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Here we go…

ULYSSES

Tho’ much is taken, much abides; and tho’
We are not now that strength which in old days
Moved earth and heaven, that which we are, we are;
One equal temper of heroic hearts,
Made weak by time and fate, but strong in will
To strive, to seek, to find, and not to yield.

  • ALFRED, LORD TENNYSON

We’ve come to that point in 2020 where there are so many lovely people checking in on us that we can no longer keep you all in the loop without missing someone, or some critical detail because we’ve told the story six times this morning and have I told you this yet?

Do you suffer from long-term memory loss? I don’t remember.

So now we’re writing it down. You can check in here and know you’re getting the full scoop. And there’s even a way for you to subscribe to content update alerts so you’ll get notified the instant one of us posts something! It’s the little form at the bottom of the main page of this site.

Does this mean you should stop calling and texting us? Absolutely NOT. We love hearing your voices and interacting with you. Now you have another reliable data source that we’ll keep updated with what we know when we know it.

Stay Tuned!

Cancer During a Pandemic

What a month it’s been! We’ve gone from hand sanitizer and me not taking the kids to school, to not going anywhere other than the doctor’s office and wearing face masks whenever we leave the house. Even though the November – January period was very frustrating, I can’t imagine how much more frustrating and frightening it must be for those with cancer who are just now trying to figure things out and get started with treatment.

Jessica and I were both already working from home, and now of course the kids are home all the time too. They are doing remarkably well, making up games, listening to books on record (and books on pads), playing tabletop games with us, and even a little bit of school work. And yet, we are still a little stir crazy. And somehow tired even though we can sleep in and no longer have to wake up at 6:XX for school.

My health continues to improve, and I have the bloodwork to prove it. Here’s a graph of one of the tumor markers in my blood:

The normal CA 19-9 range in a healthy person is 0-37 units per milliliter. You can’t see the label on that top value, but it was 25,552.7 units per milliliter on January 28 and as of March 23 it was 303.8 units per milliliter. That is a significant change.

Round #8 of chemo starts next Tuesday.

Chemo: Round 4

(CA) 19-9 – A type of tumor marker.

  • Dec 23 – 4583 U/mL
  • Jan 14 – 12111 U/mL
  • Jan 28 – 25552 U/mL
  • Feb 11 – 8523 U/mL
  • Feb 25 – 2687 U/mL

Conclusion: I’m responding well to the treatment at this time!

After four rounds of treatment, we are seeing a pattern in how these weeks go. Tuesday is an all day affair to get bloodwork, see the oncologist or one of his physician’s assistants, then down to the infusion unit to receive hydration + pre-meds + the FOLFIRINOX.

One of the components of the treatment causes peripheral neuropathy and cold sensitivity, and those side effects get worse with each treatment. After the 4th treatment my hands were shaking so badly for a few hours that I could barely type an SMS to Jessica. Eventually I gave up and used the voice to text option.

Wednesday evening into Thursday morning is when I feel the worst, probably because the 5FU component of the treatment is nearing completion, and that stuff is rough.

Even though the treatment is challenging, at least we are seeing results, both in the bloodwork and the CT scan from MDA a couple weeks ago. I had another CT scan performed late last week, so that will be a good comparison between what was going on in November/December and what we’re dealing with now.

Chemo: Rounds 1-3

ROUND 1 – 14 January 2020

The chemotherapy treatment began in full force with the FOLFIRINOX branded combination of drugs:

  • folinic acid (also called leucovorin, calcium folinate or FA)
  • fluorouracil (also called 5FU)
  • irinotecan
  • oxaliplatin

Considering the advanced and widespread state of my disease, the oncologist felt it was necessary to use this very aggressive drug combination, even though I was in pretty rough shape. At that point I had already dropped from 63 kg (140 pounds) to 57 kg (126 pounds) in less than a month and that trend was accelerating.

The nursing staff in the infusion room were absolutely delightful. They explained all sorts of new details that neither the doctor nor the physicians assistants had thought to tell us, which is funny considering one of the PAs spent almost two hours telling us stuff and giving us a giant binder full of paper that I bet we’ve looked at once since then. The PA onboarding was a nice idea, but the nursing staff met me in the desert of the real world and really explained how it worked. This is not surprising to me. It is frustrating though.

Some of the side effects of the treatment kicked almost immediately, which I was surprised by. Sensitivity to cold, for example, came on pretty quick. I can’t really eat or drink cold (or really even cool) food or drink for 5-6 days after chemo. If I hold something cold in my hands, or go outside when it’s cold without gloves and warmers, my hands will tingle as if I’ve lost all blood flow in my hands a.k.a. my hands fell asleep. Neither sensation is comfortable AT ALL.

I also started getting fuzzy headed, like the Flowers for Algernon feeling you get from a giant dose of Benadryl, and I really couldn’t think straight. Finally, the fluorouracil is so toxic they 1) have to drip it in to me over two days via a pump that looks like an Ood ball and 2) they seriously gave us a hazmat-like suit for clean up if the Ood ball pump ever breaks.

The real pump is the less cool “Homepump Eclipse Disposable Elastomeric Infusion Device“. I have brought up the similarities between the pump and the Ood ball to every nurse who has connected one to me. Everyone in that unit will know about the Ood by the time I’m done with my treatment 😉

21 JANUARY 2020

This was my first “off” week, meaning no chemo this week. My weight has dropped to 52 kg (115 pounds), meaning I’d lost 3 kg in a week. There’s approximately 2.2 pounds in a kilogram, so that’s almost 7 pounds, to put it in perspective. The oncologist agreed to put me on TPN. What they didn’t tell us is the TPN was only at half strength, as they have to start you out slow (apparently). You might think I would know this, since I’ve done TPN twice before. But I was a kid in those days.

