May 02, 2008

Mammogram Today

One of the things I hate most about living with cancer is all the tests and scans. They take too much time out of my life, and they make me anxious.

I just got home from having my annual mammogram on my left (one-and-only) breast.

The test itself isn't bad, although that final twist of the clamp HURTS, and I'm not too worried about the results, even though I know one in 10 women who have had breast cancer in one breast get a second cancer in the other breast at some point (not sure what the stats are for women like me, with metastatic disease--I always figure they should be lower, because I'm doing chemo most of the time) ...

So why was my blood pressure up around 150 over 90 (I'm guessing, but that's how high it felt)? Major wave of anxiety during and after the exam.

Of course, I know the reason: flashback to how my life with cancer started, with a mammogram.

But in the nine and a half years since then I've gotten better at recognizing and coping with anxiety. So I decided to walk home--exercise really helps get rid of the physical effects of anxiety, and I called two of my closest friends and left them messages about what was going on.

One called me back a few minutes later and we talked as I was walking, until I got to a bridge over the freeway and couldn't hear, so had to hang up.

I stopped on the way home and bought a healthy burrito (Taco del Mar--is there any other kind?) for a late lunch/early dinner, and after I feed the kittens I'm going to crash out and read for awhile.

Today's experience was kind of funny, because just this morning I'd gotten an e-mail from a woman with metastatic breast cancer who has just started on Tykerb and is having a tough time with it. After asking me to compare symptoms (we cancer patients do that a lot with others on the same drugs), she asked how I managed to stay so upbeat all the time.

Here's part of my reply:

I don't stay upbeat all the time. No one could. I write about the bad days, too. And sometimes, like last Monday, I just have to take a day off and stay in bed and give in to all the bad feelings, depression, whatever. And I also have a really good therapist, and friends who will listen to me rant and rave if I need to. And the blog has been great, because of the friends I've met.

It's really tough. Just do the best you can and don't beat yourself up about it if you have a bad day or bad week or whatever.

The last thing I want is another cancer patient feeling bad because she thinks she isn't coping as well as I am. That's not what my blog is all about. And she's having a hard time right now, and I'm sailing along fairly well. Except for the post-mammogram blues, which are pretty much gone.

@ Jeanne Sather 2008.

April 05, 2008

But I Don't WANT to See the Doctor ...

I felt like a 2-year-old yesterday morning.

I hadn't slept well, and I woke up with a stiff neck and in a really terrible mood. And it was raining--cold, damp Seattle rain. (Those of you who live elsewhere are probably scratching your heads and saying, "Well, of course rain is damp. How else would it be? But you don't know Seattle rain. Ours is damper. Trust me.)

I considered calling the cancer center and cancelling my appt. with Dr. Lee and also my treatment (zometa, by IV). Did not want to go there. Did not want to talk about cancer. Did not want a blood draw. Did not want to get answers to the questions that have been hanging over my head ...

OK, you get the picture.

And I know what was wrong: I hadn't been there in EIGHT WEEKS. Eight weeks without a doctor's appt. All I had during that time was one little MUGA scan, to make sure my heart isn't being damaged by the Tykerb. (Isn't cancer fun? My heart is fine, by the way.) Anyway, eight weeks without a doctor's appt. is something of a personal record for me, at least during the past six years.

During that time away from the cancer center, I'd made a fabulous trip with Younger Son, and--even though I was blogging almost every day--I was able to put my cancer in a box marked, "worry about this later."

Well, the time to worry was yesterday, and I wasn't ready.

So, after pouting, throwing things, and basically doing the whole 2-year-old thing, I SHAMED myself into going. That was how I got out the door.

I took a cab, because the marvelous red Corvair is STILL in the shop, four weeks and counting, don't even ask. It will come home when it comes home. And of course the cab driver was adorable. (We talked. His wife has MS. I didn't tell him I have cancer.) My cab drivers almost always are adorable, except for the guy who brought Younger Son and me home from the airport on Saturday, well, early Sunday morning by that time. He was a pill.

Anyway, cut to the facts.

Had my blood draw. One stick only.

Then, and this was truly amazing and I am going to write a second post about it, a woman from the billing office came to find me in the waiting room, to discuss the balance on my account with me personally and to set up a payment plan. I was gobsmacked.

