Saturday, October 15, 2016

Well, This Sucks: I'm MBC

Anyone who believes I'm a superhero about all this cancer crap did not hear me in the ultrasound procedure room, as the young doctor sat next to me and said, "So, there are findings..."

"Nooooooooooo!!!! I can't do this again!" I wailed. Wailed, like I was four. I was inconsolable.

I think that's all I heard. It's all I needed to hear. I could see the screen for myself. There were two hypoechoic, spidery things, one on each breast site.  There was this strange rash, a rash I had been asking the doctors to look at for ages, four of whom looked at it and passed on it...stretched between the two of them. The first tumor marked the very spot that last closed when my first mastectomy healed. The wound that took nine months to close. That.very.spot.

There was some possibility that it was just a lipid filled growth, either or both of them, so we'd have to wait for pathology:

A. Left breast mass, ultrasound guided needle biopsy: Invasive ductalcarcinoma, moderately differentiated
B. Right breast mass, ultrasound guided needle biopsy: Invasive ductal carcinoma, moderately differentiated

You never know how strong you are until being strong is the only choice you have.Both hormone positive, and something new: they are both HER2 positive.

Here's how Breastcancer.org explains it:

Genes contain the recipes for the various proteins a cell needs to stay healthy and function normally. Some genes and the proteins they make can influence how a breast cancer behaves and how it might respond to a specific treatment. Cancer cells from a tissue sample can be tested to see which genes are normal and abnormal. The proteins they make can also be tested.
HER2 (human epidermal growth factor receptor 2) is one such gene that can play a role in the development of breast cancer..... 

The HER2 gene makes HER2 proteins. HER2 proteins are receptors on breast cells. Normally, HER2 receptors help control how a healthy breast cell grows, divides, and repairs itself. But in about 25% of breast cancers, the HER2 gene doesn't work correctly and makes too many copies of itself (known as HER2gene amplification). All these extra HER2 genes tell breast cells to make too many HER2 receptors (HER2 protein overexpression). This makes breast cells grow and divide in an uncontrolled way.

But regardless, I am now considered Stage IV, metastatic.  The cancer took a walk, left my breast, marched across my skin.

Yes, I'm devastated. Again.

I have a treatment plan. I start chemo with Taxol, Herceptin and Perjeta next week. The taxol isn't supposed to be as difficult, and the other two are these new biologics.  On average, folks are living for many years. Possibly much, much longer.

Then, there are immunotherapies like vaccines.

Yes, I plan to keep working, at least for now. Dammit, I need the money (because the true costs of cancer continue), and I do love my job. But I also bought an RV.

There are some things that I still want to accomplish:
  • Going full time in a RV
  • Traveling the world, although right now, I'll settle for thisViking tour. Or the Cathedrals and Distillery tours of the UK. Or the Hobbit tour of New Zealand. Or...
  • Making sure my wonderful daughter finds someone who loves her as much as my hubby loves me
  • Helping her get into her first home, if she needs us

Yes, we all are in shock and mourning. And we are living. We're enjoying our RV as much as possible.

Tuesday, April 26, 2016

Saying Goodbye to Someone I Didn't Know

Sea Glass -- Sherri Fillipo collected it.


First, I'm sure you'd like an update. My status is unchanged. I still plan one more surgery and hopefully walk away from treatment for a time, but I've been hampered by a much more mundane issue: my knee seems to have big problems. I've been trying to recover from a torn menicus and root, and a bad tendon, per my MRI. All I know is, it's nice to get on the plane first when the walk down the jetway is such a challenge. I put over 3000 miles under my belt hobbling with a brace and a cane, but I seem to be on the mend.

I'm posting today because we lost another reluctant warrior, and I feel she deserves a salute. You've noted that I put Sherri Fillipo and her blog, Living and Dying with Metastatic Breast Cancer, on my blog roll. Her honest and compelling blog described her journey with metastatic breast cancer.  Her words had impact; she helped me understand the concept that cancer that never leaves the breast never kills anyone; that the true survivors are those who have metastatic cancer.  (In that respect, *I* am not survivor. I am in limbo, and content to be there.)

I learned to share her unhappiness that so little is being said or done for the metastatic cancer survivors. Her grace and gentle spirit came shining through, despite her race with the inevitable. I knew what her outcome would be, and I like to think that I walked behind her on the path for awhile, supporting her spirit, even though she did not really know I was there.