28 January 2020

Time for my second round of chemo! Except now that they are just now bumping up the TPN calories to something that might actually sustain me, the oncologist is like, ha ha, you have to stop the TPN for 2 days while we give you chemo through the one port you have. At this point, I’d dropped to 49 kg (107 pounds).

We refused the chemo treatment until they could figure out SOME WAY to give me TPN and chemo at the same time.

ROUND 2 – 29 January 2020

I was squeezed in to the schedule early in the day to have a PICC line inserted in my left arm. The whole thing took less than an hour start to finish, and no sedation was required. Now it was possible for me to be on both TPN and receive chemo. Let the poisoning commence! Here’s Jessica and I, happy to have resolved yet another complication.

At this point, I’d dropped around 8 kg (almost 18 pounds) in two weeks. This was the low point. I wouldn’t say that what you think of as “Jeremy” was really “present” at this point. I survived the chemo, and thanks to the higher calorie TPN, stopped dropping weight, and slowly, added a little back.

3 February 2020

I’m receiving extra IV fluids on Tuesdays & Thursdays on the off weeks in an attempt to keep me from getting dehydrated again. My weight is up from 49 to 53 kg.

ROUND 3 – 11 February 2020

Amazingly, I tolerated this round of treatment quite well. The cold sensitivity lasts longer with each treatment and I am concerned at some point the effects it will not dissipate between rounds of treatment. The peripheral neuropathy in my hands is getting worse as well. I’m told this “usually” resolves after treatment. The usually is concerning though.

The fluorouracil (the stuff in the Ood ball) is really the killer each time. I can handle the other stuff okay, but by Wednesday night into Thursday morning, I’m really feeling like trash. It’s really wonderful each Thursday afternoon when I get disconnected that that stuff. It’s like a weight is lifted from me.

22 February 2020

Almost time for Round Four. My weight is back up to 60 kg, although some of that is fluid retained caused by the massive amount of Prednisone I’ve been on the last three months. I’m now tapering off the Prednisone and expect my weight to adjust in the weeks to come.

MD Anderson: Follow Up

This Wednesday my Dad drove us both to Houston for the day for a follow up appointment at MD Anderson. As expected, MDA still didn’t have my CT scan or PET scan from last year, even though they’d had almost two weeks to obtain them. Luckily, I had brought my own copies of the disks for them to import into their system. Twenty minutes later, we were looking at the scans and comparing late December to mid February.

Good News

The mass in my abdomen, basically lymph nodes, blood vessels, and connective tissue, has reduced in size by about 4.5cm. This is good progress. This also means the treatment appears to be working. Bloodwork taken over the last two months tells a similar story, at least as far as these two markers are concerned.

CEA – A carcinoembryonic antigen (CEA) test is a blood test used to help diagnose and manage certain types of cancers. The CEA test is used especially for cancers of the large intestine and rectum.

Carbohydrate antigen (CA) 19-9 – A type of antigen released by pancreatic cancer cells. It can also be referred to as a tumor marker.

CEA / CA 19-9

  • Dec 23 – 12.93 ng/mL / 4583.9 U/mL
  • Jan 14 – 32.61 ng/mL / 12111.5 U/mL
  • Jan 28 – 23.8 ng/mL / 25552.7 U/mL
  • Feb 11 – 10.54 ng/mL / 8523.4 U/mL

MDA also recommended Avastin, which inhibits what tumors need to grow their blood flow. The one big risk they brought up is the potential for bowel perforations, meaning my bowels could just open up a hole in themselves, like appendicitis, but worse. If you follow that link above and check out the other potential side effects, they are numerous. I’m undecided if that’s something I actually want to take.

Bad News?

MDA doesn’t have anything else to recommend for me at this time. No immunotherapy or trials or other treatments overlooked. FOLFIRINOX is as good as it gets, at least for North American standard of care. I don’t know how I should feel about this.

At least the disease is responding. For now.

MD Anderson

This past weekend Jessica and I traveled to Houston for our first appointment at MD Anderson Cancer Center. It’s an impressive campus with hundreds and hundreds of patients and staff and they really have their operations in order. The only reason we had to wait for very long was that we arrived early for our appointments. Every test hummed along at the pace suggested by the staff, and the operational efficiency gave us some confidence.

They spent 30 minutes on the intake and questionnaire about my current mental and emotional state. Unfortunately, both the physician’s assistant and the doctor were feeling sick and honestly, they should have rescheduled our appointment. I feel like I was lucky to not catch whatever the doctor had. He spent all of five minutes with us and then he was gone, which was underwhelming to say the least. Jessica and I believe their initial assessment wherein they think my treatment is too aggressive heavily underestimates how much my Crohn’s disease has affected my condition this past month.

My precipitous weight loss down to 48 kg (107 lbs) started before the chemo treatments and the TPN has really saved my bacon. I’m up to 55 kg (122 lbs) now and hoping to get back to 60 kg (132 lbs) over the next month. I seriously doubt that backing off the chemo is going to help me at this time and we have no intention of doing so at this time.

Another is at MD Anderson was they didn’t actually have all the records they needed, which is frustrating because I had called earlier in the week specifically to confirm they DID have all the records they required. So now we are getting our own copies to bring with me to the next appointment, which is a week from today. At least at that point they will be able to compare the CT scan from late November and the PET scan from the end of December with the CT scan taken this past weekend. Normally the comparison happens after the fourth chemo treatment, and I’ll have yet another CT scan at the beginning of March, so we’ll have a lot more data points for comparison at that point and we’ll see how effective the treatment has been so far.

As for MD Anderson, I’m hoping they will be able to start immunotherapy and maybe recommend a trial too. Maybe we’ll have more to report after this next check in.