It is odd
how the mind works. Over the last few days my rigors and fevers have improved,
I have had periods of undisturbed sleep and, other than a couple of humours
qualms, I am deemed ‘well’ by the haematology team. And yet, when I sat to type
this, tears flowed faster than the words. For no reason. I am not sad, a little
tired yes, but not upset. Perhaps the previous months have caught up on me, or
perhaps I just found Biffy Clyro particularly sentimental today. I don’t know. But if you can imagine your
screen as a sheet from my little black book, there would be small salty droplets
marking it. Not as authentic as a coffee ring, I grant you; well I’ll give you
creative license to add whatever features you wish. I was hoping
to provide an insightful blog post during our last limbo period, you know, an
overly descriptive piece regarding my thoughts and feelings on various aspects
of medicine and life. One of my sisters simply loves these entries. Unfortunately,
I didn’t have the strength or energy to do such a thing so you have all been
saved. For now.
Despite my
relapse, my situation still fell within the BCSH guidelines. But the lines were
a little blurry, the directions a little vague, and by the end you cannot help
but think the document is simply shrugging at you. That being said, we were
left with three treatment options. The first was to continue with Brentuximab. I
was all for this, but my reasoning was purely emotional. I desperately wanted
this cool ass drug to work. But it hadn’t. They scanned me to prove it. I’ve
been told the unused portion will be transferred to another patient. They may
have said this to ease my guilt. The second
option was Gemcitabine; another chemotherapy agent. My cells, however, seem
suspiciously resistant to chemotherapy, so I imagine this thought pattern was
discarded rather quickly.
Seemingly,
this left one final option: a double stem cell transplant. But wait, there was
an outsider. An option that, travelling feverishly back from the Coromandel, I
had not considered. No one, I imagine, had considered it. Around the time I relapsed a
drug company began offering a new unregistered drug to refractory Hodgkin’s lymphoma
patients for free. I did not meet the criteria but my consultant opted to apply
anyhow. It sounds like he had to compose a novel. Upon completion of his manuscript,
he returned and said he was not hopeful at all, don’t hold your breath, this
will never be accepted. We forgot about it and concentrated on the original
final option.
A double
stem cell transplant. There are two types of stem cell transplants. Autologous,
using my own stem cells, and allogenic using donor cells. The first is a way to
administer high dose chemo. The second has further curative aspects. The donor
cells work to eliminate the cancerous cells. Because they’re foreign cells,
they can recognise that Hodgkin’s cells aren’t normal. It’s like the donor
cells walk into a masquerade ball, have a quick look around and cannot believe
Hero could be so foolish; that is clearly Don Pedro not Claudio, and they hope
Beatrice is leading Benedict on because his disguise really isn’t that great. Then
they kill them all. Yes I turned it into a tragedy. Are you lost? I think I am.
Where was I?
Right a back-to-back stem cell transplant. It was finally going ahead. Global
emails had been sent; this was the consensus. First up would be the autologous
with some BEAM to eliminate as much disease as possible. Then when I recover,
say after two months, they would smash me with the allogenic. Hopefully, in
that two month period they would find a donor for the allogenic transplant. The donor
cells need genetically similar, HLA matched, as we say in the industry. Although
I have two sisters, I again landed on the wrong side of statistics. Neither are
suitable donors. They tell me somebody in Germany is a full match. Germany
have a strong donation culture. Many people donate stem cells more than once in
their life. And they donate all around the world. Even with my occupation, I was
unaware of this need for donors. I cannot believe I was never on a register.
Don’t worry, my stem cell harvest post is imminent, so I can implore everyone
to join the donor registry. Anyway, they had two months to sort out Germany. I myself
was facing six months of incapacitation, and that is not hyperbolic, it is
necessity. Further disease staging was performed, namely another bone marrow, but
don’t worry I asked for the gas again. Always ask for the gas.
My stem cell
transplant was scheduled for Friday. We had an appointment with my consultant Wednesday
for consenting and a final rundown on the procedure. I’d booked my last supper
at a classy Wellington restaurant for that evening. But the consultant had a
bombshell. You know before the Shakespeare tangent, the HLA tangent, the
Germany tangent, there was that drug application made. The one we had all given
up on. Yeah that one. Well it had been approved. My consultant explained that we were now in uncharted territory, probably somewhere off Bermuda. In a triangle.
The global medical consensus (there had been more emails) was to continue with
the transplants. The Wellington team felt they should continue with the
transplants. My consultant was neutral, or at least portrayed neutrality, and
the decision was ours to make. We had three hours.
I am not an
apt enough wordsmith to convey how serious this decision was. It was the
biggest of our lives, although, granted, we have had few of those lately. I am
often asked if my medical background helps with my treatment. Well it obviously
hasn’t helped physically. As far as understanding goes, it has definitely been beneficial
when communicating with clinicians, and it has possibly helped me to
rationalise my disease, although ignorance would have made relapses much easier
emotionally. In this situation, my occupation and my affinity for nerding out,
helped substantially. I had heard about this drug before leaving the UK, I knew
it was in development, but I never expected it to be available to me. I had
read about it, knew the uber cool science behind it, the potential side
effects, the results from the small (very small) clinical trial, and to know
all this, and to be able to absorb further information rapidly, was priceless. So,
our question remained, do we opt for the conventional treatment, the one the
experts are suggesting, the one with a known curative possibility; or, or, do
we opt for this new drug, with little long-term data, with little data at all,
a drug nobody in the haematology department has used, an experiment really.
