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Old 02-07-2012, 06:02 PM   #1
Mtngrl
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Join Date: May 2011
Location: Denver, CO
Posts: 1,427
Two beloved voices silenced

Since joining this club nobody wants to be in, I've taken an interest in the world of breast cancer blogging and twittering. There are some amazing people letting the world know about their experiences, and about the results of their inquiries into the world of "pink ribbon culture." Some of them are interested observers, but many are living with (and dying from) breast cancer.

Yesterday morning I learned that Rachel, who blogged at "Cancer Culture Chronicles," had died. She was 42. She did meticulous work analyzing the annual reports of Susan G. Komen for the Cure, and posted her analysis. It was eye-opening. Then yesterday afternoon I learned that Susan, who blogged at "Toddler Planet," also died after five years with inflammatory breast cancer. I started crying. Susan was an astrophysicist with two small sons. She mostly talked about her boys, and her struggles to give them as many good moments with her as she could. Both women were frank about what they were going through, and although their searing honesty was sometimes hard to take,I admired them both, and had come to love them. Rachel was snarky, feisty, and wickedly funny. She did not go gentle into that good night.

We are in a culture that hides the truth about death and disease. Really, there's nothing abnormal about dying. For many people the whole process takes a long time and involves a lot of pain and suffering (whether or not they have cancer.) But it gets hushed up and hidden away, and that makes it seem pathological.

I'm reminded of a TED-X talk I saw recently. A young woman named Tanya, who had breast cancer twice and had a double mastectomy, went to the survivors' tent at a Komen event and took off her shirt. She was asked to leave. Although I'm glad federal law requires insurance companies to pay for reconstruction, I sometimes wonder how the whole "awareness" picture would look if there were more one-breasted and no-breasted women walking around.

The problem with advocacy for metastatic cancer is the people who are most passionate about it keep dying. Somebody needs to pick up the banners that Rachel and Susan were forced to drop.
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Amy
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4/19/11 Diagnosed invasive ductal carcinoma in left breast; 2.3 cm tumor, 1 axillary lymph node, weakly ER+, HER2+++
4/29/11 CT scan shows suspicious lesions on liver and lungs
5/17/11 liver biopsy
5/24/11 liver met confirmed--Stage IV at diagnosis
5/27/11 Begin weekly Taxol & Herceptin for 3 months (standard of care at the time of my DX)
7/18/11 Switch to weekly Abraxane & Herceptin due to Taxol allergy
8/29/11 CT scan shows no new lesions & old lesions shrinking
9/27/11 Finish Abraxane. Start Herceptin every 3 weeks. Begin taking Arimidex
10/17/11--Brain MRI--No Brain mets
12/5/11 PET scan--Almost NED
5/15/12 PET scan shows progression-breast/chest/spine (one vertebra)
5/22/12 Stop taking Arimidex; stay on Herceptin
6/11/12 Started Tykerb and Herceptin on clinical trial (w/no chemo)
9/24/12 CT scan--No new mets. Everything stable.
3/11/13 CT Scan--two small new possible mets and odd looking area in left lung getting larger.
4/2/13--Biopsy of suspicious area in lower left lung. Mets to lung confirmed.
4/30/13 Begin Kadcyla/TDM-1
8/16/13 PET scan "mixed," with some areas of increased uptake, but also some definite improvement, so I'll stay on TDM-1/Kadcyla.
11/11/13 Finally get hormone receptor results from lung biopsy of 4/2/13. My cancer is no longer ER positive.
11/13/13 PET scan mixed results again. We're calling it "stable." Problems breathing on exertion.
2/18/14 PET scan shows a new lesion and newly active lymph node in chest, other progression. Bye bye TDM-1.
2/28/14 Begin Herceptin/Perjeta every 3 weeks.
6/8/14 PET "mixed," with no new lesions, and everything but lower lungs improving. My breathing is better.
8/18/14 PET "mixed" again. Upper lungs & one spine met stable, lower lungs less FDG avid, original tumor more avid, one lymph node in mediastinum more avid.
9/1/14 Begin taking Xeloda one week on, one week off. Will also stay on Herceptin and Perjeta every three weeks.
12/11/14 PET Scan--no new lesions, and everything looks better than it did.
3/20/15 PET Scan--no new lesions, but lower lung lesions larger and a bit more avid.
4/13/15 Increasing Xeloda dose to 10 days on, one week off.
7/1/15 Scan "mixed" again, but suggests continuing progression. Stop Xeloda. Substitute Abraxane every 3 weeks starting 7/13.
10/28/15 PET scan shows dramatic improvement everywhere. All lesions except lower lungs have resolved; lower lungs noticeably improved.
12/18/15 Last Abraxane. Continue on Herceptin and Perjeta alone beginning 1/8/16.
1/27/16 PET scan shows cancer is stable.
5/11/16 PET scan shows uptake in some areas that were resolved on the last two scans.
6/3/16 Begin Kadcyla and Tykerb combination
6/5 - 6/23 Horrible diarrhea from K&T together. Got pneumonia.
7/15/16 Begin Kadcyla only every 3 weeks.
9/6/16 Begin radiation therapy on right lung lesion that caused the pneumonia.
10/3/16 Last of 12 radiation treatments to right lung.
11/4/16 Huffing and puffing, low O2, high heart rate, on tiniest bit of exertion. Diagnosed as radiation pneumonitis. Treated with Prednisone.
11/11/16 PET scan shows significant improvement to radiated part of right lung BUT a bunch of new lung lesions, and the bone met is getting worse.
11/22/16 Begin Eribulin and Herceptin. H every 3 weeks. E two weeks on, one week off.
3/6/17 Scan shows progression in lungs. Bone met a little better.
3/23/17 Lung biopsy. Tumor sampled is ER-, PR+ (5%), HER2+++. Getting Herceptin and Perjeta as a maintenance treatment.
5/31/17 Port placement
6/1/17 Start Navelbine & Tykerb
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