
Over the last 10 weeks, I have spent four or five weeks in the hematology/oncology ward of Mt. Sinai hospital here in Manhattan.
I had reached a crisis point in my four-year battle with multiple myeloma.
The original hospitalization was for the installation of a port and administration of a treatment consisting of dexamethasone (Decadron), cyclophosphamide (Cytoxan), etoposide (VP-16), and cisplatin, commonly abbreviated as DCEP, in a last ditch effort to get my myeloma under control.
If the …
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Much to my surprise, I’m finishing up this Manhattan Tale from a uniquely Manhattan Tale vantage point.
I’m sitting in the 11th floor of Mt. Sinai Hospital in the day room, with an IV in each arm, looking east over East Harlem. A week ago, I swam a mile without difficulty in a pool beneath Rockefeller Center. Two weeks ago, my wife and I celebrated our 40th wedding anniversary with family and friends at a lower Manhattan restaurant.
Life is …
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This “Manhattan Tale” is the first that I have written outside of Manhattan.
My wife and I are spending a few days in Washington, D.C., celebrating my brother-in-law’s 70th birthday. He and his wife live in Florida, and they have come up to DC for a chilly week to tour the sites of Washington, my hometown.
Just as the 20-degree cold we had a few nights ago gave a jolt to my brother-in-law and his wife, who are used to …
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The winter solstice occurred this past Saturday. The temperature rose to the high 60’s (close to 20 Celsius) in Manhattan. The warm weather melted the ice in Central Park’s ponds and the layer of snow that had blanketed the grass and the paths the previous weekend.
I was sorry to see the snow and ice disappear. After the snow had first fallen, there were still mallards, geese, and brants swimming on the 106 acre Jacqueline Onassis Reservoir in Central Park. …
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I am writing this column on Friday, November 22, as I try to distract myself from a bunch of medical procedures scheduled for the Tuesday before Thanksgiving: a bone marrow biopsy (ouch!), a skeletal scan, and a host of tests in preparation for enrollment in a clinical trial.
This clinical trial (my second) has prompted me to learn yet another new biological term – “kinesin spindle protein” (KSP). KSP, I have learned, is involved in the division of cells, and …
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It’s been nearly four years since I was diagnosed with multiple myeloma, and I am only now experiencing my first significant period without chemotherapy.
Six weeks ago I came down with a bout of pneumonia, and my medical team decided that I should take a break from two medicines that I had been taking and that interfered with my white and red blood cell production: Pomalyst (pomalidomide, Imnovid) and cyclophosphamide (Cytoxan).
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Last March, after an unsuccessful three-month period on a clinical trial of a monoclonal antibody, I began a new regimen of Pomalyst (pomalidomide, Imnovid) and the steroid dexamethasone (Decadron).
After a bumpy beginning with some dexamethasone-related side effects, things went very well. My wife and I referred to it as a “honeymoon” interval – we knew it would end, but it was fantastic while it lasted.
I had a great summer. I swam several times a week, and …
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