Our cancer "ordeal" blog
www.ourovariancancertrip.com
Joan
Background:
Diagnosed Stage 4 December, 2010. De-bulked early January. Clinical trial of Taxol by IV and Avastin day 1, Cisplatin IP day 2 and Taxol IP day 8. Skip one week and cycle starts again.
CA-125:
1,428 at diagnosis.
Started eating only organic and supplemented with Oncomar and Immpower mushroom extract per hospital dietitian recommendation. Cut out all sugar where could.
Dropped to CA-125 of 408 three weeks after de-bulking surgery.
Dropped to 78 just before first chemo treatment.
Dropped to 29 just before 2nd chemo cycle.
Dropped to 20 just before third chemo cycle.
Currently completing cycle 3.
Comments
-
It sounds like you are in
It sounds like you are in the same arm of clinical trial GOG-0252 that I am. I finished all the chemo on December 8th and am doing the Avastin maintenance. I was dx. July 2010 with stage 3, grade 3 clear cell. The IP is uncomfortable, but tolerable. I was in really good shape when I was dx. so I think I tolerated the chemo pretty well. I think having a sense of humor and a positive outlook were huge reasons I did as well as I did. You absolutely can't wrapped up in percentages, etc. I got lots of pre-meds and was sent home with Zofran and Emend, so I had NO nausea at all during chemo. I did have the neuopathy in my left foot, and that hasn't gone away. I took L-glutamine and I think it helped keep it from progressing too much. My "bad weekend" was after my IV Taxol on Wednesday and IP Cisplatin on Thursday. Towards the end, I was pretty much in bed from Friday evening through most of Saturday. It definitely does build up and take longer to rebound. I worked the whole time, except for my treatment days, but left at 3:00. Good luck to you - it sound like you have a great attitude. I'll check out your blog!0 -
Nauesataiga said:It sounds like you are in
It sounds like you are in the same arm of clinical trial GOG-0252 that I am. I finished all the chemo on December 8th and am doing the Avastin maintenance. I was dx. July 2010 with stage 3, grade 3 clear cell. The IP is uncomfortable, but tolerable. I was in really good shape when I was dx. so I think I tolerated the chemo pretty well. I think having a sense of humor and a positive outlook were huge reasons I did as well as I did. You absolutely can't wrapped up in percentages, etc. I got lots of pre-meds and was sent home with Zofran and Emend, so I had NO nausea at all during chemo. I did have the neuopathy in my left foot, and that hasn't gone away. I took L-glutamine and I think it helped keep it from progressing too much. My "bad weekend" was after my IV Taxol on Wednesday and IP Cisplatin on Thursday. Towards the end, I was pretty much in bed from Friday evening through most of Saturday. It definitely does build up and take longer to rebound. I worked the whole time, except for my treatment days, but left at 3:00. Good luck to you - it sound like you have a great attitude. I'll check out your blog!
Oh how I wish I could say the nausea wasn't a problem for me! You are so lucky (if any of us can say anything with the word "luck" in it!) as this is by far the worst side-effect I have experienced. I am also on the Emend, Sancuso Patch. The Emend seems to work but they only gave it to me for 3 days, then I switch to the patch, which does not seem to work very well. Do you take the Emend for just 3 days as well?
Congratulations on finishing and you are a true warrior for working through all of that misery! It still seems like such a long road ahead, even though I am half-way through, but it is heartening to hear someone has gone "the distance"!
Joan0 -
Yes, I only took Emend onElarsen said:Nauesa
Oh how I wish I could say the nausea wasn't a problem for me! You are so lucky (if any of us can say anything with the word "luck" in it!) as this is by far the worst side-effect I have experienced. I am also on the Emend, Sancuso Patch. The Emend seems to work but they only gave it to me for 3 days, then I switch to the patch, which does not seem to work very well. Do you take the Emend for just 3 days as well?
Congratulations on finishing and you are a true warrior for working through all of that misery! It still seems like such a long road ahead, even though I am half-way through, but it is heartening to hear someone has gone "the distance"!
Joan
Yes, I only took Emend on the two days after the taxol treatments. I also believe they gave me Emend as part of my pre-chemo "cocktail". Then I loaded up on Zofran for the bad weekend. I think cycle 4 was my worse. I actually started taking Hydrocodone on that Friday evening before the pain would wake me up - I had horrible joint and body aches and started getting a nice headache along with all that by cycle 4. It was pretty much worn off so I could go to work that Monday morning. Keep on trudging through it. My CA-125 is down to 7.7 and I get an Avastin treatment this Wednesday.0 -
Hi Elarsen
Thank you for posting your story. I am stage 4 PPC and my CA 125 was 1,080 when I was diagnosed. I was very fit when I was diagnosed and I tolerated taxol/carbo really well only having very slight nausea and fatigue. I was diagnosed Nov 09 and unfortunately with a stage 4 diagnosis it recurred. So I am on the chemo again.
I don't follow a particular diet and eat what I fancy which strangely enough is vegetables, fruit, meat etc. I find any processed food tastes aweful so I stir clear of it. I used to be a runner and a swimmer and am soc frustrated because I don't have the energy at the moment to do it.
I now have a different attitude to this cancer. It is a chronic condition that can be managed with chemo. In between chemo I need to keep well and healthy so my body can continue to tolerate the chemo for when I have to have the next one. My recent scan was good and the cancer seems to be stable - so this is as good as it gets and I have come to appreciate that.
I will look up your blog. Take care Tina xxx0 -
Thanks for your upbeat post
Joan,
This post is great. I know how terrifying this disease is, but I wish there were more positive posts here. Many sources indicate that multiple variables contribute to length of survivability, and attitude is one of them. Our bodies have an uncanny way of proving our minds right, regardless of what we focus on.0 -
Whatever you think, you're right.Tethys41 said:Thanks for your upbeat post
Joan,
This post is great. I know how terrifying this disease is, but I wish there were more positive posts here. Many sources indicate that multiple variables contribute to length of survivability, and attitude is one of them. Our bodies have an uncanny way of proving our minds right, regardless of what we focus on.
Might or might not be true but what if it is?0
Discussion Boards
- All Discussion Boards
- 6 CSN Information
- 6 Welcome to CSN
- 121.8K Cancer specific
- 2.8K Anal Cancer
- 446 Bladder Cancer
- 309 Bone Cancers
- 1.6K Brain Cancer
- 28.5K Breast Cancer
- 397 Childhood Cancers
- 27.9K Colorectal Cancer
- 4.6K Esophageal Cancer
- 1.2K Gynecological Cancers (other than ovarian and uterine)
- 13K Head and Neck Cancer
- 6.4K Kidney Cancer
- 671 Leukemia
- 792 Liver Cancer
- 4.1K Lung Cancer
- 5.1K Lymphoma (Hodgkin and Non-Hodgkin)
- 237 Multiple Myeloma
- 7.1K Ovarian Cancer
- 61 Pancreatic Cancer
- 487 Peritoneal Cancer
- 5.5K Prostate Cancer
- 1.2K Rare and Other Cancers
- 539 Sarcoma
- 730 Skin Cancer
- 653 Stomach Cancer
- 191 Testicular Cancer
- 1.5K Thyroid Cancer
- 5.8K Uterine/Endometrial Cancer
- 6.3K Lifestyle Discussion Boards