I meant to update things a bit earlier.
After the news regarding the cancer, it turns out that I am qualified to go into a study for a new immunotherapy drug that is in a early stage trial. It seems to be a drug that shows promise in at least stopping the further growth of the cancer, though sometimes it may reduce the tumors.
If I can hold serve at this point, that works for me. I ran a 5k race and did over 2,300 yards in the pool today. Being able to do that is totally acceptable.
Unfortunately this will throw off my schedule a bit. I have a triathlon next week (end of April), but will be coming back to a biopsy and then my first treatment. Since I will have approximately zero days of training available between the triathlon next week and then the triathlon a month later, I may have to skip the May triathlon. And a June one.
If I feel healthy (i.e. no potential nasty side effects come to the fore) and the doctors give me the okay, I may do the triathlon at the end of May regardless of being able to train. I may not be the fastest (not that I am now anyway) but probably could finish it.
There will be more clarity over the next few days as I get a sense of where the biopsy will be done in my body, so many places to choose from , and normal recovery time. I really have gotten used to training then doing a race. Really difficult to get too bogged down thinking about cancer while trying to complete a workout. Or race.
Oh yeah. One more thing. Knocked off a 5k race today and got another Sprint Triathlon next week. I know I mentioned that. But that is the takeaway. The important one.
@iTri4aCure
Cancer came back for the third time in 3 years the end of 2017. Inoperable. Signed up for my 1st Triathlon that day and started training. Ironman 70.3 Finisher Fall 2018. Just missed another 70.3 finish in Fall 2019, after another 22 rounds of chemo and 3 radiation treatments since the Fall 2018 finish. Chemo stopped working December 2019. Looking to race in 2021
Sunday, April 22, 2018
Friday, April 6, 2018
Updates And Scans
It has been a few week since I finished the Las Olas triathlon. There was a brief break in training and I am starting to get back into it, though has been derailed slightly by a head cold and starting to do some checking off of items on the bucket list.
I had a scan right after my return from Florida. But being optimistic, I signed up for the Las Olas triathlon in March 2019, only this time increasing the distance to Olympic distance. The next day I saw the report. I was not meeting with the oncologist until a few days later, but I could see the news was not good. There were more lymph nodes that were cancerous, though the older ones seemed to be progressing slowly. But a couple of spots had doubled in size in the three months since my last scan. Granted they were still small, under 1 cM, though one was pushing 1 cM, but it was still concerning. It seemed my efforts were not working out. Though I knew the odds were against me, I still had hope that there would be no spread.
When I met with the oncologist the report was worse than I thought. The lymph nodes were problematic of course, but the slow rate of growth was a good thing. The lungs were a problem. The report indicated “bilateral spread” but I did not realize the extent until my oncologist started pointing them out. I gave up counting at around a dozen. It was not good.
She asked me how I was feeling, and I said “I just swam 500 meters, biked 11 miles and did a 5k in a triathlon, feeling pretty good.” It was then she said the words I did not want to hear - “one of the hardest things to do is to discuss with an asymptomatic patient that it is time to start chemo.” No. I did not want that. Not now. I then threw out my training, a brick of a 20 mile bike ride, followed by a 30 minute run. And more, including that I had three more sprint triathlons scheduled in the next 3 months.
We went through the pros and cons of what was happening. I am in good health, other than the cancer 😕, and relatively young. If I had health issues or was older, I probably would be back on chemo as I type this. There is a point where the symptoms progress to the point that the physical toll of the chemo will be too much. A balancing of how long the cancer can spread and affect the body before the body is too weak. Sometimes the cancer may plateau for awhile, but at the current rate I am looking at maybe 6 months time before I am back on chemo. No doubt before the end of this year. And it is not a pretty chemo. They inject you with atropine to counteract the side affects of the chemo. The same atropine that is carried in kits that soldiers and EMS personnel have in case of a chemical attack. Awesome. I knew it would not be fun, having gone through it before with different drugs, but the side effects this time really stink.
My oconlogist is wonderful. As long as I promised to let her know immediately if anything changes, she will continue to monitor me. My next scan is after my sprint triathlon in June. As much as I am not a fan of the running portion of the triathlon, I am looking at throwing in a 5K race in the mix. It is about a week before my next triathlon, but I am sure my coach can make that part of my schedule.
