Sunday, January 9, 2011

uh-oh. Failed the lumps and bumps test. More chemo starting tomorrow

 Well, shit. About a month ago I went in for my monthly checkup and my oncologist felt some enlarged nodes in my neck. Turns out I have some more malignant cells growing in my neck. The oncologist thinks that they're probably holdovers from the cancer I had last spring (as opposed to new stuff that started in my bone marrow).

Getting a recurrence this quickly isn't great news and the next round of chemo to root it out will be more extreme than the treatment I had last spring and summer. Here's the game plan:
  • 3 months of ICE, a protocol typically used for non-Hodgkins to get rid of this latest set of malignancies. I'll probably tolerate this ok and will be able to continue to work. Will probably lost most of my hair (again).
  • Harvest my white blood cells and separate out some white cell stem cells.
  • 5 days of very intensive chemo that will really wipe out my immune system. After this I will be pretty beat up and without getting a white blood cell transplant (from myself to myself) I'd be at great risk for a whole host of nasty infections.
  • Get my own white blood cells back and regrow my immune system (4-6 weeks of feeling pretty beat up while I recover from the high dose chemo). I will take a 2 month leave of absence which will allow me to recover at home without much exposure to bugs that could get me sick. I envision lots of walks and  hopefully (slow) bike rides to help me recover my health through this period.
  • Participate in a clinical trial over 21 weeks that gives me a maintenance dose of a very successful new drug for getting rid of any residual cancer cells. At this point I will be back to work. I'm not sure if this maintenance dose will prevent me from regrowing  my hair or not and what impact the dose will have on my blood chemistry.
  • Live a long time!
During the last month I went through the standard set of diagnostic and staging activities -PET scan, core biopsy, echo cardiogram, PFT for lung function, bone marrow biopsy, PICC line insertion. The good news it that I'm pretty recovered from the last chemo protocol - all my numbers are equivalent to where I was last February. So I should be able to tolerate this next round of chemo well. And the cancer is much more localized than it was last February and will hopefully respond well to the ICE protocol I'll receive here over the next few months.

As you can no doubt guess, this has really rocked our world and I've spent the last month or so coming to grips with this next step of the journey. It's been a pretty scary, sad and angry time for both Susan and I. We've gradually let our friends and family know what's going on and have received great support and love. With this post, we've now gone completely public with our status. I'll probably start blogging some more as it does provide a way to express what I'm feeling and it's also a great way to keep people in the loop on how things are going.

One perspective I've gained that has helped a lot is that this latest treatment doesn't need to cure me for 30 years. It just needs to keep me healthy long enough for the next advance in medicine to combat whatever strange things happen in my lymphatic system. That perspective has kept me from going totally psycho over worrying if this next treatment can do what the previous ABVD regimen could not do, namely keep these malignant cells from multiplying in my lymphatic system. I've also been doing a bunch of guided meditation to think really positive thoughts about my health and longevity to help my body do the right thing.

So this pretty much sucks but it is what it is. Tomorrow I'm back in the big chair for more medicine that will help me get better! So I'm psyched to get that going and feel the nodes in my neck shrink back down to normal levels.

That's it for now. Send positive energy my way and I'll keep you up to date on how things go!

4 comments:

  1. Thanks for posting Dad. It helps keep the GeoFlorentine team on the same page about all the strategery and action plans of this siege on cancer! I am really proud of the way you have handled this sad, scary and angry time. While you have been feeling those emotions you have not seemed to embody them/let them control you. We will get through this! Thanks for being a super dad. Huah!!!

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  2. As always, Cat, you are a great remote wing woman! I'm in the big chair as I type this, getting the first dose of chemo. Everything went well this morning and I have a beautiful view of the snow covered Flatirons. Should be done in the next 30 minutes or so. I took a fun picture of me oogling my blood chemistry results from this morning. Although you can't see it, all my numbers are in the normal range. I was pretty excited to document this as it won't happen again for the next few months. So I'm going to have to get a bit messed up in order to get better. A pretty common journey for those people getting chemo but it still strikes me as weird and somewhat medieval that the cure makes you feel worse than the disease itself.

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  3. So glad we got to share a meal (and, yes, a few drinks) before you departed on the next stage of the journey. Sending positive energy and looking forward to being part of Team Geo!

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  4. Team Geo, You've got more people on your side than you'll ever know (the number might actually scare you!). While seeing you ride this undesirable roller coaster, you actually provide strength to so many people. We know this sucks for you and yet you come into your home each day (that is work - sorry Susan!) with a positive spin on life. You remind us that life is truly all about inappropriate tight fitting spandex. Or rather, that life is all about what you make of it. You're truly an inspiration. Thanks for sharing your story.

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