Blog, labs

It’s Been Awhile

Looks like I haven’t written anything for awhile. For no particular reason; I guess I just haven’t felt inspired. Hmm…. I wonder what has happened recently in my myeloma world.

I had a bone marrow biopsy (maybe in January?) to check my MRD status. I went up to 27 myeloma cells in a million. That was from about 1 in a million. So that was a bummer to see. MRD is pretty cutting edge. Nothing showed up on my blood tests, although the following round of blood tests showed my m-band moved to “detectable but not quantifiable”. BLAH, it would have been nice to hit MRD zero and stay there.

My oncologist didn’t want to make any changes based on MRD as most oncologist would follow. The myeloma specialist then spoke to the oncologist and then had a meeting with me to talk things over. He said that the numbers were not trending in the right direction, and what was the point of waiting until things significantly elevated. The specialist said he went through the list of drugs and wanted to add in a drug that “wasn’t going to do me harm”. He recommended adding back in Dara to punch the numbers back down.

I was on Dara prior to transplant, but Stanford stopped it because it was not working fast enough. Since it didn’t seem to give me any problems, I agreed to go back on it. If he was recommending something like cytoxan, I would have said no.

Well, as it turns out, side effects can change post transplant. I had my first dose of Dara with carfilzomib and it was rough. I turned into a 90-year old, with super fatigue. My skin on my torso also went hypersensitive and wearing a shirt was unpleasant. Too bad we were still in winter ❄️. That lasted for about a week. I had another round two weeks after the first, and the same thing happened again. The oncologist was baffled. We ran some blood tests, but nothing showed up. I’ve noticed that if something is out of the ordinary and not listed on a clinical trial, the oncologist is left bumbling his bottom lip and saying, “Good luck with that”.

Fortunately for me, by the third dose, my body was getting used to the drug and the symptoms significantly lessened. I didn’t have any of those symptoms by the fourth dose. So I’m back to being left with the few days of being miserable from the carfilzomib side effects. Maybe the cancer gods will show me some favor and things will get good enough to eventually drop the carfilzomib and just stay on the Dara.

But then again, at this point, I’m pretty sure the cancer gods don’t like me very much 😜. But then again again, they just updated all the five year cancer survival rates, and myeloma is now 59%. I’m going to hit 5 years soon. Not that I attribute that to the cancer gods, I’ll take the credit with my efforts.

I guess the other thing physically that happened was that, I developed a frozen shoulder. Possibly from the chemo, they aren’t actually sure what causes them. It’s quite bizarre. I can’t raise my right hand or arm above shoulder height or move it in an outward direction. I guess the tissue surrounding the “ball” of your arm, that goes into your socket, just seizes up. It can take 8 months to 2 years to “unfreeze”. Fortunately, it looks like I’m going through the stages at the faster rate. I’m sure the infrared sauna and turmeric are helping. Too bad my muscles didn’t freeze in a better spot 💪🏼. Imagine having your six pack be frozen and being ripped for 2 years.

Let’s see, I guess I have some blood numbers to share, here you go.

My medical provider made it a pain for me to transfer over my data, so that’s why I don’t post much about it (plus, I don’t have blood run much these days). Because of my weird side effects from the Dara, they did run a whole metabolic panel. My red blood cell numbers are still low. From the metabolic panel, they ran iron.

As you can see, my iron is quite well, from all those goji berries and beets. So my poor red blood cells are just quite beat up from the chemo. I thought that was interesting to see.

Well, I can tell your attention span is beginning to wane by this part of the post so I’ll be quick with the rest.

I made it to a succulent nursery, “Succulent Gardens”, down by Monterey, that I always wanted to go to. That was pretty awesome to visit. I’m a huge succulent fan, as you may have noticed from the pictures on my website. They supply plants to a lot of the other nurseries in California, so I was cool to visit the source. Here are some pictures.

I took a mushroom propagating class at a local collage. I sort of knew how to grow mushrooms from books and the internet, but I wanted some hands on training. So I know how to do that now. I have mushrooms growing inside the kitchen cupboards now. Hopefully at some point I’ll have a bigger space to really get into it.

Preparing mushroom growing media.

Finally, spring has sprung. Here are my irises that I planted last year. They had a year to grow and be undisturbed, so they are happy. Yukon likes to eat the grass around the pot.

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