
For Mr. K, who never misses a beat.
March 2024: Hope?
Soon after the end of chemotherapy I was invited to a support group meeting for people with amyloidosis. It was held at the hospital where I was being treated. I was really looking forward to this. I would meet others with this disease, find out what is positive in their lives, maybe get some hope and inspiration even, maybe?
The agenda indicated that there would be a session with medical experts, then one with regular people. That’s the one I really wanted to see. As far as I could tell, although there was a way to keep the disease under control, there was still a lot of bad news associated with it. But talking with people in my position? I thought that would help.
As I expected he medical panel opened with lots of bad news about all the yucky stuff that happens when you have amyloidosis. And it got worse. I learned even more terrible information about it. Like you can get it in your gastro-intestinal tract. And your liver. And your nerves. I had been blissfully oblivious to this. There were lots of questions from audience members about all the awful things they were going through. One person asked about palliative care. Isn’t that what you get when you are ready to die?* I had brought a book with me to take notes. I left it blank except for writing “Never coming back here.”
And we never had the session with our amyloidosis peers. The day was mostly a disappointment.
But there were a few glimmers of hope. Dr. Oncologist was on the panel. When asked about recovery from the disease she said something like “Sometimes people just get better on their own.” Sometimes people just get better on their own? Okay, well guess what, RunningBarb intends to be one of those some people. If it happens to some people there is no reason why it can’t happen to me too. I am going to do everything I can to make it so.
Also, there were two presentations from drug company representatives describing drugs under development to address amyloidosis. While the Dara-CyBorD combo is good at stopping progression of the disease, there is no medically known way to remove the proteins that are stuck on the organs, called fibrils. When I previously asked Dr. Oncologist why they couldn’t be vacuumed out, maybe using the same technology that allows you to cut off pieces of the heart (only half kidding here), she explained that the fibrils get embedded into the fibers of the organs, sort of like fruit in a Jello mold. As if we needed another reason to hate Jello. Or, I asked, maybe the body could just dispose of them, like it does some early cancer cells. But that doesn’t seem to work either.
These drugs being studied, birtamimab and anselamimab, were being designed to tell your immune system to gobble up these no-goodnik fibrils. So your immune system can fight the fibrils, maybe, they just need a little help. Still not a slam-dunk remedy, but encouraging all the same. The results of the trials were promising, but there was a long way to go. The studies were still underway. If the results were good, the drug would have to go through the Food and Drug Administration approval process. If either or both were approved it would be a while before they could come to market. Once they came to market they might not be appropriate for my specific situation. I really, really, really wanted to be in the clinical trial, but I was not eligible. I would have to wait it out.
The third glimmer came from someone Mr. K struck up a conversation with while I was in the bathroom. This guy had finished with his chemotherapy and was now becoming a normal person again, although maybe not yet the normal person he was before all this amyloidosis mess started. He said that he used work out a few times a week, doing high intensity interval training (HIIT) and being pretty athletic. These days he wasn’t up to the HIIT, but he was back at the gym lifting light weights. He said that going off chemotherapy was a “game changer.” He also said that he was in the birtamimab trial, he believed he received the drug (not a placebo), and it made him feel better, more energetic. This was encouraging.
And there might have been a fourth, although I didn’t notice it at the time. In the question and answer session with the doctors, someone mentioned that when he swims, he gets purple spots on his legs. (People with amyloidosis frequently experience bleeding under the skin, usually around the eyes.) I missed the answer about the leg spots, but all I could think was, You can swim? I would be so happy to be able to swim again. Long or short distance, I don’t care. To be able to put my body in the water and feel it flow over me while I move would be the most delicious thing in the world. In my state I couldn’t fathom how he had the energy to swim. But the fact that he could stuck with me.
So now I was off weekly chemotherapy – two months early! – and had only 20 months of immunotherapy left. Let’s see what happens.
* I have since learned that palliative care also refers to care for people with severe illness.
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