is different. Honestly. I don’t believe in a one-size-fits-all cancer treatment. I like sitting down with patients and their families, going over scans, discussing options—not just rushing them into surgery. Cancer affects the whole person not just an organ and I try to hold space for that. Some days are heavy, really, and some go just right. If anything, I just try to keep learning, adapting. Because cancer doesn’t play by textbook rules, and neither do real patients.