Waldenstroms and amyloidosis
Diagnosed with the Waldenstroms a year ago, just today with amyloidosis. Will start treatment next week. Anyone have these or know anything?
Interested in more discussions like this? Go to the Blood Cancers & Disorders Support Group.
I apologize for not responding today but I will have the specialist info for you tomorrow. The following is a link for IWMF’s Newly Diagnosed to get you started: https://iwmf.com/newly-diagnosed-wm/
Please know that we are here to support you. Eunice
The following link is an IWMF physician directory for WM specialists. Please note that there are two listed for TX. I am communicating with our IWMF office to see if I can also find you a young WM patient who would be willing to communicate with you. Thank you again for your reaching out for support.
So sorry. I forgot to include the IWMF Physician’s List for your reference. https://iwmf.com/wp-content/uploads/2022/01/IWMF_PHYSICIANS_DIRECTORY.pdf
Mi madre de 85 años fue diagnosticada y empezó el tratamiento Rituximab...mayo 4; no tengo mayor información sobre cómo cuidarla....
Agradezco si alguien me guía.
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@maya1967, how is your mother doing on the Rituximab treatment? How are you?
My Dad had Waldenstroms Macroglobulinemia (rarer than amyloidosis) for 10 years from age 63 to 73. He took oral medication each year, but missed the last year, and the decline was obvious. He had blood transfusions and plasma exchange, but nothing helped. And yes my father did pass away, but this was twenty-three years ago. Hopefully there's more superior research since then.
It is not inherited, and most infected people have no history of disorder in their family. The condition usually arises from genetic changes in blood cells that's acquired during a person's lifetime.
Hi @loribmt
Wonderful technical explanation! Did you school yourself AFTER you were diagnosed? Do you have any helpful pointers to where one might get this level of education on Leukemia - short of becoming an MD and then a cancer specialist? I'd like to shine a bright light on this blackbox.
Paul
@mrgreentea. Hi Paul. You caught me a little off guard with your comment this morning. It made my day. So I just had to share it with my husband. His reply regarding my knowledge of leukemia and technical explanations, “Even a blind squirrel finds a nut from time to time.” 😂
To answer your question, yes, most of my knowledge of blood cancers and conditions came from total immersion feet first into my personal experience with acute myeloid leukemia and the process of the bone marrow transplant and treatments/chemo/meds for both issues over the past 5 years. I also lucked out with a brilliant transplant doctor who enjoys answering questions. My husband and I have learned so much from our almost daily visits with either him or his staff over the course of 4 months right after transplant and our subsequent followup visits.
But that also whetted my appetite to learn more. I’m always researching for myself and members in Connect. I’ve lived with some of the same symptoms, used the same chemotherapy and treatments as other blood cancer patients so it’s easy to relate to people.
Our blood/bone marrow/immune systems are incredibly complex!! Nothing is black/white/written in stone…or blood. Every person is different and what works for one person in treatment doesn’t automatically work for another. I have such an enormous respect for hematologist oncologists and the mysteries they have to unravel! The minute details of each subtype of blood cancers or conditions are mind boggling.
Quite a bit of my information comes from reading research papers on Scholar.google.com and medical sources such as cancer journals, ONA (oncology nurse advisor), Cancer Therapy Advisor-daily updates.
If I remember correctly, you’re still waiting for a firm diagnosis with a potential blood condition. When you get that information it will be easier to zero in on subject matter without being swept off into a rabbit hole. It’s so easy to start reading about things that aren’t relevant, which can be real anxiety producers!
Let me know when you find out and then we can go from there. ☺️
Finally 🙂 🙁 I have a diagnosis from a Mayo CLL doc. He said I have something that "acts like CLL". And, because of my unmutated IGHV and -17p, that I am in a higher risk group. His recommendation is to join his new Mayo trial looking at Acalabrutinib (or A+O) for naive patients.
It's certainly not cut & dry. My Fairview doc is not convinced "that all of the clones represent CLL since by morphology, at least the lymph node looked more like a B-cell lymphoma with plasmacytic differentiation (usually either Waldenstrom's or marginal zone lymphoma) and you have the elevated IgM which is not often seen with CLL either." However, she does think that A or A+O would still be a good course.
I will go over the options with the Mayo doc mid-April and decide how to proceed.
If you have any thoughts/wisdom to share, please do!
@mrgreentea, it sounds like another piece of the puzzle has been placed, but the picture remains incomplete. Hence the smile and frown emoji. It is good news that there is a clinical trial that may be right for your diagnosis. While the option is available, it is your choice whether it is right for you. Ask questions.
You might appreciate this information, including videos from Mayo Clinic about participating in clinical trials, terms you'll learn, and making the decision:
- About Clinic Trials https://www.mayo.edu/research/clinical-trials/about-clinical-studies
- Deciding to take part https://www.mayo.edu/research/clinical-trials/deciding-to-volunteer
I look forward to hearing what you learn at your upcoming appointment. Please share.