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Cancer

[CANCER] Talking to the Oncologist about Treatment Plans on #WorldCancerDay #BusyLivingWithMets

So, today has been a funny day… it’s #WorldCancerDay, so social media is full of extra content encouraging us all to be vigilant in looking for symptoms of any kind of cancer, and to keep focusing on funding to be able to provide more treatments. My (new) cancer if I’d had it 10-12 years ago would have been ‘I’m sorry, there’s not much we can do longterm’, whereas now there are a range of very good treatment options… so I carry on seeking to live with metastatic cancer.

Swimathon

My team at Manchester Met Uni are taking part in a Swimathon for Cancer Research UK and Marie Curie Care. As I was going to an appointment with oncologist today, to discuss chemotherapy, I decided it was an appropriate day to stretch myself and do my share of the Swimathon early (as if I have chemotherapy I won’t be allowed to swim – infection risk). I’ve been getting up to 40 lengths reasonably frequently, so 60 lengths (1.5k) was my stretch target today … and I made it:


Oncologist

This afternoon it was back into the waiting room at Stepping Hill – thanks Suzanne for your company – and we’d settled in for a long wait, when we got called in only 30 minutes late!

 

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It’s #waitingroomfeet again today #worldcancerday – time to talk to the oncologist about chemotherapy etc …

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The appointment was relatively fast, because apparently I am ‘an unusual case’, with HER2 not in my original tumour (despite the extra DISH test), and now showing in the new tumour (which is definitely a metastatic tumour) – so there are lots of conversations and no 100% obvious route for treatment. They are now looking for more information from my original tumour, and my spinal biopsy cells – with them being subjected to the FISH test at the Christie.

So, today, there’s no changes in the systemic treatment – I will continue with the Zoladex and Exemastane, and tomorrow I will sign up for the CORE trial, and then find out if I’ve been put in the 50% for stereotactic radiotherapy (with a wait), or 50% with standard radiotherapy (which means we get going). Essentially they want to get rid of as much of the tumour on my spine as possible (they’re not expecting to eradicate it, but to control it), and that treatment is in process of happening, before anything else happens.

Once that has completed, we start looking at more systemic treatment, such as chemotherapy – which they’re still keen not to give me as I’m looking pretty well, so there may be an option to just give me Herceptin. There will be a lot of discussion, and I am expected to be an active participant in this – now I’ve been told about the gold standard drugs that come with chemotherapy, obviously I want them, even if I don’t want the chemotherapy – but happy that lots of things are being discussed – and they’ve clearly got my health as a whole in mind – and want to do best for overall treatment and wellbeing.

There is no change in prognosis, but as the hormonal treatments have already shrunk the tumour, that take the pressure off other treatment… so I see the oncologist again in 3 weeks. I was hoping that by end of this week I’d know what my plan was – instead – sit with the uncertainty and lack of control a little longer, knowing at the heart of this is a desire to not over-treat!

Photo by Martha Dominguez de Gouveia on Unsplash

Categories
Event

[CHARITY/CANCER] Partaking in the #Swimathon with @mmu_business staff

As I’ve written on the page, which is for all of our friends to sponsor us:

Cancer has truly got in the way of my life since August 2017, when I was diagnosed with aggressive breast cancer. After going through surgery, chemotherapy, radiotherapy, and hormone therapy (documented on https://drbexl.co.uk/category/cancer/), I hoped that the ‘cancer treadmill’ was flattening out.

My colleagues and I, lecturers in digital marketing at Manchester Metropolitan University, therefore signed up to participate in this Swimathon. 8 of us, of differing swimming abilities, will be  swimming independently and then combining our swim distances together, to ensure that we’ve swum at least 10km between us.  This page offers space to donate on behalf of any of the team-members listed above.

Unfortunately, my cancer has metastasised into my spine (thankfully small), so I’m about to enter more treatment. I may have to do my swimming early, or my colleagues may have to cover my distance… an example of the flexibility and backing up that my team have given me throughout this process.

Join us for Swimathon 2019 – the World’s largest annual fundraising swim.

Support us here.