Sean’s Burgundy Thread: Myeloma & Shiny Yellow Volkswagens

Here’s a question you’ve probably never seen: How is multiple myeloma like a yellow Volkswagen Beetle? Read on!
I will never forget the day that I was unceremoniously plunged into the perplexing world of multiple myeloma.
It was an early afternoon in mid November 2008, and I was at home with a backache that I couldn’t seem to get rid of. My phone rang, and in his stoic, matter-of-fact tone, my family doctor said that my severe pains were not the result of a pulled muscle or tweaked nerves (as I’d hoped), but were most likely the product of an aggressive blood cancer, multiple myeloma. Further testing to confirm his suspicions would be needed.
Multiple what? After the initial shock of the call subsided, I logged onto the Internet and began sorting through the volumes of myeloma information that rose to the top of the search engines. With a mixture of fear and curiosity, I visited several sources to help conjure up a clearer picture of my foe.
What I uncovered in those early fact-finding hours was awfully scary and confusing. Language such as ‘incurable blood cancer’, ‘severe pain from bone fractures’, ‘shortened life span’, and more prognostic doom and gloom certainly caught my attention.
I noticed that one of the key descriptors given to multiple myeloma at these sites was that it was deemed a ‘rare’ cancer. Well acquainted with cancers, I certainly believed that it was rare, considering that no one in my immediate circle had ever heard of it, let alone had it.
In its publication, Cancer Facts and Figures 2010, the American Cancer Society (ACS), has determined that a particular type of cancer has to have at least 40,000 reported cases to be considered a ‘common’ type of cancer.
The ACS estimates that in 2010 there were 20,180 new cases of myeloma (11,170 in males / 9,010 in females) in the United States and that roughly 10,650 patients succumbed to the disease during that year.
By way of a comparison between myeloma and various ‘common’ cancers, the ACS estimates that in 2010 there were approximately 102,000 newly diagnosed cases of colon cancer, 217,000 new cases of prostate cancer, 209,000 new cases of breast cancer, and 68,000 new cases of melanoma in the United States. Estimates for various types of leukemia were given at roughly 43,000 newly diagnosed cases.
Aside from the number of cases reported, I didn’t know the pragmatic distinctions between common cancers and rare cancers. I just prayed that there were enough motivated medical institutions, brilliant minds, and progressive companies working on behalf of myeloma patients to make a difference. I feared that with a low patient pool, there wasn’t enough financial incentive for these groups to enter the arena. Thankfully, I have since witnessed significant activity in the myeloma world.
I am not a fanatical student of statistics, but with roughly 21,180 new myeloma diagnoses in a U.S. population of nearly 308 million, my calculator tells me that about one out of every 15,260 or so U.S. citizens were newly diagnosed with myeloma in 2010. Seems like a lot of people to me. Maybe I was the one person out of my closest 21,179 friends that was burdened with multiple myeloma.
When I added myeloma to my resume, a phenomenon I call the ‘Yellow Volkswagen Theory’ began playing out in my life. It goes something like this:
Have you ever made a purchase, a bright yellow Volkswagen Beetle, for example, and after getting it home, you start to see more and more yellow Volkswagens on the roadways and in the parking lots? They weren’t necessarily there before, or if they were, you just didn’t notice them. Pretty soon you’re waving at them, having big rallies, and arranging future marriages for your children with other Beetle owners’ children. Suddenly yellow Volkswagens are everywhere!
Interestingly enough, this life principle also works with myeloma.
The day before I was to travel down to Little Rock, Arkansas, to be evaluated at the Myeloma Institute for Research and Therapy (MIRT), I received another important phone call. A fellow who was a talented musician in a show I’d produced many years before, and with whom I had lost touch, called me from Virginia to wish me well in my myeloma journey. He had begun treatment at MIRT nearly two years earlier. At 49, I was young-ish at diagnosis, but my friend was several years my junior. And he was doing well!
His wise, warm, but frankly informative counsel steeled me for what I was to face in the ensuing treatments. I will always be grateful for his reaching out to me.
Okay. Though myeloma is rare, I actually knew someone with it. While I appreciated the personal connection, I was saddened that my friend had to go through this difficult trial. In this case, misery did not love company.
My little southwestern Missouri town has a population of 1,600 residents. Given the ACS stats cited above, I could easily assume that maybe I was the only ‘recently diagnosed’ myeloma patient living in my vicinity.
Imagine my surprise when I learned that a gentleman who I did not personally know lives just 200 yards from me and has also been battling myeloma for a few years. And then another friend who had appeared in some of my Branson, Missouri, live shows shared that his dad (a local resident) was diagnosed with myeloma and is being treated at MIRT.
While I was going through infusions and stem cell transplants in Little Rock, my wife, our local elementary school’s music teacher, met a student’s mother who was a couple of years ahead of me in the Total Therapy treatment protocol at MIRT. Shortly after that, the art teacher’s husband, in his 70s, was diagnosed with myeloma. Tragically, the art teacher’s father had succumbed to myeloma many years earlier.
After I returned to my Missouri home to continue a three-year maintenance chemotherapy plan, I joined a popular myeloma listserv and came across a wonderful guy I’d worked with a dozen years earlier before he moved from our small Ozarks town out to the west coast. He has been battling myeloma for several years and has some harrowing survivor tales. His spirit is amazing.
It doesn’t end there. A lady from my church called me one day and asked if I’d get in touch with one of her neighbors who, you guessed it, was just diagnosed with multiple myeloma. I met with him and his wife both here and in Arkansas. They’ve recently returned home from Little Rock to begin maintenance treatments.
And just this first week in July, a gentleman from my church, in his 70s, is beginning his treatment at MIRT. And there is another lady from a small town a few miles to the west heading to Arkansas for treatment.