I figure the stronger I can keep my body, including my lungs, at this point I can buy myself more time. And as much of a non-fan of running that I am, being able to run a 5K whenever I can now sounds awesome. Incredibly, wonderfully awesome. All the training that I can do, even on the days I am not having a good workout, also awesome. There is going to be a time where I may lose the chance to run, bike, swim. Or participate in a 5k. The thought of turning into a lump on the couch, sleeping or running to the bathroom, every other week really makes you appreciate other things a lot more.
It is coupled with a certain sadness as you see the headlights of the tractor trailer coming straight out you. The key is to ignore the damn truck. Ain’t nothing you can do about that part. You, however, can say screw it and go on. Hey, I am still processing the recent news and know what it means. There is a certain positive about having a bit of a break off with reality when dealing with this.
All I know I will keep on enjoying running as long as I can.
@iTri4aCure
I had a scan right after my return from Florida. But being optimistic, I signed up for the Las Olas triathlon in March 2019, only this time increasing the distance to Olympic distance. The next day I saw the report. I was not meeting with the oncologist until a few days later, but I could see the news was not good. There were more lymph nodes that were cancerous, though the older ones seemed to be progressing slowly. But a couple of spots had doubled in size in the three months since my last scan. Granted they were still small, under 1 cM, though one was pushing 1 cM, but it was still concerning. It seemed my efforts were not working out. Though I knew the odds were against me, I still had hope that there would be no spread.
When I met with the oncologist the report was worse than I thought. The lymph nodes were problematic of course, but the slow rate of growth was a good thing. The lungs were a problem. The report indicated “bilateral spread” but I did not realize the extent until my oncologist started pointing them out. I gave up counting at around a dozen. It was not good.
She asked me how I was feeling, and I said “I just swam 500 meters, biked 11 miles and did a 5k in a triathlon, feeling pretty good.” It was then she said the words I did not want to hear - “one of the hardest things to do is to discuss with an asymptomatic patient that it is time to start chemo.” No. I did not want that. Not now. I then threw out my training, a brick of a 20 mile bike ride, followed by a 30 minute run. And more, including that I had three more sprint triathlons scheduled in the next 3 months.
We went through the pros and cons of what was happening. I am in good health, other than the cancer 😕, and relatively young. If I had health issues or was older, I probably would be back on chemo as I type this. There is a point where the symptoms progress to the point that the physical toll of the chemo will be too much. A balancing of how long the cancer can spread and affect the body before the body is too weak. Sometimes the cancer may plateau for awhile, but at the current rate I am looking at maybe 6 months time before I am back on chemo. No doubt before the end of this year. And it is not a pretty chemo. They inject you with atropine to counteract the side affects of the chemo. The same atropine that is carried in kits that soldiers and EMS personnel have in case of a chemical attack. Awesome. I knew it would not be fun, having gone through it before with different drugs, but the side effects this time really stink.
My oconlogist is wonderful. As long as I promised to let her know immediately if anything changes, she will continue to monitor me. My next scan is after my sprint triathlon in June. As much as I am not a fan of the running portion of the triathlon, I am looking at throwing in a 5K race in the mix. It is about a week before my next triathlon, but I am sure my coach can make that part of my schedule.
I figure the stronger I can keep my body, including my lungs, at this point I can buy myself more time. And as much of a non-fan of running that I am, being able to run a 5K whenever I can now sounds awesome. Incredibly, wonderfully awesome. All the training that I can do, even on the days I am not having a good workout, also awesome. There is going to be a time where I may lose the chance to run, bike, swim. Or participate in a 5k. The thought of turning into a lump on the couch, sleeping or running to the bathroom, every other week really makes you appreciate other things a lot more.
It is coupled with a certain sadness as you see the headlights of the tractor trailer coming straight out you. The key is to ignore the damn truck. Ain’t nothing you can do about that part. You, however, can say screw it and go on. Hey, I am still processing the recent news and know what it means. There is a certain positive about having a bit of a break off with reality when dealing with this.
All I know I will keep on enjoying running as long as I can.
@iTri4aCure
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)
Dead Inside ..I’m Not Dead Yet….
I have been dealing with cancer for 10 years. I am perfectly aware of my condition. In fact I have been putting together things for the...
-
Spoke with my new Oncologist. Really good things. First are the standard treatments available. I ran through FOLFOX, FOLFORI and Lonsurf...
-
I think I have been coughing more since I stopped chemo. But I have allergies and tend to get upper respiratory infections now and again....
-
I was feeling tired today. One of those tireds where I just wanted to sleep. If I woke up, throw on the TV, then fall back asleep. ...