She passed on April 10, 2016.  May she and her dear family be blessed with peace.  Thank you, Sherri.

When I began this journey decades ago, I knew I would make friends I would eventually lose, at least, here and now. The first person I met through a chat forum died just a few months later, and I began to wonder why her and not me? I was clearly on a different path than she; I was getting better and she was growing worse and worse. When she shuffled off the mortal coil, I wept for her, even though I don't now remember her name -- only that she loved to walk her dog on the beach in Oregon, and she had a friend who posted when she was too sick. Technology, as primitive as it was back then, allowed me to connect with someone states away, and I was touched by her life.

Sherri is another such soul. I'd never met the woman. I found her blog in an article listing best blogs for breast cancer warriors. I followed her for more than a year. I saw her farewell post, then an update. And she, too, has moved on.

I will keep my eye out; I will look for another nice blog where you and I can learn we are not alone in our journey. In the meantime, let's take a moment to remember a profound soul:

"The cure for anything is salt water -- tears, sweat, or the sea." - Isak Dinesen
Let me know your thoughts.

Sunday, January 3, 2016

What's it like, you ask?

What's a mastectomy and an oophrectomy like?

It occurs to me that you might like to know how mastectomy and oophrectomy (ovary removal) procedures go. I thought I'd go ahead and share my experience with you, in case you ever need to walk this path.

The day of surgery, they gave me a little Versed to help calm the anxiety (which I rarely feel in any surgery) but that really releases the endorphines. I start talking every time. Hubby tells me I started firing off a list of things to do after my surgery during the first mastectomy. I honestly don't remember this time at all. They started the drugs, and wheeled me away, and I woke up five hours later -- but it seemed like only a few.

I was on Delaudet, and nice opiate that they give to manage the pain, but it made me sleepy. I was awake long enough for them to tell me everything went well and that everyone thought I looked great. They were all very positive.

A rendering of a Jackson-Pratt Drain
You squeeze this into your fist, then
close the valve, creating negative pressure.
The other end is placed near the
surgery site well under your skin.
I remember expanding my chest with air, and feeling relieved. It was gone. Another two sources of worry, out of my life.

So, you ask, what about the incisions?

I awoke with large surgical pads over the incisions for my breast. I couldn't see anything under it all, but I really didn't care this time. I knew I had a large incision, all stitched up, starting from about my breastbone to under my armpit, pretty much along the axis of my former breast. I could feel the JP drain under my armpit. The drain collects lymph fluid and blood from the incision site, and prevents seromas, with are big, painful swellings that can't drain because of the injury done to the lymph system.  If a drain isn't installed, the fluid has to be removed with a needle. The drain doesn't hurt if you can avoid moving it suddenly.

To keep it from tangling, we pinned it to my lovely hospital gown.  Meanwhile, my GYN surgeon explained that I had three holes in my belly that were superglued together, no fuss no muss.  I had also had quite a few samples removed, so I was bleeding mildly. I was a mass of tubes (including the IV pole) and wires.

The gynecological surgeon would have sent me home, but the mastectomy surgeon likes his patients to stay overnight. That harkens back to the protests over drive-through mastectomies. As American healthcare started to move in the direction of outpatient surgery unless absolutely necessary, women complained that they were being sent home from mastectomies far too quickly and callously...they called them "drive-throughs." Insurance companies were pressured, and laws passed in the late 90s: no more drivc-throughs. So, I spent the night.

I slept quite a bit, but I had to wake frequently. Now, I could have asked the nurse to help me to the restroom, but I couldn't wait. So, two or three times, I awoke, unplugged the IV pole from the wall and untangled the phone cord, wrapped my JP drain to avoid tangling and pulling, and headed to the nice bathroom. It was quite an effort.

This hospital stay, I couldn't eat anything but a liquid diet, though, so I didn't get to enjoy the hospital's great food until the next morning.

I headed home the next day, and I was glad to go. I started eating -- soft foods the first day -- and I have a few restrictions, like not lifting more than 10 pounds. I soon realized: that means no shopping cart, and right before Christmas. In fact, I overdid one day doing just that. I have to take it easy, rest more frequently.

I am recovering slowly, but my sleep was impaired for a while, I'm pretty emotional and I have that jangly feeling all over the incision. I'll get better, and I will be ready for work when I go back next week...I just can't lift anything.  I'm really anxious to have the jangly nerves settle down. My abdomen already feels better.

I've come to realize that I go through a few weeks of emotionality, a sort of PTSD, after each surgery, so I'll have to reconnect with my therapist.