So is myeloma rare? Couldn’t prove it by me.
My mathematically-inclined buddies state that when you get down to it, our local myeloma numbers aren’t entirely unreasonable. An older population, people from all over the country relocating here for retirement, and other factors contribute to a higher propensity for myeloma diagnosis. My half-serious conspiracy theory buddies say that there must be a cluster here.
These are just some of the nearby connections to myeloma that I have discovered in the last couple of years. It seems like myeloma patients are constantly popping up like shiny, new yellow Volkswagen Beetles. Perhaps awareness about myeloma is increasing and diagnostic techniques are getting better. I don’t know.
But given my druthers, I’d take the shiny Volkswagen over myeloma any day. Absent that option, I will continue to energetically support and pray for the hundreds of myeloma patients and caregivers whom I’ve met in one form or fashion out there in Myelomaville.
Stay strong, stay hopeful, and stay connected!
If you are interested in writing a regular column to be published on The Myeloma Beacon, please contact the Beacon team at .
Another great article and one that rings true for me as well. I always say it is still "considered" a rare disease and in fact is still classed as an 'orphan disease' at NIH. Orphan diseases are not known for heavy medical research or breakthroughs in treatment, so I've always been grateful that we have so much research and activity in this area for our "rare" disease! The biggest difference I think for you, and your physical location is how many of those you have met that also went to MIRT! Now that, is pretty amazing and cool. Not so true for us here in California, though there are some who made the trek.
Great essay. I agree as to the shiny yellow Volkswagen theory of myeloma--amazing how many people I come across with myeloma!
I have yet to meet anyone with myeloma, despite living in an overpopulated area of South Florida, though I read of those with MM in the newspaper obits or those "famous" people, like Matt Damon's father at 68, an avid sailor and marathon runner. I still feel like a rarity.
I remain extremely grateful for all the new drugs & research for MM.
Slug bug! I am sure you played this game growing up. Great article Sean. I have been following you for awhile now. I am actually surprised we have not met before. I am a 35 year old male from NW Arkansas diagnosed Dec. 8th, 2008. I am sure we were going through treatment at MIRT at the same time. Anyway great articles and stories.
Aaron
I total agree. Even though we are told myeloma is a "rare" disease it seems every where I turn I run into some with a connection to myeloma. It seems everyone has a friend, relative, business associate etc. who has been affected. I run a kayak race as fund raiser for myeloma research and am amazed at the people the show up because of their connection to the disease. The internet and social networking makes it even more visible and easier to connect.
In 1970, I bought the first ever Orange VW (the color was actually called "Clementine"). And, like you said, pretty soon I saw lots of them. Then in 1977, I bought a Yellow VW Convertible, and yes, soon I saw many of them. Then in 2005, I traded my Cadillac Eldorado for a Red Honda Element (they told me I was the only person they ever knew who traded their Caddy for an Element). Then in 2008, I learned I have multiple myeloma. Now, I know many others with it, thanks to the many bloggers and, of course, the Myeloma Beacon. Well, I ran up over 100,000 miles on both my VW's - with no problems. Same for my Element. And same, so far, for my myeloma. I've taken all the standard meds (Rev, Dex, Velcade), I had my stem cell transplant in July 2010, and I've now lived about 1000 days, one day at a time, with MM, thanks to the good "maintenance" and "service" of my Caregiver, Nurses and Doctors. So Thanks, Sean. Let's all work and play together, live one day at a time, and hopefully, soon, we can all say we all have one thing in common - we all got cured.
Walter
hi Sean...that's a really good analogy to the yellow VW. I know a fellow in an environmental volunteer group we both belong to who was diagnosed with MM and went thru the SCT and lots of chemo treatments. At the time I had never heard of this cancer. Then about two years later, I had the same diagnosis and had to go through the same treatments myself. It helped to have a friend to talk to who had been through these same experiences. Later, another friend from a musical group I played in was also diagnosed...so is it all that rare? By the statistics, I should have thousands of friends to have two of them with the same disease...I know lots of people, but not that many!! Since then of course have met many more people with the same problems of MM, since have joined the support group in my city (Calgary). We all try to help each other out through these trying times!!
Dear Sean:
I liked your article. I am a few years younger than you. I started MM in 2008 at MIRT. I'd go no other place.
The ubiquitous quotation that MM has no cure seems strange. Which cancers do have cures?
The longer that we live, the longer that we will live. That statement sounds obvious or even stupid but is true.
Fight the good fight!
Hi Suzanne,
I live in Cooper City. Is that close to your over populated part of South Florida. I too have MM and I am currently receiving treatment at the Memorial West Hospital in Pembroke Pines.
Hi Michelle -- I am in Coral Springs. I know Dr. Feinstein from a couple of years ago when we consulted. I almost did the outpatient transplant there at Memorial except insurance wouldn't cover it, so I ended up at Shands in G'ville, and I am very pleased that I did because it now seems a huge patient responsibility to come & go to the hospital.
The care at Shands was exceptional & I always felt safe. Hope you are feeling just fine, as I am. Suzanne
Per the population of our town there should be about six and two thirds people with myeloma - I go to yoga with two, met one at the hospital, know of another four through friends and one through the local press. Now I don't think we're that close knit (hehe) a community that I know of everyone.
Mind you it's not that big a world - our neighbours have just bought their son a 1971 Clementine coloured VW just like Walters! ;D
Thanks for your comments! Rare or not, I have have witnessed an amazingly powerful community spirit from the many MM patients and caregivers whom I have met along the way. I look forward to the day when I see many more shiny yellow Bugs than cases of MM. Be well!
Progress toward fundraising goal
for all of 2020:
15%
For more information, see the Beacon's
"2020 Fundraising: Goals And Updates" page