This past weekās scans did not go as we had hoped. Far from it, actually. Despite my best efforts, the cancer has progressed. I now have 2 significantly sized lesions in my liver, and a couple more questionable spots elsewhere. Itās been a difficult week of extremely difficult discussions and emotions.
I had my 3rd radiation treatment on Thursday. Once this round is complete (still currently scheduled for a total of 8 treatments), the road is murky. Due to the sizes of the liver lesions, they are not good candidates for interventional radiology procedures or radiation. I am awaiting a surgical consult with the surgeon who did my last abdominal surgery. While I have no interest in going through a 3rd massive abdominal surgery, if these spots are even resectable, it may be necessary.
I met with my oncologist yesterday to have a discussion Iāve been fearing for years. We have reached a difficult point in my health care plan: whether or not to do chemo again. There is no cure for leiomyosarcoma. I have known this all along. Every patient is different, however. Some need a surgery or a few treatments, they reach stability or a state of having no evidence of disease, and they can stay there⦠sometimes for years, sometimes indefinitely. I have always intended to be one of those patients. Unfortunately, these last several months have shown acceleration of disease Iāve never had, and it has continued to get worse.
Conventional oncology here in the US can offer surgery, radiation, chemo, and sometimes interventional radiology procedures to remove, slow, or stop lesions. But they have no way of making it go away for good. None of these treatments get to the root cause, nor can they attack circulating or cancer stem cells. Itās essentially sustaining a game of whack-a-mole as long as you can. The final Hail Mary can sometimes include chemo. We discussed this in depth yesterday.
In my case, the goal/hope with chemo would be to stabilize existing spots and hopefully stop new spots from popping up. This is best case scenario. There would be a small chance of decrease in size for existing spots, but it isnāt the usual outcome for LMS patients. None of this is news to me, but it was good to get confirmation and better understand the realistic expectations.
If there was stability or shrinkage and I was tolerating the treatment, then Iād just stay on it indefinitely until it stopped working or I no longer tolerated it. So, essentially, once you get on that chemo train, you stay on it until it derails, then try another train, until that one derails or you donāt tolerate it, etc, likely indefinitely. Meanwhile, the train is dragging you beneath it, beating you up the whole way⦠and after how poorly I tolerated chemo the first time, and how weak I have already been these past several months, the idea sounds terrifying and frankly not safe.
My oncologist understands why I am hesitant to do it, and said that whatever I decide, she will support me however she can and that she wishes she had more and better options to offer me..
I donāt know that I want to board the train. I have to weigh the known high risks with the possibility of stability, but only with continued use, and only if I tolerated itā¦
It has very much come to the point now where I need to figure this out on my own, receive Godās blessings of a tremendous miracle, or this may be the beginning of the end.
Brandon and I have been working hard together to review my protocol, going back through all our notes and prior ideas⦠things Iāve tried that could be modified or restarted, things we hoped I wouldnāt need to resort to, continuing to think outside the box and prioritize as best we can. Iāve been going back and forth with my integrative team, bringing new providers and therapies on board for the last few weeks⦠we are feeling like we still have some solid ideas that all have research and/or strong anecdotal evidence to support⦠but it is scary as F!!!!!!!! And expensive!! Insurance doesnāt pay for wellness, unfortunately šš¤. And the stress?? There is no way to describe it.
These past few weeks my priority in choosing therapies and regimens has been Wellness. How can I not just āattackā cancer but also Deeply HEAL my body and mind! I continue to read stories of miraculous remissions to give me a dose of hope to keep going. I look at my husband and kids and it GUTS me to think about leaving them behind. So through the tears and heartbreak I keep researching, keep reading and experimenting on myself. Praying to God, my angels, and ancestors to Please guide me! Please heal me! Please help me so that I can be here, healthy, to live a long life with my family.
I am terrified of the possible pain and suffering, but Iām not a stranger to that. I donāt need to be told Iām strong. I Know I am. And I donāt want to have to be! Iāve been strong long enough!! But the thing that haunts me the most is the thought of leaving my family when we still have so much life to live together.
I am not asking for anything right now, but pretty please donāt put the onus on me to tell you how you can help.. I so VERY much appreciate the offers, but in all honesty, I can barely get through the day, and I donāt have the mental capacity to try to think anymore than I already need to. If it moves you, please join me in prayer. We are continuing to spend a lot of money on experimental therapies. We are driving long distances most days so are going through a lot of gas and wear and tear on the car. I am trying to eat as healthfully as possible, but our schedule is chaotic and requires immense flexibility, so life is rarely plannable for us anymore.
If there is a supplement or medication or protocol out there, I have likely tried it and/or am doing it⦠Brandon keeps reminding me that if beating this were easy, they would have figured it out by now. Iāve been trying to get beyond cancer for 5 fricken years. I am beyond exhausted and hanging on by a thread of hope most of the time. But I know that that thread, however thin, will keep me working so that I can stay here with my husband and kids for as long as I possibly can.



