HonCode

Go Back   HER2 Support Group Forums > her2group
Register Gallery FAQ Members List Calendar Today's Posts

Reply
 
Thread Tools Display Modes
Old 04-01-2007, 08:16 AM   #1
Heart Sutra
Senior Member
 
Heart Sutra's Avatar
 
Join Date: Nov 2006
Location: The Hudson Valley, New York
Posts: 124
a/c t/h chemo

Hi everyone,

Thank you for being here.
It's been a long time since we posted, and truthfully a long time since we visited. Though this site does a great service, it can be harmful to fill all days and nights with thoughts and fears of cancer, which we did despite knowing better. It's a tough run.

Sue's treatment with A/C, then T/H chemo was horrific, and is only slightly better now. She hit the jackpot with having nearly every one of the "Possible" side-effects, with the expception of death caused by chemo.

She was switched from Taxol to Taxatere, which does seem to be making these last two treatments better. She will then have a year a Herceptin every 3 weeks left.

With A/C treatment, she was completely incapacitated 5 days on average with a 2 week cycle. Completely means completely unfortunately. She experienced the severe nausea, mouth sores, nose sores, vaginal sores, severe headaches (She had chronic migraines before chemo, chemo brought them on) vomiting, fatigue, hemorroids, severe constipation, period every 2 weeks, and probably one or two more we've missed here. Her blood counts of white and red cells went through the floor, and that was fixed with very painful, very expensive, injections which kept her body alternately killing, and rebuilding itself. There is no pretty way to say the truth, and why even try?

All of this chemical induced misery was countered with other chemicals that helped to some degree. She refrained from taking any "folk cures" except marijuana, which did not help, and trying a vibrating pillow held on her stomach for the constipation.

With Taxol and Herceptin, the nausea was lessened, there were no sores, the headaches were gone, no more vomiting, and her period stopped for now.
But replacing that is joint pain that brings her to tears, numbness in her extremities and her mouth that is alternately annoying or painful, and drastic mood swings. The joint pain resulted in a switch from taxol to taxatere, and so far it is working out.

She describes her experience as a temporary chemical induced death, and I can't argue it, not that I would anyway. No wonder so many abandon the treatment for the wishful thinking of whatever is the magic healing practice du jour, it is certainly understandable. There is no reasonable way to imagine that chemo does not cause harm as well as kill cancer cells. There is no way to feel, despite all reassurances, that chemotherapy is anything but a crude and blunt instrument even with all the advances that have come. What would be worse is for it not to be available. Not a fun run at all.

This is all as a preventative measure. Sue had clear margins after her mastectomy, There was no node involvement, her scans were good, her blood work is good, as of today, there is no indication of cancer anywhere in her.

May it always be that way.

Good luck to all of you new friends and old, we think of you often.
__________________
---Kevin and Sue---

Dx'd 10/06 IDC grade III/III
Er- pr- HER2 3+
MRM right breast 12/5/06
nodes negative
same day reconstruction started
(implants)
Stage II (2.2 cm tumor)
fairly extensive DCIS
Ct and Bone scans clean
Port placement 12/26/06
AC (4 cycles DD)to begin 1/2/07
Taxol/Taxotere (4 cycles DD)
Herceptin for one year

"There is no distinction between the one who gives, the one who receives, and the gift itself."- Hahn
Heart Sutra is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 04-01-2007, 08:37 AM   #2
saleboat
Senior Member
 
saleboat's Avatar
 
Join Date: Sep 2005
Location: NYC
Posts: 250
Oh Kevin & Sue,

I am so sorry to hear of what your experience has been-- poor Sue, that all sounds so unpleasant and awful and at least, knock wood, the worst is over.

Thank you for checking-in. And you are very correct, the internet can be informative in a situation like ours, but it can also fuel fires and plant the seeds of anxiety. It isn't always easy to find a happy-medium, but this site comes very close.

All the best, and good luck with the rest of the chemo ride.

Jen
__________________
dx 4/05 @ 34 y.o.
Stage IIIC, ER+ (90%)/PR+ (95%)/HER2+ (IHC 3+)
lumpectomy-- 2.5 cm 15+/37 nodes
(IVF in between surgery and chemo)
tx dd A/C, followed by dd Taxol & Herceptin
30 rads (or was it 35?)
Finished Herceptin on 7/24/06
Tamox
livingcured.blogspot.com

"Keep your face to the sunshine and you cannot see the shadow." -- Helen Keller
saleboat is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 04-01-2007, 11:56 AM   #3
AlaskaAngel
Senior Member
 
AlaskaAngel's Avatar
 
Join Date: Sep 2005
Location: Alaska
Posts: 2,018
Your position now, after having seen what you have seen, has changed. You express your circumstances very well.

Even though not everyone goes through what you have seen, it is impossible to know before one starts treatment just what it will be like for any given person. Thankfully the question of what treatment to do for breast cancer has already begun to change for those in the earliest stages. Thank you for openly saying what you have seen, so that at least those who are borderline--or with even better odds--have something credible to consider in making their decision whether or not to go forward with the most toxic therapies possible.

Best to you and Sue,

AlaskaAngel
AlaskaAngel is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 04-01-2007, 02:03 PM   #4
Mary Jo
Senior Member
 
Mary Jo's Avatar
 
Join Date: Aug 2006
Location: Sheboygan, WI
Posts: 2,582
Hi Kevin and Sue,

Wow................you've really went through hell Sue. I can't even imagine what this has been like for you. Actually for both of you, as being the person watching it all it has to be horrible. Thankfully, you are almost finished.

