Saturday, August 9, 2008

Made it throught the first YEAR!


It's really hard to believe that this cancer "thing" has been going on for a full year now!

To update me, I was diagnosed a year ago (Aug 1, 2007) with cancer in my liver of unknown origin or Primary. Since then I've had several chemo cocktails, (Gemcitibine, Carboplatin, Taxol, etc.), 14 weeks "off" and since Feb 08 have been on Xeloda - oral chemo, 2000mgs/2x/day. About that same time they re-evaluated my liver biopsy and now their "best guess" is that I have bile-duct cancer.

I have no tumors showing in my bile duct, only in my liver - no nodes. So I am still a bit of a mystery to them.

At first I had a lung cancer specialist, as it was the best guess at the time. Recently I've moved to a GI cancer specialist. The first thing he did was send me to a surgeon for an eval. The surgeon said I am not a surgical candidate too (everyone has said that) because I have too many tumors all throughout my liver. I found out that not only do I have the five they keep measuring with CTs, I also have "many" little ones that they don't measure. Shock and Awe!

He also said that he does not see me as a candidate for radiation because of the number of tumors. He said he'd not want to do radiation unless he had a 95% chance of getting it all, and in my case, that's unlikely.

He DID tell me the same thing as the Dr in Pittsburgh who I sent my records to. He said that IF the Xeloda stops working, that he'd consider chemo embolization. So... Finally I have that all confirmed. That's a quick recap of this past year.

Now for the good news! I just had another CT scan this week and it (again) showed no change. BUT the asst. showed me my scans and pointed out how before the tumors looked solid and firm, while now some look more fuzzy - more mottled in the interior and they suspect that it MIGHT be that some of the cancer cells are dying inside. They aren't shrinking, but they think it's worth a PET/CT scan to see how active they all are. This will be done Sept 4th.

Meanwhile I get a month OFF of chemo! YEA! Since I am going back to Minnesota next week to see my sister (who is in chemo and rad for breast cancer) and my brother and his family. My sis and I are going to a cabin in Wisconsin and hang out - I can't wait! I'm in AZ and here there is no lakes or "swimmin' holes" to jump into, and I miss that a lot! The others are coming too for the weekend. Hopefully it won't rain.

Anyway, back to my cancer. They know it is an adenocarcinoma, but really are not 100% sure what kind. They told me that if the biggest one in my left lobe is still very active, they might consider taking another biopsy on that one this time and see if it tells them anything more. My first prognosis when it was unknown origin was 3-11 months, and I just beat that but if they knew what it really is, they might be able to target treatment better. Is ANYone out there in a similar situation? I feel pretty alone with this thing, I'll tell ya!

I asked my doc's asst. if all this meant that I might actually live for a few more years? And she wouldn't say, but she'd just given me an example of someone they'd had there with a similar liver mets (only in liver no where else) and she went for 2.5 yrs without chemo! I feel really weird about all of this. To go from thinking I was going to fall apart any day to now thinking maybe not! I booked a flight to Chicago for Christmas to see my daughter and it really felt strange to make a plan 6 months ahead! I haven't dared do anything like that all of this year of cancer.

I get that it's best to live in the day, but "regular" people make future plans, and it feels good to do that, but I DID buy cancellation insurance, just in case.

I'm not sick now except for extreme fatigue when I'm taking the Xeloda (2wks on, 1 wk off) but not much pain, no loss of appetite (I should - I'm GAINING weight!) and thank God I'm not experiencing any of the many awful things I could be suffering. They told me this could change any time, so I feel like I'm holding my breath. Hoping I can breathe again soon! :)

2 comments:

Anonymous said...

Very big congratulations on surpassing the one-year milestone. That is something worthy of celebration.

One diagnostic test that was done for my dad that you may want to consider if you are trying to pinpoint a diagnosis is a molecular dna profiling test that matches the dna/rna of your tumor with a genetic profile of various kinds of cancer.

These genomics tests are still in the early stages of development (so obviously they don't have one-hundred percent reliability), but it still might be worth asking your doc about to see what he thinks.

We used the test developed by the aviara company in san diego. Basically, our doctor arranged to have tissue sent to their labs, and they sent back results that gave their best guess on what kind of cancer is involved. This is just something that we looked into.

PattiB said...

I'll ask! Thanks!