Pancreatic Cancer Recurrence after Whipple

Posted by joannc63 @joannc63, Feb 18, 2023

Hello. I had the Whipple surgery on 6/30/2020 for stage 3 Pancreatic cancer. I found out on 2/17/23 via CT scans that it is back in the pancreatitis bed and a noldule in my liver. I see my oncologist in 2 days to go over starting chemo again. I have back pain and abdominal pain from the recurrence. Has anyone had luck with chemo when the cancer returns? I hope the oncologist can get the tumor to shrink. I guess I am just looking for hope maybe this can get under control. Thank you.

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@stageivsurvivor

My story is a little different but worth telling here. I had a Whipple procedure in 2012 and was staged as III, locally advanced, borderline resectable. Surgical margins were clear. There was portal vein resection required and pathology showed invasion into the vascular wall. Eleven of 22 lymph nodes were positive. One week after surgery a CT was done and the radiologist noted suspicion of metastatic disease to the liver. It was not large enough to be seen two weeks earlier at the time of the initial CT scan. So this was how I ended up having a Whipple and being stage IV…..it had not been detected prior to surgery that was done a couple of days after the initial diagnosis. No cure was to be achieved for me by having the Whipple.

My first thoughts on treatment were to find a clinical trial. To make the search easier, molecular profiling was done and a liquid biopsy revealed a germline (inherited) mutation. So now I knew the type of trials to focus my search on. A trial matching my criteria would take 14 months so in the meantime, standard of care chemo was required. Standard of care is just what it means….and it was not going to give me the longevity in survival I was looking for. I knew I would require better than SoC and strongly advocated for more aggressive chemo.

The “gold standard” of chemotherapy regimens in 2012 as it is today is Folfirinox. Administering 12 cycles is the number selected that is felt to achieve No Evidence of Disease (NED) and yet be tolerable by the majority of patients as adverse events, side effects and peripheral neuropathy are concerns. Few oncologists explain what NED means, especially in how it is determined. The goal of the oncologist is to knock the disease down low enough that it is not detectable by current sensitivity by imaging such as CT, MRI or PET. It is hoped that at this level, one’s immune system can keep any minimal residual disease (MRD) in check. As long as one continues to have a robust immune status, the MRD is held in check. But is the immune system comes under challenge and gets compromised, MRD can come back and usually in a more aggressive form.

Knowing this is why I advocated for more aggressive treatment with Folfirinox. Rather than stopping at 12 cycles, I indicated my desire and committed to doing as much as my body would tolerate. Thankfully my oncologist honored my request. Because neuropathy would likely be experienced and could become permanent, he decided to treat with six cycles of Folfirinox (FFX) followed by six resting cycles of just 5-FU with Leucovorin. After those six cycles, it was back to full-dose FFX for another six cycles. This alternating dosing regimen went for 24 months resulting in a total of 46 cycles of 24 FFX and 22 of 5-FU. At that point, a clinical trial opened that I met the criteria for and enrolled after a two week washout period. After the final 5-FU treatment, all liver metastasis had shrunk 80% and it was believed only scar tissue was being observed on imaging.

The clinical trial was designed to target a gene mutation for maintenance monotherapy. Many oncologists feel it was the excessive FFX that destroyed any MRD and the clinical trial drug has helped in preventing any new primary tumor from forming in the residual pancreas as I have a lifetime risk from that gene mutation.

Anyone can say to their oncologist they want to survive and be cured. Saying and doing are two very different things. I was 55 years old and strong physically from having done 100-200 mile bike rides per week. I was also strong emotionally and mentally. I set realistic expectations that setbacks might be encountered. I found ways to tolerate the treatment, deal with a setback and then move forward. I stayed focused on my goal and had the determination and very strong will to survive. In 2016 at the conclusion of the trial I was declared NED. It was likely I was already NED at the conclusion of the FFX treatments. In 2022 I was informed by a number of pancreatic cancer oncologists that they consider me cured. In a few months I will be celebrating 11 years of survival of having had stage IV disease.