Well, I am a
scientist after all. I am always up for an experiment. And the biology behind
it sounds solid. After a three hour stroll around Newtown and far too many
coffees, we announced that we would try the new drug. I was so close to
having that bloody stem cell transplant I’d nearly declared it to the online
world. But this time I turned the bastard down. It was at least on my terms.
And I still went out for my classy dinner.
There were
further reasons that lead us to our conclusion, reasons that may seem less than
rational. The drug is offered through a “Compassionate Access Scheme”. It had barely
opened for Hodgkin’s patients when I re-re-relapsed, and remained open only a
few weeks. I believe it has now closed. Such a narrow window, and yet I had
slid through. It was almost my duty to give it go. Those who know me will be
well aware of my spiritual and religious beliefs. If anyone thought there was a
slim chance that I was agnostic, I am not. The more I am compelled to reflect
on my mortality, the more I believe that when I die, that is it. I am not
coming back as a cat, I never consider the pearly gates, nor Dante; all I
imagine is nothing. Definitely an atheist, sorry guys. So I do not believe in
fate, but I do believe that if an opportunity opens up, like this window, well
I should probably take it. Ok, maybe I will return as a cat burglar given my
apparent window obsession. Obviously all my clinical data will be collected, so I can
flatter my ego with the belief that I am contributing to future medical
advances. Liv, the ultimate humanitarian. I spoke of my medical background, and
clinical trials, and science, and making an informed decision quickly; but it
was predominately personal reasons that lead us to our final outcome. I found
it quite difficult to go against medical consensus.
A new drug, a distended abdomen and who's that sexy beast in the mirror? |
The drug is
in my veins now. It took two weeks of further paperwork before it was
cleared, and I was too afraid to update the blog in case everything fell through.
As you’ve probably gathered, plans have a tendency to change at the last minute.
And I didn’t have the energy to type a retraction. I probably would have
Fairfaxed out. During these two weeks my disease progressed rapidly. I suffered
unresolvable nocturnal fevers resulting in terrible mornings. The drug
infusion itself (one hour, once a fortnight) was an enjoyable anti-climax.
Unfortunately, the following day was one of those terrible mornings. I had a pleasant
mustard complexion and a yellow glow in my eyes. They admitted me, and to be
honest I didn’t argue. They were concerned that these were side effects, however
I knew it was all disease. That night my fevers were again unresolvable. This
caused quite a stir in the morning. I informed my nurse I had a fever. She
knew. She’d been watching me for five minutes. My resting heart rate was over
150. The alert team were called. About six doctors and five nurses streamed into
my little cubical. All the while I was mumbling “But this is just normal
morning fevers, this isn’t the drug.” I made a joke about dying. It fell flat.
Not funny in a cancer ward. They pumped me full fluids, and more fluids, and
more fluids. Too many fluids. Eight kilograms too many. And it all ended up in
my legs. I won’t be climbing through any windows for a while. I have to lift my
elephantine limbs off the bed. My underwear are two sizes too small and I
spend my days with elevated feet, wondering if it is acceptable to simply forgo
trousers. It is rather comical. Mainly because my fevers have eased and this is
probably my biggest ailment. Oh that and my spleen! Yes you get to hear about
that again. My spleen is massive and painful, as is my liver. Both are enlarged
to the extent that I was used as a training abdomen. Twice. A medical student
was ecstatic because one of his goals was to palpate a spleen. What can I say?
I aim to please.
So this is long. But it is current. I was only
discharged Monday. I know I have been deliberately coy about the drug. I am yet
to receive confirmation as to whether I can name it, hence I haven’t. And the
New Zealand media are currently a little sensitive about cancer treatment. I am
itching to launch into the science behind it; patience Liv. Basically, it is
not chemotherapy, it is immunotherapy. It works to turn my immune system
against the cancerous cells. This is why I am feeling pretty positive about it
all. Chemo wasn’t working, this might. And how else can I feel?
Solid. Please give me the number of the beauty in the mirror.
ReplyDeleteYou'll have to go through her agent!
DeleteThanks for the update Liv....we'll raise a glass to immunotherapy with one of your favourite beers! XXX
ReplyDeleteYay for new and exciting drugs and being on the right lost at the right time!!! Keep kicking ass Liv, as always am amazed at your bravery. P.s have you seen the trailer for the new jungle book? Looks amazing!
ReplyDeleteTalk about tough decisions! Here's wishing you a successful experiment. Have you heard Biffy's new single? It's pretty rocking: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6RRZn5zVLG0
ReplyDeleteHello Olivia from the USA! This is totally a blast from the past. I ended up on your blog while looking at your mom's Facebook page. It was 2001 when we first met the feisty Liv at a soccer tryout (15 years ago!!). I remember how kind you were to include Julia in your plans, and invite her to the movies when she really needed a friend. Your family adopted all of us and we became unofficial "Kiwis". Your mom still sends us a Christmas package every year of NZ lollies. You can't get peanut slabs here! So, even way across the world you have supporters and fans. Know you are loved and thought of often. Have strength. There are a lot of people out here rooting for you. Your California pals, Deb, Tim, Julia, Jeff and Tyler
ReplyDeleteGreat update Liv!! We have all fingers and toes crossed for you that this immunotherapy works!! xx
ReplyDelete