How Have Your Glioblastoma Experiences With Temozolomide Been?

Posted by Mark Stopyro @markstopyro, Jul 11 10:44am

Has anyone decided to opt out of the 6/12 months, 5/23 days option for taking temozolomide (TMZ) in (generally) a dosage 2X the dosage you received during a radiation + chemo treatment? Alternatively, has anyone sometimes wished that the the post radiology + chemo TMZ usage had been skipped?

My reading through web posts and Facebook groups related to glioblastoma, I have encountered some messages and responses which sometimes describe negative results and regrets about taking the follow-up TMZ. I completed the radiology/chemo but for now I'm holding off on the TMZ followup. I believe passing on the follow up TMZ will likely lead to a shorter life, but a higher possibility of a sharp and rapid decline and death. No guarantees, just a gamble, right? I must admit that among glioblastoma sufferers, I am randomly blessed with relatively little suffering thus far (diagnosis Feb 02 2024, resection Feb 27). Given 2 tumors, one unresectionable and the other resectioned about 80%, relapse could be pretty darned soon. I'll share more if anyone wishes to hear more on my experiences with it.

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It is about quality of life. I have yet to get a full nights sleep with optune. Between battery changes and alarms, it has us up 4-5 times a night.

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@thomhorowitz

The optune device has poor clinical support. They do not seem concerned with adverse events. Refer you back to prescribing doc. My doc reports his experience is an N of Me.. so on boardrding is weak and dependent on a trained care giver to change electrodes as needed. With this heat wave we need to change daily. Living with an umbilical cord on top of head is a challenge. I look forward to a coma as I must skip an occasional night of use so my wife and I can have 6-7 hrs of sleep without optune Alam’s waking us up. Changing batttery every 2-3 hrs is a drag, There is a plug in transformer but it must be higher voltage an I get more burning feelings when it is used.

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my husband started it in June, he was trained on a thursday, but experienced 'burning' on a saturday. i mention this, because the support was very poor, the person kept telling him that it is possible to get 'warm' sensations and didnt really assess the difference in burn vs warm. then we had a problem with putting the wires in the sleeve. the customer service person told us that they did not have one in the office to see what i was trying to explain, as well I sent her photos of what we were trying but i had to email as they don't have texting on the weekends. At that point, we opted to wait until Monday to speak directly to our trainer who did resolve the issues for us. and i conveyed my dissatisfaction with the support. Overall i feel they are also not as transparent as to the division of symptom mgt (ie md) vs technical difficulties with the device, and they don't tell you that your Device support person who trains you is not an RN, so while I accept this now, it was frustrating to discuss what causes the burning and its impact on his skin . I think they should have introductory page of who is who and who you go to for what. I found that later in general literature, but i also feel the training materials are too disjointed, I noticed on the fb page, someone put a cheat sheet together and was willing to share that.
It is a quality of life issue with using this treatment, and it is hard to establish whether the sx you have are related to disease progression or issues with the tx or chemo. But as previous poster notes, it does get easier as you go on. I found that if i kept my concerns directed to my trainer during business hours, i felt more confident about the care my husband was receiving.
I also requested extra visits there is no protocol for how many visits per month, nor when they send the info to your md. That is another criticsim . But as i said before i now am bit more assertive much to my husbands chagrin, BUt i am a retired dialysis sw, so i know about what pt self care should be modeled after and realize that this is just a device they are responsible for, I have also told my husband that if he feels it is too confining, i understand if he doesn't want to do it. Granted he is on chemo and has an inoperable grade 4 gilo, but my feeling is we need to promote him having a good quality of life, since extending doesn't mean anything unless you can enjoy what you are doing. Good luck, also look at the optune fb page, very helpful. Obviously the company doesnot promote these because they do have stay with the guidelines of their research to get the optimal amount of validity.