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Hi
That is one amazing story ! Your tenacity and courage to have that will to survive in the wake of that kind of diagnosis .
For me I relied on Gods promises and lamenting over His love for us. Because of the Lords great love for us we are not consumed ,for His compassions never fail.
They are new every morning ;
Great is his faithfulness.
I say to myself, “The Lord is my portion; therefore I will wait for him. Amen

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@mnewland99

Congrats to you that your chemo is working. I had surgery in late 2022 and was “cancer free” for 4 mo the before it metastasized it liver and abdominal area. I’ve been on GAC chemo for 8 months but now the chemo is no longer working. May I ask what your mutation cocktail is? Mine is ATM, KRAS12D, and TP53 and maybe more I’m not even aware of by now.

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Let me update that post. Following a short chemo vacation (3 weeks) my CA19-9 numbers went up to over 536 after being in the normal range before chemo vacation. I also did have some growth in my lungs at this time but it turned out to be a benign nodule that was in response to difficulty breathing due to a slow gas leak we’ve had where we are living. I’m having a PET scan to recheck the “lesion” in the femur. The rising CA19-9 numbers could have been due to inflammation in my lungs since I had such difficulty breathing, but that’s my own guess. My CA19-9 numbers are once again in the normal range again and started to decrease once I resumed chemo after my chemo vacation back in late July. I also got some focused radiation (MRIdean) in October which might have also helped.

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@johndurbano

I'm sorry but I don't have the answer to your question. I am in the process of have blood maker testing done through Guardant. it's called the 360 test. This test will capture the DNA shed from tumors in the blood. It will provide a comprehensive overview of the genomics in both the primary tumor and metastatic sites. The test is used to detect gene mutations in circulating cell free DNA {cfDNA}. The hope is they will be able to identify the best form of treatments going forward. Hope this information may help. I certainly wish you all the best in your fight.

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@johndurbano
I was just reading through this post again and was wondering how you are doing with the chemo. You are getting the stronger chemo that I got before my distal surgery. I’m interested to know how it works post surgery. I’m now just on GA chemo as I dropped the cisplatin and so far my CA19-9 is still in the normal range. However always hoping some immunotherapy comes along the way so that I can stop chemo. Side effects aren’t bad for me, just hoping something long term is discovered someday soon.

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@1954now

Hi
That is one amazing story ! Your tenacity and courage to have that will to survive in the wake of that kind of diagnosis .
For me I relied on Gods promises and lamenting over His love for us. Because of the Lords great love for us we are not consumed ,for His compassions never fail.
They are new every morning ;
Great is his faithfulness.
I say to myself, “The Lord is my portion; therefore I will wait for him. Amen

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I love your faith mantras and I’m totally there as well. Faith gives us strength to fight this disease. To keep myself balanced though, in the back of mind I do acknowledge we all have a time limit and ask for God’s strength and mercy as we go through this journey; whatever outcome He may decide for us. God bless.

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@mnewland99

@johndurbano
I was just reading through this post again and was wondering how you are doing with the chemo. You are getting the stronger chemo that I got before my distal surgery. I’m interested to know how it works post surgery. I’m now just on GA chemo as I dropped the cisplatin and so far my CA19-9 is still in the normal range. However always hoping some immunotherapy comes along the way so that I can stop chemo. Side effects aren’t bad for me, just hoping something long term is discovered someday soon.

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So good to hear that you're doing well. Its been a real battle at my end. I'm in a break period for a couple of weeks before they start my third regiment of treatments. The cancer continues to grow and this is my last hope. I truly wish you all the best. Stay strong and never give up hope.💜

Yahoo Mail: Search, Organize, Conquer

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@johndurbano

So good to hear that you're doing well. Its been a real battle at my end. I'm in a break period for a couple of weeks before they start my third regiment of treatments. The cancer continues to grow and this is my last hope. I truly wish you all the best. Stay strong and never give up hope.💜

Yahoo Mail: Search, Organize, Conquer

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Have you tried GA chemo? It seems to work well on the liver. Also there’s different focused radiation types and also proton therapy though not a lot of facilities that do that - I think proton is good for nodules or tumors rather than lesions.

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