I've had the first cycle of my doses for this trial which was 4 visits to the hospital. One took hours and the others about 1 hour each. The shorter infusion seems to be giving me joint pain and maybe some weakness. Like having arthritis... I'm still doing my walks and doing some work but getting up and down is a bit shaky. I might be good enough for a marginal game of volleyball but we'll see.
As time goes on the IL-2 treatments in April-May will have those side-effects go away so maybe this current problem will fade some. On the other hand, cumulative effects could get worse. Cross your fingers!
The next cycle starts Aug. 2 with a long day: give blood/urine, wait for results, talk to the doctor and get a 2 hour infusion. Then back to the 3 visits over 21 days that are short visits.
Wednesday, July 21, 2010
Friday, July 9, 2010
Steroids!
I emailed the doctor as to what in the new treatment would alleviate my remaining IL-2 side-effects and he said that one of the pre-drug drugs that is given to minimize the Avastin side-effects has steroids.
Thursday, July 8, 2010
First new treatment
The clinical trial that I am now trying will go till I have a bad scan (checked quarterly). It's Avastin and another drug (technical names Bortezimib and Bevacizumab). One hits tumor cell division and one hits tumor formation (onto existing blood vessels). I have to go in 4 times every 21 days and get an infusion (IV). One visit will last about 4 hours for a blood draw, doctor visit and 90 min infusion and the other three are straight to the infusion for 30 min.
First treatment was yesterday and I feel almost normal waking up today. I feel about like Pre-IL2 like I felt in late-Jan almost recuperated from the surgery. Very interesting! Hand numbness is reduced (which can get worse from this trial!), grip is easier to do and my weakness feels reduced. Odd but I'll take it!
Here's a link to the trial web page: click here.
Since today is the day that I might have started to have new side-effects from the new treatment, it is very encouraging that, instead, I feel more normal than before!
First treatment was yesterday and I feel almost normal waking up today. I feel about like Pre-IL2 like I felt in late-Jan almost recuperated from the surgery. Very interesting! Hand numbness is reduced (which can get worse from this trial!), grip is easier to do and my weakness feels reduced. Odd but I'll take it!
Here's a link to the trial web page: click here.
Since today is the day that I might have started to have new side-effects from the new treatment, it is very encouraging that, instead, I feel more normal than before!
Thursday, July 1, 2010
Scans after IL-2 treatment
I talked to Dr. Quinn on June 30 and the results on my lung scans was mixed. Some shrinkage and some growth. The ones that grew had not been affected by the first rounds in Feb. or the treatment in April-May and so the doctor doesn't think they will be helped and to go over options. Surgery will not work well because there are 7 small tumors and would require taking too much of my lungs out. We could wait and observe (for more IL-2 affects) but that could be dangerous. We could take one of the pills available. Some attack the cell division and some attack the formation of veins that tumors use to grow. They have a trial going that involves two medications. One attacks cell division and one attacks the tumor connecting to the veins.
The trial involves one medication by injection and one by IV infusion so there would be visits to the hospital. It's only open for a set time period so it won't be available some time in the future. There are many possible side effects but most people have fewer than people taking other chemo therapies. If they don't find improvement in the first scan in 3 months than I'd go off the trial and on to one of the kidney cancer pill treatments. We think the trial improves my odds a bit so we're going to go with it. Depending which part of the trial they put me in, I will have to visit the hosptial 2 or 4 times a month.
I get brain and bone scanned July 2 to make sure I don't have anything going there that would preclude me from doing the trial. I take the first infusion/injection on July 7.
I'm still recuperating from the IL-2. My hands still have some carpo tunnel issues (numbness and inability to make a fist or hard grip) which may not go away and if that gets worse I'll get it treated. Strength is getting better but that is a slow process. Maybe I can do more than walking, like volleyball/racquetball, in 4-8 weeks. Assuming the new treatment doesn't weaken me which it might.
One day at a time! I feel pretty normal so doing my daily routine is easy.
The trial involves one medication by injection and one by IV infusion so there would be visits to the hospital. It's only open for a set time period so it won't be available some time in the future. There are many possible side effects but most people have fewer than people taking other chemo therapies. If they don't find improvement in the first scan in 3 months than I'd go off the trial and on to one of the kidney cancer pill treatments. We think the trial improves my odds a bit so we're going to go with it. Depending which part of the trial they put me in, I will have to visit the hosptial 2 or 4 times a month.
I get brain and bone scanned July 2 to make sure I don't have anything going there that would preclude me from doing the trial. I take the first infusion/injection on July 7.
I'm still recuperating from the IL-2. My hands still have some carpo tunnel issues (numbness and inability to make a fist or hard grip) which may not go away and if that gets worse I'll get it treated. Strength is getting better but that is a slow process. Maybe I can do more than walking, like volleyball/racquetball, in 4-8 weeks. Assuming the new treatment doesn't weaken me which it might.
One day at a time! I feel pretty normal so doing my daily routine is easy.
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