She was warm, charming, and accepted my suggestion for how much a month I could afford to pay.

You have to understand that I am used to the University of Washington Medical Center, the Seattle Cancer Care Alliance, and Swedish cancer center, where often the first bill you see is a threat to send you to collections. And if there's an error in the bill that you are trying to work out--and have called and written to them about the matter--the threats keep coming even while you are discussing, negotiating, and getting copies of paperwork sent from your insurance company or doctor's office. I have been sent to collections at least twice for bills that were mistakes.

(I am not making this up. I AM trying to shame these cancer centers into doing a better job. I once rewrote a threatening letter from SCCA that I had received and sent it to Norm Hubband, the top guy--COO, I think his title is--as a suggestion for a kinder, gentler letter they might send to patients who owe money. Don't think they used it.)

So this was pretty unbelievable--someone from the finance office who treats patients like real people. She didn't use the word "deadbeat" once!

OK, after all of this, I finally saw Dr. Lee, who was in top form. We went down my list of questions, which were these:

Q: Could I increase the dose on the antibiotic I'm taking for the Tykerb-induced acne?

A: Yes.

Q: Where's my tumor marker (CEA)?

A: 1.2 last time we drew it, which is normal, normal, normal.

Q: Is it time for a PET or other scan?

A: Yes. Dr. Lee recommended the PET/CT, which is the one I was hoping for. Because on the PET, tumors will light up. If my tumor marker is accurate--the whole point of doing the scan--then nothing should light up except my arthritis. If that is true, then I am in remission, which was something we had given up on years ago. This doesn't mean I'll be able to go off treatment, but it would mean there are no signs of active disease.

Of course, I've been saying I'm in remission since January, but doctors are more cautious souls.

Q: How's my thyroid?

A: Not quite normal. We can do more tests to see if I need thyroid meds. I asked to put this off for awhile because I'm having a bunch of tests in the next couple of weeks.

Q: I think I've overdue for a mammogram on my left breast.

A: Yes. We'll schedule that.

Q; I need to see my dentist. How do I explain what zometa can do to the bone in the jaw?

A: Tell him to check for osteonecrosis (bone death) of the jaw. (Let's just leave that one at that. I have no signs, but because of being on zometa for so long, I can't have a tooth pulled, for example. The bone will not fill in.)

And then, drum roll, the question that has actually been bothering me--way back in the dark back corners of my mind--was this one:

Q: How long do you expect the Tykerb to work?

A: We don't know. (What he actually said was, "I hope it will work for years." Then we got into the details.)

Now, that's a tough answer. I've been on it for almost five months. In a clinical trial, it only worked an average of six or seven months for the women in the trial.

I asked if Dr. Lee had any patients who have been on Tykerb longer than me, and he said no. So we are on the cutting edge, ladies and gents. I've e-mailed Dr. Livingston to ask him about this, but haven't heard back.

A favor: if you are on Tykerb, and have been on it longer than six months and it is still working for you, please e-mail me, or add a comment below, and let me know.

Now of course Dr. Lee had his own list of things to talk to me about, but his list was pretty much the same as mine, except for the mammogram and the last question.

Then, I went to get my one measly 30-minute IV, zometa, and I was done. My nurse, Susan, was done with her shift, but she hung around to be the one to stick me because sometimes it takes a couple of tries to get a vein on me and Susan got me first stick last time.

Also one stick. I was golden by this point.

While I was in the chair getting my zometa, I had a long talk with a woman who is also Stage IV breast cancer and used to be a nurse. She was in to get a shot, which she got, and we talked for most of the time my IV was running. She was bald in a very odd pattern, and we talked about that. Going bald, getting drugs. What to do with the hair.

Then, as I left the cancer center, I tried to call a cab to take me home, and was told it would be an hour wait. Another woman, also a cancer patient, was walking right next to me and overheard this, and asked me where I wanted to go.

Even though she was going north, she drove to me to my bank, waited while I made a deposit and flirted briefly with Roberto, the sweet Latin teller, and then drove me home, which was south. I'm used to people being nice to me, but this was pretty amazing.

She had a tumor removed from her cheek and is now having radiation, so I think she has Teri's kind of cancer. I gave her my card and the name of Teri's blog, The Cheeky Librarian (didn't have the URL memorized).