I understand what you are saying about surrounding yourself day and night with cancer. Definitely not good for the psyche. I, too, occasionally take a day or two reprieve from here and I will say, on those days I think less of recurrence than when I show up here many times a day. I just can't help myself though. I guess on the other hand I've come to "know" many here and I want to see what everyone is saying - doing etc., along with offering encouragment, hope and love to everyone AND asking an occasional question.

God be with you both. I pray herceptin alone will be a walk in the park for you Sue.

The Lord's Peace I send you,

Mary Jo
__________________
"Be still and know that I am God." Psalm 46:10

Dx. 6/24/05 age 45 Right Breast IDC
ER/PR. Neg., - Her2+++
RB Mast. - 7/28/05 - 4 cm. tumor
Margins clear - 1 microscopic cell 1 sent. node
No Vasucular Invasion
4 DD A/C - 4 DD Taxol & Herceptin
1 full year of Herceptin received every 3 weeks
28 rads
prophylactic Mast. 3/2/06

17 Years NED

<>< Romans 8:28
Mary Jo is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 04-01-2007, 02:32 PM   #5
rinaina
Senior Member
 
rinaina's Avatar
 
Join Date: May 2006
Location: northshore suburb of chicago
Posts: 1,093
Images: 2
So sorry for all Sue has had to endure. We can all relate to some degree or another but for me, as bad as I was on chemo, (AC), and believe me I was sick most of the time in between cycles, it was't as bad as Sue had. My heart goes out to her and you. I know Herceptin will be a cake walk for her and she deserves that and much more. The good news is she is NED and hopefully will continue to be.
__________________
~Rina~
Dx:3/06 had a lumpectomy April 19, 2006
Her2+ er/pr- Stage I Grade 3 tumor size 1.4 cm, node negative
AC 4 dense doses
34 radiation treatments including booster doses
receiving herceptin every 3 weeks since late August 2006 for 12 months
rinaina is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 04-01-2007, 08:23 PM   #6
Bev
Senior Member
 
Join Date: Dec 2005
Location: Alexandria, VA
Posts: 1,055
Sorry Sue and Kevin that you've received every side effect in the book. My nurses told me to do B6 for TH related pain.

By my calculations you have 3 more months of T. By August, the cloud will start lifting. Hang in there. Take a great vacation. BB
Bev is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 04-02-2007, 04:55 PM   #7
Heart Sutra
Senior Member
 
Heart Sutra's Avatar
 
Join Date: Nov 2006
Location: The Hudson Valley, New York
Posts: 124
Wink

Thank you all for being here. Thank you for your kind words and thoughts.

Alaska, Alaska...

No change of position here at all. There may be ever changing alternative therapies in the world of modern medicine, but the alternative treatments of quackery are still kept at a safe distance. We're not willing to go see the Reikki master or acupuncturist, though we don't think badly of anyone who does. We're still not giving quarter where none is due...'nuff said.

Chemotherapy is, as you once described, the medicine that tastes worst. It is a blunt, and somewhat violent, tool. As crude as chemo is, credible studies supporting better valid alternatives are slow to be found if yet at all. We all wish for faster change. It is unfortunate that for now there seems no better option, though certainly there are options galore.

I wrote details of Sue's chemotherapy because we were a little caught by surprise, and maybe her experience will help someone else to not feel alone. She is strong, but I wish she didn't have to be.

To be clear: Although I said that I certainly understand why someone would want to abandon this treatment, I loathe the thought of that being misconstrued as advice to do so.
Sue is here editing me... which as you may well imagine, consists mostly of admonishments

Best of everything to you all
__________________
---Kevin and Sue---

Dx'd 10/06 IDC grade III/III
Er- pr- HER2 3+
MRM right breast 12/5/06
nodes negative
same day reconstruction started
(implants)
Stage II (2.2 cm tumor)
fairly extensive DCIS
Ct and Bone scans clean
Port placement 12/26/06
AC (4 cycles DD)to begin 1/2/07
Taxol/Taxotere (4 cycles DD)
Herceptin for one year

"There is no distinction between the one who gives, the one who receives, and the gift itself."- Hahn
Heart Sutra is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 04-02-2007, 06:31 PM   #8
juanita
Senior Member
 
juanita's Avatar
 
Join Date: Dec 2005
Location: indianapolis, indiana
Posts: 1,544
My heart goes out to you and I must congratulate you on making it through the ac. That was what I quit because of the severe vomitting that I had with the tac combined. I didn't have the mouth sores like you, but I was really out of it for about two weeks, then would start feeling better in time to go for the next treatment. Herceptin will be a walk in the park compared to what you've been through.
juanita is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 04-02-2007, 08:33 PM   #9
AlaskaAngel
Senior Member
 
AlaskaAngel's Avatar
 
Join Date: Sep 2005
Location: Alaska
Posts: 2,018
Early stage bc

Heart Sutra,

I'm sorry I misunderstood. I agree that realistic options are today still much more limited for those with higher stage initial diagnosis. But I did not generalize. I limited my comment to those with early diagnosis, who have more reason not to go to extremes out of fear, and who are trying to be strong enough to find their way with tests like Oncotype Dx.

AlaskaAngel
AlaskaAngel is offline   Reply With Quote
Reply


Posting Rules
You may not post new threads
You may not post replies
You may not post attachments
You may not edit your posts

BB code is On
Smilies are On
[IMG] code is On
HTML code is Off

Forum Jump


All times are GMT -7. The time now is 05:02 PM.


Powered by vBulletin® Version 3.8.7
Copyright ©2000 - 2024, vBulletin Solutions, Inc.
Copyright HER2 Support Group 2007 - 2021
free webpage hit counter