Wednesday, February 27, 2008

From Treatment to Prevention

The appointment went well. The team at Dr. B's office oohed and aahed over my new hair, and were - of course - thrilled to see Zack. I even got to see my chemo-buddy, which was an extra treat. Dr. B says my radiation burns don't look fabulous, but are within the bounds of normal so not to worry.

Surgery:
No major surprises, just some tweaks. The surgery to remove my ovaries needs to happen ASAP, rather than in May as I'd planned. So, we're trying to get it scheduled for the week after we return from vacation. On the positive side, Dr. H can probably do the surgery. Zack is excited to meet her, as he credits her with saving my life. By working her personal contacts, Dr. H bustled me into the offices of Dr. S and Dr. B within a few days of my visit with her. Without her direct intervention, that process could easily have taken a month. A month, it turns out, I didn't have.

Drugs:
I start Tamoxifen tomorrow. I'll take it until the surgery, then switch to an aromatase inhibitor. I also start calcium & vitamin D supplements, since both early menopause and the AIs tend to increase bone loss. So, osteoporosis is the newest item on the list of things to worry about. I figure this gives me all the justification I need to eat Cabot's cheese by the brick and drink lattes all morning. There's calcium in butter, right?

Monitoring:
I'll have checkups every three months to check for any possible cancer recurrence. Any new tumors would be most likely to grow in my bones, liver, chest wall, or lymph nodes. Although the evidence is mixed on their utility, Dr. B and I decided to go ahead and test for blood borne tumor markers. The problem is, the tumor markers often spike without the doctors being able to find an actual tumor anywhere. However, a tumor marker spike does throw up a red flag, and in the best case scenario this could give Dr. B a three month head start finding for a new cancer. Based on the incredible growth rate of the first cancer, Dr. B wants every time advantage she can get, as long as I am willing to live with the potential for unnecessary anxiety that false positive results could bring. (we are.)

Other than that, Dr. B wants to do symptom-triggered scans, rather than have me do CTs every three months. She feels that I will pay close enough attention to know when something feels strange, and she'll do careful checks whenever I see her. She'll use regular bloodwork to check up on liver function and my other organs.

Summary:
We're living in a coin toss world. Think tails!

5 comments:

Anonymous said...

Hi Lynn:

I am glad you had a good day and feel optimistic.

This is very important: there more calcium in IRISH butter (mmmmmmm - love that stuff) and full fat ice cream and cheese. mmm. OK that is a joke, but I have a thing for Kerrigold butter and cheese. mmmmmmm.

xo
Laura beth

TM said...

So to summarize, Aggressive Constant Vigilance!! (with yummy dairy treats). You rule. Can't wait to see you soon!!!

t

Butter Vixen said...

Absolutely! Maybe Mad-Eye Moody will magic me up some Irish butter. Kerrigoldius!

Zack said...

I'm going to be a kabillion pounds on this diet. But oh the fun of getting there--can I have a pound of M&M's on my gallon ice cream sunday?

Michaela said...

i think it should be called The Milkshake Diet.

yum.

xoxo
michaela