Wednesday, December 14, 2011

Big Appointment Day


Today, Steve had appointments at Cedars-Sinai hospital and UCLA oncology departments. Terry, Chrissy  and Greg kept him company. At lunch time Lesley telephoned to tell me Chrissy sent her a text saying it went really well at Cedar-Sinai. The UCLA appointment was later that afternoon. 

When I got home, I called Greg and asked him about the appointments. In between cell phones breaking up, this is what I got:

They met with someone at Cedars-Sinai who seemed very knowledgeable. He reiterated that Steve's tumor should be removed and that it was in a pretty good location so surgery would not likely cause any permanent damage to vital areas. They tested Steve's vision, memory and language and found no impairments (YAY, I'm so happy.... I haven't seen Steve lately and I was worried). Cedars-Sinai also runs a vaccine program similar to UCLA's. They recommend the whole gamut of treatment we have been reading about. Surgery, radiation and chemotherapy.

Greg was not too thrilled with the UCLA appointment because they were expecting to meet with the head of the department, someone named Dr. Cloughesy, but instead they met with a "gal" (Greg's word) from the oncology department who didn't know about the surgery options or clinical trials in other departments. She also tested Steve for deficits and Steve did well. She said her department was running a clinical trial with a drug called Belcade which has had some success. Apparently, it inhibits protein synthesis, thus slowing tumor growth and it also seems to make the tumor more sensitive to radiation. They have someone who had been given the Belcade who has been alive over ten years now.  Ten years is a lot longer than the standard 12-14 months.

Did I write about the vaccine trials in a previous blog? I don't remember. We had heard about this vaccine program which is a clinical trial at UCLA. They take the tumor out and take it off to the lab. They try to make a vaccine based on your own tumor which would then be injected to trigger your own immune system to fight your tumor. Pretty ingenious, don't you think? They heard today that only 50-60% of tumors have the genetic capability of being made into vaccines, so some people can't participate. You don't know until you try, though, right? The folks at Cedars-Sinai, City of Hope and UCLA are all moving forward or recommending the vaccine trial as a possibility. The only negative comment we heard came from Dr. Greene at Kaiser yesterday who said he didn't think the trials were going well and he seemed to be anti-vaccine program.

More good news.... I asked Greg how Steve was doing and Greg said word-finding problems were not noticeable and Steve's headaches were better. He only occasionally needed to take Tylenol for them now.  Woohoo! And since Steve seemed to be stable (likely from the dexamethasone steroid medication) they didn't have to rush into surgery. I take that to mean it's possible to wait until the New Year for surgery when the new insurance starts up (good-bye Kaiser!).

We are all looking forward to Dr. Pikul's appointment tomorrow at Kaiser. Steve had a MRI taken last night in anticipation of the appointment. We want to hear about any changes in size of the tumor and areas of swelling and what Kaiser plans to do to help Steve.

Not too bad a day, I think. We've had worse :)

3 comments:

  1. I checked my e-mails after I posted the above and I found this from Chrissy:

    Appointment 1. Good. Surgery option. Vaccine....similar to ucla. Very nice doctor and informative.

    Need funtional mri to confirm surgery is an option. By the looks of the mri and ct looks like it.

    ReplyDelete
  2. So glad to hear Steve is doing okay symptoms-wise! Very excited to hear about the man who lived so long on that trial drug, I so hope we can get the same results! :)

    ReplyDelete
  3. Yes, indeedie! I'm hoping for results of more than 10 years, too!

    ReplyDelete

If you have trouble leaving a comment, you should be able to use the "Name/URL" setting. Just write in your name and you can leave the URL address blank. Thanks for commenting. I like knowing that I'm not writing into the air.