Wednesday, April 1, 2009

Rare

Most of us want to be special, but not in the way the OSU oncologist described it to me yesterday.

Tom and I met with the doctor to learn results of two scans I had last week and to hear his recommendation for any follow-up treatment. The good news is the CT scan and the bone scan were both clear; there were no findings of cancer still lurking. While that was a great relief, it was not comforting to hear what has the doctor perplexed and his proposed course of treatment.

The report back from a sarcoma pathologist who had double-checked slides of the mass taken from my abdomen confirmed two different, rare cancers were present in the tumor. Most prevalent was the leiomyosarcoma initially diagnosed in September. Along with it was a bone sarcoma, which rarely occurs in adults and rarely occurs in tissue that is not bone. My doctor has seen adults with a bone sarcoma in non-bone tissue, but he has never encountered that situation in combination with another sarcoma in the same tumor.

While my scans showed no lingering or recurrent cancer, his initial recommendation for preventive care is a nasty regimen of chemotherapy requiring another 15 days in the hospital. It would involve a five-day admission for intravenous chemo, to be repeated in three weeks and then again for a total of three treatments. The hospital stay is due to the drugs' harsh side effects.

Thankfully, the oncologist encourages a second opinion, especially since he hasn't treated a case like mine before. He is also consulting some of his peers, and he called last night to report another sarcoma expert advised a wait-and-watch approach for now.

My homework is to work with my health insurer to explore a second opinion from specialists at a top sarcoma center in Houston. I'd like to hear them say they have seen this before and know just how to keep it from coming back -- something that doesn't require a hospital stay for rumpus-kicking chemo.

1 comment:

Chanda said...

I wrote yesterday -- but it doesn't look like I hit the right buttons to get the "message" to you. Look how far you have already come with this battle that you have been facing. You have beat the surgery -- and that in itself seems like a miracle to me. You have that new grandchild coming and you are strong enough to survive whatever comes your way I truly believe. Just don't give up (and I don't believe that you will). Take care of yourself first -- work can follow. You are truly loved and needed (at work, at home, and I am sure amongst friends and family). Keep your faith -- more miracles are in store for you -- even though I presume it will be a long difficult battle if you have to go through another round of chemo. YOU ARE STRONG! You have already proved that.