All in all, a pretty amazing day.

When I got home, I took Connie for a socializing walk, over to the drugstore. This is through a busy area, so he has to meet lots of people on the street and NOT jump up on them. It's a challenge.

Then I crawled into bed with a book, and Older Son came by and made dinner for us (yakisoba, a Japanese noodle dish) and I ate that in bed.

My next challenge, once I get caught up at home, is to lose 25 lbs. The thyroid may have something to do with my weight gain. But also, I don't get enough exercise to lose weight, because I get tired. Going to consult with Monica, the world's most fabulous personal trainer, who also has years of experience working with women with cancer.

Oh, my new cancer center is formally known as the Puget Sound Cancer Centers, and it is at Northwest Hospital in Seattle. The folks in the billing office are awesome, if the woman I met is any indication.


@ Jeanne Sather 2008.

March 17, 2008

From the E-Mail Box

One of the really fun things about blogging is the mail that I get. I never got this kind of e-mail before I had cancer (BC)!

Potential Canadian Husband
I received an e-mail from a Canadian man who lives in Vancouver, B.C., suggesting himself as husband material. He didn't tell me much, just suggested that I look at his profile on facebook and e-mail him if I was interested.

Well, I'm not on facebook, and I don't want to have a profile on facebook (I have enough of an online presence as it is: 784 hits on Google, as of this morning). But I was curious about this guy, so last night I went to facebook and tried to set up a profile, and IT WOULDN'T LET ME ON!

Was it because of my year of birth? I know facebook is primarily for college students, but really!

There is a security window when you set up a new account, like the one people have to use when they post comments to my blog, but the security window wouldn't come up. So no luck. I haven't been able to look at this guy's profile.

I thought I might ask Younger Son (who IS on facebook, natch) to sign on and show me the profile, and YS was home last night, but then I thought: Do I want my son involved in my love life? Even this much?

The answer, of course, is no.

So I guess I will try facebook again later today, once I finish the story I'm working on, and if that doesn't work, I'll just have to e-mail Larry and ask him if he'd like to tell me about himself in e-mail. If that's too much trouble, I don't think he and I have much of a future together anyway.

Don't know what I'm talking about? Read about my search for a Canadian husband: Dating
Scroll down. The oldest posts are at the bottom.

An Invite
Then there's the invitation from a woman who works for a PR firm in New York City, asking me if I'd like to take part in a round-table discussion about cancer and careers.

The date, amazingly enough, is next Friday, when I will be in New York. It couldn't have worked out better, actually, because Younger Son and I will be arriving by Amtrak Thursday evening and staying with Jacqueline of Rebel1in8 fame in her loft in Brooklyn. I'm wondering if Jacq. is responsible for this invite--have to e-mail her to ask.

The event is put on by something called Cosmetic Executive Women (CEW) and sponsored by Roche, a drug company. (I'll be sure to wear lipstick, and I'll take notes if there are any weird drug company freebies on offer.)

But it sounds pretty substantive, according to the e-mail I received, which said, in part:

... addresses the unique challenges of cancer in the workplace and focuses on issues patients face when trying to balance both treatment and work.

The roundtable discussion offers an opportunity to present questions about challenges that your readers may experience, and we would love to have you or a representative from your blog attend. ...

Carlotta Jacobson, CEO and Founder of CEW, and board certified medical oncologist Dr. Ruth Oratz, Clinical Associate Professor of Medicine at New York University School of Medicine, will discuss the best ways to transition back to work and maintain a work life balance. ... We will also have a legal expert on hand to discuss national and local laws which protect and offer support to those working and living with cancer.

I've already accepted.

I was fired once while in cancer treatment, by a health and fitness Web site, no less, so this is a topic that is near to my heart. The settlement paid some of my cancer debt and gave me the down payment for my house.

Read: Blindsided by disease and life, she fights to survive

More Questions About Tykerb
I also received an e-mail from a woman who is in remission with Stage III breast cancer after treatment with Herceptin. She wants to get Tykerb, and her oncologist is telling her she isn't eligible.

I'm not going to argue with her doctor, but I sure admire her for looking into this, and I gave her contact information for Dr. Livingston in Tucson and also for the "Tykerb Cares" drug program. Awful name, isn't it? Trust drug company execs and marketing folks to come up with some real winners like this--I feel so warm and fuzzy knowing that my drug company cares about me! Never mind that they delayed shipping my Tykerb to me for THREE WHOLE WEEKS on one pretext or another.

