Heather just got out of our visit to
the Katmai Cancer Center here in Anchorage, we met with Dr. Susan
Delgalvis to further discuss Heathers latest diagnosis. Dr.
Delgalvis went over the scan results with the radiologist this
morning and she is fairly confident that the cancer has spread to her
spine and sacral area, which is by the tailbone, not by the hip as
previously thought. She spoke with Dr. Cox back in Fairbanks, which
judging by the Facebook pictures I've seen today, looks beautiful-
and formulated a plan of action. She is going to schedule a biopsy
for the tumor on Heather's spine and hopefully get the results
sometime this week. If it is confirmed to be cancer, then Heather
gets bumped from Stage 3 to Stage 4 cancer- there is no Stage 5, if
you get my drift. If that's the case, then Heathers care plan
changes as well, she was originally supposed to have intensive
chemotherapy treatments of Taxol which slows the spread of cancer
cells, and Herceptin, which specifically targets the cell receptors
that “tell” a cell to grow and divide, in her case, the cancer is
caused by too many cell receptors telling the cells to grow, thus
resulting in rapid growth of cancer (see picture). If she is diagnosed as Stage 4,
she will only receive the Herceptin, and that every three weeks. The
doctors that be would like to save the actual chemotherapy for if she
has a major outbreak of cancer growth so they can beat it back into
submission (hopefully).
Read a USA Today article on Herceptin and breast cancer here. Make sure to read to the end of the article. Did I mention I'm desperately grateful I have medical insurance?
Heather had her first infusion of Herceptin today, it comes in a clear fluid, unlike the red fluid that Adriamycin comes in. I guess that Herceptin can cause some pretty sever immediate side effects to first time users, such as shortness of breath, lowered blood pressure, and others, so the initial infusion is used to monitor if she would have any negative side effects. Fortunately, she simply went to sleep after eating a bagel I bought her at the cafe downstairs. The infusion was uneventful, other than her sending me down for another bagel and a croissant sandwich (who knew toxic chemicals would stir up such an appetite?). A small bit of positive outcome is welcome with all that has gone on as of late, and hopefully this means that she will not have any major side effects in the future, at least with the Herceptin. As such, she will receive Herceptin every three weeks for the rest of her natural life, and here's hoping that will be many years down the road.
May God continue to strengthen and encourage you as your family passes through this valley. "It is better to take refuge in the Lord that to trust in people" ~ Psalm 118:8 NLT
ReplyDeleteBTW: you have a real gift for writing!