Surgery: easy peasy. Well, ok, not really, but it's fine. Really.

How was your experience? Feel free to comment here, on Inspire or Facebook.





Saturday, January 2, 2016

New Year, New Normal

Keep walking, keep running, Let cancer be the shadow that disappears when life turns a new day...
Keep Walking
Thank God it is 2016.  I am so glad last year is done.  It has been 17 days since surgery, and I'm making some progress:

  • They removed the drain after the first week. 
  • The stitches were removed the second.
  • I feel fewer tears and pulls in my abdomen.
  • All of my pathologies are in.

They were interesting. All of the tissues sampled were benign, including breast, ovaries, tubes, and the polyp on my colon -- all except for the endometrium strips. The report indicated that the sample was too small, but that one tumor marker (p53) was overexpressed, but another tumor marker wasn't present. The pathologist suggested that it be tracked.

No, no, no.

I don't want to track anything else. I want it out. So, I'm not happy. We should have taken the uterus when indicators started to go negative. I will be discussing this with my surgeon next week. The uterus has got to go. If he doesn't agree, I'll be getting a second opinion.

I'm going through all of this new drama because of the Tamoxifen. Effin Tamoxifen.

My recovery is going well, I'm happy to report. I'm ready to be all healed, but I still have jangly nerves under my arm and around the incision. I can't push a shopping cart, lift or do things with my abdomen. I can walk, but I can't dance yet. (Did I mention I love to dance?)

I also have to figure out what to do about oncology. My trust is low to zero that there is another treatment solution for me. My bones are too brittle for the other hormonal treatments like Arimidex, and my heart probably won't stand the assault, either.

I think I may be done with everything for a while. I may have to just wait and see what shows up. I just don't think I have any reasonable options left.

My only other dilemma: to bra and breast form or not? Right now, my little flat chest is fine.

Update: The GYN Surgeon does not know what to make of the data from my endometrium samples; they fit no category so they have no protocol. The tumor board will review it.

Yeah, it is coming out.

Let me know what you think, either here, on Inspire.com or Facebook.



Friday, January 1, 2016

2016: A Really New Year.

Thank God it is 2016.  I am so glad last year is done.  It has been 15 days since surgery, and I'm making some progress:

  • They removed the drain after the first week. 
  • The stitches were removed the second.
  • I feel fewer tears and pulls in my abdomen.
  • All of my paths are in.

They were interesting. All of the tissues sampled were benign, including breast, ovaries, tubes, and the polyp on my colon -- all except for the endometrium strips. The report indicated that the sample was too small, but that one tumor marker (p53) was overexpressed, but another tumor marker wasn't present. The pathologist suggested that it be tracked.

No, no, no.

I don't want to track anything else. I want it out. So, I'm not happy. We should have taken the uterus when indicators started to go negative. I will be discussing this with my surgeon next week. The uterus has got to go. If he doesn't agree, I'll be getting a second opinion.

I'm going through all of this new drama because of the Tamoxifen. Effin Tamoxifen.

My recovery is going well, I'm happy to report. I'm ready to be all healed, but I still have jangly nerves under my arm and around the incision. I can't push a shopping cart, lift or do things with my abdomen. I can walk, but I can't dance yet. (Did I mention I love to dance?)

I also have to figure out what to do about oncology. My trust is low to zero that there is another treatment solution for me. My bones are too brittle for the other hormonal treatments like Arimidex, and my heart probably won't stand the assault, either.

I think I may be done with everything for a while. I may have to just wait and see what shows up. I just don't think I have any reasonable options left.  My only other choice: to bra and breast form or not?

Let me know what you think, either here, on Inspire.com or Facebook.



Thursday, December 17, 2015

There, it's done!

There, it's done.

I had the mastectomy. I had the salpingo-oophrectomy.  I'm out of the hospital and on the mend.

I keep saying, surgery is my jam. I handle surgery, no issues. I just do. I've had zero pain meds. I know! But it's just a little sore, not a big deal. Not like chemo, not like so many things. It all went like clockwork and now all I have to do is recover. I did all of this because of my bad genes, but there was nothing that said "cancer." So, this went easily.

I took my medication the night before. I was worried about it, but my doctor told me to keep a positive attitude: guess what? She was right. It was a little crampy, the misoprostol. Not a biggie.
An IV Pole with a bag hanging.
Oh, my IV pole is my friend.

