- The Myeloma Beacon - https://myelomabeacon.org -
The Final Mile: The Numbers Game
By: Albert Vetere Lannon; Published: June 10, 2020 @ 11:57 pm | Comments Disabled
Despite stress and setbacks, and a lot more expense than we had expected, I am in my new home in Julian, California, a small mountain community famous for its apples and daffodils. My wonderful mate Kaitlin has gone back to Tucson to prepare our house for sale, but our old dog, Gus, is keeping me company as I sit and read in front of the wood-burning stove.
Our manufactured home, turned into an amazing refuge by Kaitlin, is on a hillside, and uphill gets to me pretty quick, but I walk Gus in a grassy area close by where we both get some exercise walking uphill on grasslands where deer and wild turkeys hang out. We call our new home Ruby’s Rest. The COVID-19 pandemic has put sale of our Tucson home on hold; I need to stay alive until it is sold and debts paid. One day at a time.
At six months since I stopped treatment, I’m doing okay, one day at a time. “Okay” means reasonably functional. I still tire easily, with aches and pains that may be the multiple myeloma, or just arthritis and old age; I turned 82 earlier this year. The rib and shoulder pain I had went away, and then returned, the myeloma getting aggressive and hitting my left side ribs now as well as the right. My left leg goes painfully numb from time to time. Nothing broken so far. I still find that my energy level diminishes as the day wears on. It’s technically spring here, but with snow last week, so I’m inside most of the time, just as I was in Arizona.
The treatment-induced neuropathy in my feet isn’t going to go away, and I feel like I’m walking barefoot on gravel, but it’s manageable with the help of a cane. My appetite comes and goes, I’ve lost weight, but my bowels are back to normal. Drinking lots of water keeps my kidneys afloat.
I had my last appointment with my oncologist in mid-January, and I was amazed and grateful for the love and hugs that were delivered from the nurses and support staff. I guess, to them, I stood out from the majority who are too often trapped inside themselves and our disease. If I brought a bit of joy to the hard-working staff and to some of my co-patients in the infusion room, that makes me happy; they sure brought joy to me. I’ve met my new primary doctor, 22 miles (35 km) down the road. I don’t think I’ll look for an oncologist.
There has been some interest among the Beacon’s readers in my numbers. I’m one of the 15 to 20 percent of multiple myeloma patients whose free light chain levels are their primary disease marker. When I was diagnosed in June, 2017, after sneezing and breaking two ribs, my lambda free light chain level was 269 mg/l. A year of lower-dose Revlimid (lenalidomide), Velcade (bortezomib), and dexamethasone (“RVD Lite”) brought my lambda level down to 29 mg/l, with 26.3 mg/l being the high end of the “normal” range for people without kidney issues.
When the cancer figured a way around the treatment, the numbers started creeping up: 59, 85, and 105 mg/l. So I went on Kyprolis (carfilzomib) plus dexamethasone, and from October 2018 to November the numbers dropped to 91, then 86, but in December started back up to 100, then 92, then 191 mg/l. And the therapy was giving me blood pressure spikes that, at one point, made me pass out and convulse.
So in January, 2019, I went to Empliciti (elotuzumab) with Pomalyst (pomalidomide, Imnovid) and dex. The lambda free light chain level dropped to 91, but the next month shot up to 230 mg/l. I got off that and started Darzalex (daratumumab) plus Velcade and dex, which caused a quick drop in the lambda number to 160 mg/l. That treatment was interrupted by a bout of pneumonia, and infusions resumed in May, with a lambda reading of 230, followed in June with a drop to 160 mg/l, with infusions moving from weekly to every two weeks.
But then the lambda level kept going up: 313, 363, 498 mg/l in August, with a stable M-spike of 0.4 g/dL. So I went on what the doctor called a “last-ditch” regimen: cyclophosphamide (Cytoxan), Velcade (bortezomib), and dexamethasone (CyBorD). The lambda level dropped slowly: 411, 401, and 302 mg/l in October. But that regimen was kicking my butt big time, and I decided to stop treatment.
In December, my new high for the lambda level was reached, 727 mg/l, and in January, 2020, another personal record, 1301 mg/l, with a rise in my M-spike to 0.8 g/dL. I have read about at least one myeloma patient who was diagnosed with a lambda free light chain level of 8,000. If that’s any indication, I’ll be around for a while. But in case not, I’ve talked to a hospice group in San Diego that is supportive of California’s End-of-Life Choices Act. Whether I ever decide to avail myself of this choice remains to be seen.
I’m in no hurry to make that final exit, and, one day at a time, I’m doing all right even as the multiple myeloma advances. Good books to read and a library close by (closed now because of the pandemic), stories to write, discovering the shops and neighbors of a little village, basking in the love and support of my hard-working Kaitlin, deer and wild turkeys in the neighborhood, and bacon. There is still joy in my life. I cooked a lasagna dinner for our friends Allan and Arnie who did so much to help Kaitlin create Ruby’s Rest.
───────────────── ♦ ─────────────────
Today’s quotation is attributed to theologian Paul Reinhold Niebuhr (1892-1971), who may have heard earlier variations of it from others. It is called “The Serenity Prayer,” and it is commonly used in alcohol and addiction recovery meetings: “Grant me the serenity to accept the things I cannot change, courage to change the things I can, and wisdom to know the difference.”
Albert Vetere Lannon is a multiple myeloma patient and columnist for The Beacon. Albert’s first column [1] was published last November. Due to unforeseen circumstances affecting the Beacon’s editing of Albert’s columns, there has been a delay in their publication, but with this column we are just about caught up.
If you are interested in writing a regular column to be published by The Myeloma Beacon, please contact the Beacon team at .
Editors’ Note: If you are thinking about commenting on Albert’s column, please recognize that he and his medical team have given a great deal of thought to the treatment decision he has reached. As Albert has told us: “Everyone’s reaction to myeloma and its treatment is different. I have been happy with my oncology team, which truly has listened to me and been willing to negotiate. At this point, I am not really interested in hearing about other possible treatment regimens, clinical trials, or medical groups. There comes a time when one says, simply, ‘It’s done.’” We would appreciate if you would respect Albert’s wishes in any comments you make in regard to his columns.
Article printed from The Myeloma Beacon: https://myelomabeacon.org
URL to article: https://myelomabeacon.org/headline/2020/06/10/the-final-mile-the-numbers-game/
URLs in this post:
[1] first column: https://myelomabeacon.org/headline/2019/11/07/the-final-mile-the-decision
Click here to print.
Copyright © The Beacon Foundation for Health. All rights reserved.