The preamble
In the last three weeks there have been a host of new symptoms developing in my body. I don’t know if I was ever fully aware of how long the list was until we actually wrote it down in preparation for today’s appointment with the oncologist.
- Terrible night sweats and hot flashes throughout the day
- Creepy body spasms that happen as I sleep
- Random swelling in feet, hands, face, and legs
- Random tingling/extra numbness in legs or feet (different than my ‘normal’ leg/feet numbness)
- Almost daily hot and throbbing headaches that last only about thirty seconds
- Debilitating back pain
- And some issues with urination and such that I won’t talk about extensively here!
So we expected some bad news…in fact, we almost hoped that there would be some kind of explanation for the developing symptoms. What we both genuinely expected was that the lower new tumor had grown significantly. This wasn’t the case.
The tumor update in all it’s terrible glory:
At this point in time virtually my entire spinal cord is surrounded by a ‘tumor sheath’. I don’t currently have the actual vertebrae count, but it is most of my spinal cord and it has a layer of tumor around it and the best way I’m finding to describe it is with the word sheath or casing. Additionally there is a clear tumor mass where my original surgery once was. (to clarify this point, up until now they have been able to identify that there was a growing mass here but it could be tumor, it could be radiation damage, or it could inflammation. Today, for the first time it is very clearly and undeniably tumor growth) So we went from one tumor four months ago, to three tumors two months ago, to…well, I’m not even sure how to categorize where we’re at now. One giant tumor who is attempting to strangle out my entire spinal cord.
Treatment options
This is pretty radical growth in only a two month time period and necessitates changing our treatment approach.
Regarding treatment we will make a decision within one week. We need to move quickly but there are two factors that inhibit this. There are quite a few potential clinical trials that are very reliable and very hopeful (the reality is that clinical trials are not what they once were even a few years ago. They’re much safer, more successful, and more reliable than they’ve ever been before.) but a clinical trial would require waiting about a month to start…and we’re not sure we want to wait that long. The next, and likely option, is to use another drug called Avastin. This drug has been very valuable for central nervous system cancers and is not a bad option to pursue. Regardless it is sad to see one more thing crossed off our list of attempts:
- surgery
- radiation
- daily temodar (chemo)
- stronger monthly temodar (chemo)
The second factor is that we’re still waiting for results from an emergency brain MRI that I had done today. Somebody along the way goofed up and I didn’t get that piece of the scan done prior to our appointment today. So now we’ve got to wait until my doctor gets the results and calls me this evening with more information.
Where we’re at
I wish I had a good answer for this. I wish I had something inspirational to say…ok, lets be honest, I could very easily drum up something inspiring right now, I’m pretty sure of it. But I don’t want to. I don’t want to downplay just how shitty this news is. It is. It’s just terrible news. This doesn’t mean that I still don’t have hope that healing can happen. This doesn’t mean that I don’t believe that God is and will continue to tell a beautiful story in my life or death. This doesn’t mean that I’ve lost hope. It simply means that I’m sad and I don’t want to write that off, I don’t want to artificially push through it, I don’t want to disengage my emotions, I don’t want to do a disservice to the reality of where we are because I truly believe that if I’m unwilling to recognize hell for what it is then I’m less able to recognize its transformation into goodness when/as it occurs.
Pray for us as we talk to our kids about it. They knew that daddy had scans today and so we’ve made ourselves accountable to share with them results.
Thank you for your love and support.
peace.