Yes, that's steam coming out of my ears.

Not really, I've been amazingly mellow lately as my energy continues to climb. I don't need afternoon naps anymore, but I do shut off the phones and get into bed with a book and my dinner at about 6 p.m. or so.

"A book"? There are so many books piled around and on my bed that I'd be in danger if an earthquake of any magnitude hit Seattle during the night. The dogs, too, except they are smart enough to crawl under the bed.

@ Jeanne Sather 2008.


March 16, 2008

Tykerb Question

A reader of my blog e-mailed me today, and one thing she said is bothering me: She said that Tykerb, my new miracle drug, only works for six or seven months, typically, and then it stops working.

None of my doctors had told me this, and I sure hope it's not true, because I've been on Tykerb for four months already (since Thanksgiving Day, 2007), and that means it would stop working pretty darn soon.

Those of you who are on Tykerb--what do you know about this? Please give me your source, even if it's just "My oncologist said."

Thanks.

I've e-mailed Dr. L in Tucson to ask him, but of course it's Sunday morning, so he may not be checking e-mail today.

@ Jeanne Sather 2008.

February 27, 2008

What I'm Eating: Lunch

As I've said before, I'm struggling to eat a healthy diet.

The Tykerb, my new miracle chemo drug, seems to kill my appetite. It also upsets my GI tract. So I don't feel much like eating, and the foods that do appeal to me tend to me light on nutrition: crackers, bagels, pudding, rice. Too many vegetables at one sitting leaves me with gas and cramps.

Also, by 6 p.m. or so, I don't feel like cooking, so I've been shifting my main meal to noon or early afternoon. I eat out with a friend or one of my sons once or twice a week, because I eat a better meal that way.

But I also seem to have odd food cravings--these I indulge.

The other day when I was at the grocery, I saw bunches of fresh asparagus. It looked wonderful--expensive, but wonderful. So I bought some.

Today I made myself a very tasty rice dish, using the asparagus, mushrooms, and tofu.

First, I precooked the rice, which was a box of seasoned brown and wild rice, the Farmhouse brand, which has no additives.

I cut the asparagus into 1 1/2 inch pieces and precooked it for just a minute in the microwave. I sliced the mushrooms and cut the tofu into small cubes. I put all of these into a heated wok with just a little oil and cooked them quickly on high heat. When they were almost done, I added a splash of soy sauce.

Then I stirred in the rice, and that was it.

I ate in on the front porch in the sunshine where I could admire my garden. Crocuses and small daffodils are blooming, tulips are above ground, and the blueberry bushes have new leaf buds.

@ Jeanne Sather 2008.

February 05, 2008

Eating Better

Well, now that my life expectancy has yet again moved out to the horizon (See Postcard from Tucson), I have no excuse for eating badly.

Well, no excuse except that the Tykerb kills my appetite and exercise is still a test of will--I'd much rather nap than walk.

However, I'm pretty self aware, and I know that eating right is important. So I'm paying attention to my eating patterns and to my energy levels at different times of day. For example, I rarely feel like cooking dinner. I have more energy earlier in the day, so I am now eating my biggest meal of the day in the early afternoon.

For the past couple of days, this has been Japanese fried noodles (yaki soba), made with lots of vegetables (cabbage, carrots, mushrooms) and cut-up vegi burger and a fried egg for protein.

Then in the evenings, I drink vegetable soup. The brand I like (Pacific) is organic, and right now I'm hooked on the creamy butternut squash soup. I drink it at room temperature or cold.

And even though it's only February, I'm getting motivated to get out my vegetable seeds and start some plants indoors. When I reread my posts about gardening last summer, I realize that I ate so much better at that time of year because homegrown produce is such a treat.

Gobbling strawberries and cherry tomatoes and pea pods right out of the garden ... Eating good food because it tastes good--that's the way to go.

See: Gardening


@ Jeanne Sather 2008.

February 04, 2008

Advice Needed: Who's on Tykerb + Xeloda?

I know at least a couple of readers of this blog are on that combination, but I can't remember who ...