I went into the hospital with the wonderful hubby, who himself is still recovering from his surgery. They prepped me, gave me happy drugs and wheeled me away. Actually, I don't remember getting wheeled away. I was on drugs.

I woke up five hours later. I was told one of the doctors was delayed, so it took longer, not that I noticed. From there, I slept and wrestled with the IV so I could get to the bathroom. That was a pain, but it went fine too. I managed all by myself all night. I ate a liquid diet. I slept and posted on Facebook and slept some more.

I have three stitches in my belly, including my belly button, and a big bandage across my chest. I have a drain I get to tend. All of this is fine. I'm relieved to have the weight off my chest.  I now have a boy chest.

I have a long list of pathology findings coming:

  • My breast tissued will be examined
  • My ovaries and tubes, the same
  • There were samples taken during the hysteroscopy (they used a scope to examine my uterus)
  • There was a little glioma on my colon


So, I will have interesting findings coming. More cancer concern, but not a scare. Not yet. Let's just relax and recover for a few days. I do have pain meds, if I need it, but...I'm good for now.

Thank God.


Tuesday, December 8, 2015

No One Pays Attention

How long have I been telling you I'm heading for surgery? Two months? Three? Why is everyone surprised then?

Everyone I've mentioned this to this week, even people I know I told personally, not just through this blog, seem to have forgotten. Apparently, they don't read this, and they must be tired of hearing me talk about myself. (Lord, I am!)

Amazon woman "S03 06 01 020 image 2552" by William Henry Goodyear - Brooklyn Museum. Licensed under Public Domain via Commons - https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:S03_06_01_020_image_2552.jpg#/media/File:S03_06_01_020_image_2552.jpg
A single-breasted Amazon woman -- not going to be her anymore!
As a refresher: next week, I'll have that second mastectomy, along with a "salpingo oophrectomy", tubes and ovaries, both coming out. (You gotta love Greek -- Oo is the Greek word for "egg" and an oophor is an egg bearer. Salpingo means tubes or trumpets, but I'm sure they meant tubes this time. The "ectomy" part literally means to cut out.)  If you also remember, I will have my uterus looked at, because it's showing signs of a toxic reaction to my Tamoxifen regimen. I would not be surprised if I wake up without it as well, but that's not what the doctor is saying.

Yep, more fun over the holidays with stitches and drains and wound care. I'm ten days out from the anniversary of my first chemo, and I'm heading to the hospital again.  At least the food is really, really good there.

To add to it, my company separated officially from it's former parent, so our insurance changed just about a week ago. I've had to scramble to make sure that I'm covered, that the deductibles and out-of-pocket costs (over $5k) will still apply -- they nearly didn't.

I had to hit the ground running on this, because my dear hubby needed surgery, too, this time for his shoulder. He'd had a rotator cuff repair three years ago, and the recovery was long and difficult for him. Fortunately, this time it went more smoothly. He's going to recover quickly.

Fortunately, because our HR was on it, things went well with the insurance,. Thanks, HR Leader Lori. You saved much in the way of drama for me. I am most grateful.  Fighting hospital bills while recovering should be considered unconstitutional...cruel and unusual punishment!

I took a lot of encouragement from hubby's surgery going smoothly; maybe mine will as well. Maybe I'll recover very quickly, too and I'll find that certain issues, like that cyst that caused and infection, are gone.

One thing right out of the gate: I'll be balanced again! Right now I look like an Amazon warrior, who cut off her left breast to use a bow and arrow more effectively. (You may have heard me joke about being Wonder Woman, an Amazon, because my car is invisible to other drivers -- well, I even look the part now!)

I've had another challenge as well: my blood pressure is just spiking. High. I have no idea why; I've been losing weight, I walk a great deal, I have a decent diet, just a bit high in sugar, but not bad...so what's going on? And remember those heart palps? There's a correlation as well. And I have to grapple this now: they won't perform that surgery if I don't get it down. It doesn't rain...

So, you ask, am I upset about losing body parts again?  Yes and no. I will miss things a bit, but my looks are shot anyway. My once lovely shape (I had a great figure before all of this) is pretty misshapen now, so I'm concentrating on just keeping healthy. I *welcome* the possibility of losing that still troublesome cyst on my ovary.  So, I might be a bit sad that this has to be, but, really, it was ready to go anyway.

Docs, I'm ready. Make the drugs good.

How's your health adventure going? Feel free to comment here, or Facebook or Inspire.com.