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@timmerman

I was diagnosed last August. They found 3 spots. 2 of them were inoperable. I’m still on Optune and chemo 5/23. My Optune use age ranges 85- 92 each month. One spot is gone and the other spot is smaller. It hasn’t been the best dealing with glio, but I manage. I throw up every month with the chemo pills. My doseage is 250. Hope this helps . Take care, Kim

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I. Take Zoran after my dinner and359mg 45 min later. No other t issue except drop in platelets after second round of tmz

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@dbcondrey

my husband started it in June, he was trained on a thursday, but experienced 'burning' on a saturday. i mention this, because the support was very poor, the person kept telling him that it is possible to get 'warm' sensations and didnt really assess the difference in burn vs warm. then we had a problem with putting the wires in the sleeve. the customer service person told us that they did not have one in the office to see what i was trying to explain, as well I sent her photos of what we were trying but i had to email as they don't have texting on the weekends. At that point, we opted to wait until Monday to speak directly to our trainer who did resolve the issues for us. and i conveyed my dissatisfaction with the support. Overall i feel they are also not as transparent as to the division of symptom mgt (ie md) vs technical difficulties with the device, and they don't tell you that your Device support person who trains you is not an RN, so while I accept this now, it was frustrating to discuss what causes the burning and its impact on his skin . I think they should have introductory page of who is who and who you go to for what. I found that later in general literature, but i also feel the training materials are too disjointed, I noticed on the fb page, someone put a cheat sheet together and was willing to share that.
It is a quality of life issue with using this treatment, and it is hard to establish whether the sx you have are related to disease progression or issues with the tx or chemo. But as previous poster notes, it does get easier as you go on. I found that if i kept my concerns directed to my trainer during business hours, i felt more confident about the care my husband was receiving.
I also requested extra visits there is no protocol for how many visits per month, nor when they send the info to your md. That is another criticsim . But as i said before i now am bit more assertive much to my husbands chagrin, BUt i am a retired dialysis sw, so i know about what pt self care should be modeled after and realize that this is just a device they are responsible for, I have also told my husband that if he feels it is too confining, i understand if he doesn't want to do it. Granted he is on chemo and has an inoperable grade 4 gilo, but my feeling is we need to promote him having a good quality of life, since extending doesn't mean anything unless you can enjoy what you are doing. Good luck, also look at the optune fb page, very helpful. Obviously the company doesnot promote these because they do have stay with the guidelines of their research to get the optimal amount of validity.

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They do need care centers with nurse educators and training tools.

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@naoj

My husband, David, has been on the Optune device for six days. So far so good. I am the primary care giver and have changed the arays twice (every 3 days ). It was not hard to do... a little nerve racking the first time. We found the training and support good and understand anything medical (i.e. skin irritation, headache, or other side effects) must be referred to our prescribing physician. No side effects thus far. The device is a lifestyle change for sure, but David has continued his morning runs with a backpack on. We are going to try practicing golf tomorrow to see if possible. He is 75 years old and used to an active life. Trying Optune is worth it for us if it provides an extension of life and maintains quality. Understandable that it is not for everyone.

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The rub is that sweat can effect the conductive jel. I need. To avoid direct sunlight on my head. Hat or umbrella help

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@thomhorowitz

It is about quality of life. I have yet to get a full nights sleep with optune. Between battery changes and alarms, it has us up 4-5 times a night.

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My brother has had the same experience and has decided to forego using Optune because of all the disruptions

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@nancyhafer

Bill was diagnosed in September and currently takes 425 mg of TMZ 5 days a month along with nausea medication and a laxative. Only issue he has had is some trouble staying asleep and then exhausted for 2 or 3 days after chemotherapy. Walnut size tumor resection last October with only downside was a little more vision loss with peripheral vision causing issues with driving. Otherwise no progression of the cancer so far🤞🏻🙏🏻.No optune as he has some dermatitis on his scalp and figured it would drive him crazy.

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Update and question. Bill just finished 6 months of 5/23 Chemo with no progression of tumor. Have decided to stay the course of 5/23 since he tolerates it well. Anyone decided to stop the 5/23 after 6 months?

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@nancyhafer

Update and question. Bill just finished 6 months of 5/23 Chemo with no progression of tumor. Have decided to stay the course of 5/23 since he tolerates it well. Anyone decided to stop the 5/23 after 6 months?

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No. My husband also responded well to the standard of care 6 month treatment. He continued and has finished cycle 9. Next MRI in two weeks.
His fatigue has increased significantly in the last two months. We hope the tumor has continued to respond.

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I have found it quite tolerable. A little nausea n my third us dos.. all in all it breaks the stereotype of CHEMO.

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My fatigue is related to the keppra

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