Dee, a blogger and breast cancer patient who lives in Oregon, is going to start on this combo soon, and she'd like to hear from women who are taking these drugs together, which I believe is the most common combination for Tykerb.

So leave a comment for Dee below, or go to her blog and leave her a message.

Dee's blog

I have another friend who is taking xeloda alone, and has been for two years now. She is doing really well on it.

And I'm taking Tykerb, but not xeloda, and I'm doing well on the Tykerb. Side effects have calmed down after two months on the drug.

@ Jeanne Sather 2008.

January 28, 2008

Zit-Faced

I was having trouble taking my antibiotic, minocycline, as directed--because I'm supposed to take it twice a day on an empty stomach, and avoid dairy products for an hour either side of taking it.

Well, that's hard for me, because my stomach is a bit upset (the other common side effect of Tykerb), and dairy foods and tofu are the things I feel like eating.

So anyway, I skipped the antibiotic for a couple of days, and my face broke out big-time. About eight or 10 small pimples on my chin and around my mouth and nose. Ouch.

Vanity is now ruling my decisions, and I'm back to taking the antibiotic on schedule, but it looks like it will take several days to get the acne under control.

The Dose
I'm only taking four Tykerb a day instead of five, because four seems to be the magic number as far as my stomach is concerned. When I take five, I'm in the bathroom all day long.

My doctors are OK with this. And as long as my tumor marker stays down, I'm OK with it too.

My latest CEA was a marvelous 1.6--which is normal, folks. I'll put up with a lot worse side effects than a few zits and an upset tummy for numbers like that!

Read more: Tykerb (Scroll down.)

@ Jeanne Sather 2008.

January 26, 2008

The Tykerb Diet: Food Cravings

I forgot to ask Dr. Lee when I saw him yesterday if Tykerb kills the appetite. But no need to ask, really, because I know it does--at least for me.

So I'm not feeling hungry much of the time, and not wanting to eat when I do feel hungry, and then there are the FOOD CRAVINGS. No, I'm not pregnant--that's Amorette.

Many, if not most, of these cravings are for healthy foods (grammar police: I know the correct word is "healthFUL," but I hate that word), and I seem to have lost my taste for sweets, especially chocolate--except for ice cream, which now must be vanilla.

Just this minute I had a craving for TOFU (see what I mean?), so I fried myself up a batch. At 11 o'clock in the morning--not the time I usually eat tofu.

Delicious. Now I'm craving MORE TOFU.

Too weird.

Here's how I cooked it:

Take firm tofu, cut into cubes (cubes should be the right size to pick up with chopsticks).

Pour soy sauce over the tofu and let it stand while you heat oil in a wok or frying pan.

Roll the tofu in flour, and fry on all sides until crispy.

Eat immediately.

@ Jeanne Sather 2008.

January 21, 2008

The Tykerb Diet

At the risk of embarrassing myself in front of god and everybody, I am going to confess to what I've eaten today, eight weeks into my treatment with Tykerb:

Two cups of coffee with cream
One bottle of lemonade
One scone
One more cup of coffee, also with cream
Four cookies
One Diet Coke float (with a scoop of vanilla ice cream)

It's after 9 p.m., and I haven't had dinner. Not hungry. Don't feel like eating.

Now, I know this isn't good. I don't need anyone to tell me that (and please don't e-mail me with suggestions for improving my diet--I have all the info on that topic that I need). I've been a vegetarian since my teens and a fan of organic food long before it became trendy.

I've lost 10 pounds since I started on the Tykerb, which is OK, because my weight had jumped up over the summer, and I'm hoping to lose another 10, maybe a bit more slowly, though.

I also worked out today, for the first time since my broken rib, which was about two months ago. That felt good, even though Monica (friend and personal trainer) only let me exercise for about a half hour. But then I came home and moved bricks around in the back yard for another half hour or so (I'm using the bricks that came off my chimney when it was rebuilt to make a patio), and threw Connie's tennis ball for him at the same time--the dog is ball-crazy. It's that simple.

So it's not that I didn't have any exercise.

This is simply what the Tykerb does--kills the appetite.

Having written this, though, I am going to the kitchen to microwave myself some frozen corn. I'll have that and some cottage cheese. Not the best dinner in the world, but it'll do for now.

Read more: Tykerb

@ Jeanne Sather 2008.

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