Thursday I was accepted for stem-cell transplant therapy at the Mayo
Clinic, as a protocol for addressing and containing multiple myeloma. It
was what I wanted, and it's a big deal that I got it. Now the challenge
is making the most of the opportunity.
Here is what lays ahead:
o
Between now and when the transplant is performed (projected to be
mid-July, but that's a soft date)), I'll likely go through 4-6 cycles of
chemo-therapy, all geared toward boosting my kidney functions and
eliminaing calclium leaching from my bones. While I've made significant
progress on all of these markers across the board, I can do better and
the doctors, understandably, want to make the best possible use of the
transplant.
o Once we get the OK for the transplant
(because the markers are good), we'll temporarily relocate to Rochester
for about 6-8 weeks, where the finer detailed road map looks like this:
—Evaluate
Mayo
will conduct their own blood tests, to make sure they align with the
numbers coming back from test results in Duluth. According to what we
were told yesterday, there are few surprises at this stage and 90% of
the time the evaluation phase results in a green light.
—Harvest
Next
step is collecting my stem cells. They will inject me with a shot every
day that will cause my bone marrow to cough up its stem cells. The
doctors will start collecting the stem cells five days later and
continue that process until they have more than enough to do two
transplants. Excess cells can be frozen for long-term storage and
viability.
—Sterilize
Once they have
enough stem cells, they give me a single shot of something to kill off
everything remaining in my bone marrow (the good and the bad
indiscriminately). As you can imagine, we're talking about heavy-duty
poison here and this begins a stretch where I might struggle again with
the chemo. Let's say sterilization takes place on Day 1.
—Reintroduce my own cells
Two days later the doctors will reintroduce my own stem cells to my bone marrow, on Day 3.
—Recolonization
For
the following three weeks my job is recovery. By Day 6-7 my blood
counts will be low and I'll lose my hair. There won't be many good days.
I'll be taking heavy-duty chemo and just trying to ride the choppy
waves without swamping my boat. This projects to be the darkest time..
Somewhere around Day 14 my blood counts should start to recover. From
here on recovery tends to accelerate. Most transplant recipients are
sufficiently far along that they no longer need close monitoring and can
return home in the range of Days 18-21.
At this
point the key question is how much the cancer has been brought under
control: it could be anything from hardly any to full remission. While
the transplant treatment is not dangerous per se (that is, few die of it
directly), there is no guarantee that this will contain the
cancer—which is the point of all this.
Huddling with my
doctors after the transplant (perhaps 100 days afterwards) we should
finally be able to make a reasonable assessment of my post-transplant
prognosis—how much I can look forward to time with little or no pain,
which opens the door for Susan and me to think about how to use that
precious commodity. Until then it will be difficult to suss out exactly
where I stand, yet that doesn't mean we have to stand on the sidelines
until October.
No Trips Abroad
Though
from this point on most of the chemo will be conducted as outpatient
therapy, I will still need to remain near enough to Rochester and Duluth
to have minimal complications with scheduling. That is, I'll need to be
tethered to my Minnesota treatment centers. While brief forays
out-of-state might be possible on rest weeks (between active cycles of
chemo-therapy) they will be limited.
One Thing at a Time
Job
One from now until transplant is my getting stronger (turning around
weight loss, eliminating dependency on walkers and wheel chairs,
managing daily needs and hygiene with minimal dependency on Susan, and
continuing to push my kidney functions in the right direction). This
will directly translate into my being to make the best use of the
transplant.
Resuming "Normal" Activities
I
asked my doctor when I might prudently be able to return to some of my
work (as a process consultant or community networker), and got an
interesting response: I can resume any time it makes sense. It's simply a
question of what I have the capacity and motivation for taking on. This
was something of a surprise (I had been thinking that career
resumption, if at all, might happen only after the transplant and we got
to see what that protocol had accomplished.)
Among
other things, this significantly changes how Susan and I will be viewing
the months ahead in Duluth. If we aren't looking at the transplant
happening sooner than July, then I have over three months to get
stronger, to enhance my capacity to handle the chemo well, and start
crafting the life that Susan and I want our partnership to be. I'm
limited only by my energy and my body response—rather than by the
calendar (I have to wait until July) or by the stigma of cancer. Though
I'm still coping with back pain on a daily basis, I'm jazzed to begin
this work.
We do not have to put off conversations
about what we want. We can start now. I especially like how this allows
us to start moving toward a rebalancing of focus after two months that
have been intensely unbalanced, coping with Laird's emerging health
crisis. Now we can shift to Laird & Susan's opportunities.
Sounds better, doesn't it?
Monday, March 28, 2016
Good News from Mayo
at 2:17 PM
Labels: Mayo Clinic, multiple myeloma, stem-cell transplant therapy
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2 comments:
Yes! Yes!
Yes it does! And better is incredibly good. You are a strong person from the inside, with keen insight and amazing endurance.
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