Negative Turn in a Long Journey
I was diagnosed with PC in March 2023 just after my 60th birthday, and have frequently checked this forum, read most of the posts and responses here, and have taken great comfort and learned a lot from everyone's input. I am at an important crossroads in my treatment, however, and would appreciate any thoughts, advice and input you all may have. I am being treated at Smilow Cancer Hospital at Yale.
I had a small (1.9 cm) tumor in the head of my pancreas that restricted my bile duct and was also wrapped around the portal vein. I had 8 rounds of Folfirinox, the tumor shrunk away from the vein, and I was on the table for Whipple surgery on 9/25/23.
At the start of surgery, 5 small malignant lesions were found on my liver (even though nothing was ever seen on scans) and surgery was aborted. I started FFOX again and sought second opinions at UCLA, Mayo Clinic, and Frodetert/MCW which provided a lot of motivation for me to push on towards making surgery possible again. After 14 more rounds of FFOX (22 total) I was back on the table one day short of a year later on 9/24/24 for Whipple. This time it was a success. Eight hours of Whipple followed by 4 hours of portal vein reconstruction. I recovered very quickly (only 4 days in the hospital) and within 2 months was back to “normal” with only a few minor digestive issues to deal with.
My post-surgery pathology was as follows: Tumor: 1.5 cm, Grade G2, invades retroperitoneal soft tissue and portal vein. Perineural invasion present. Involves vascular bed/groove (corresponding to superior mesenteric vein/portal vein). All margins uninvolved by invasive carcinoma and high-grade intraepithelial neoplasia. 24 lymph nodes examined; 1 involved. Staging: ypT1c N1, at least Stage IIB. Tumor testing showed I have the KRAS G12D mutation.
My “secret weapon” throughout all this has been my physical health. I was a competitive cyclist and runner for over 40 years and I had very mild side effects during the 22 rounds of chemo; always ECOG=0. Throughout the last 2+ years I have continued to ride my bike, walk, jog, swim and do the occasional weight workout or yoga, on average about 10-15 hrs./week.
As you can probably guess, things have taken a negative turn recently. My first two sets of post-surgery check-up scans were NED but a May CT scan showed (and a PET scan confirmed) suspicious areas–soft tissue attenuation around the celiac/hepatic arteries, thickening of the left adrenal gland, an enlarged lymph node adjacent to the superior mesenteric vein, and a small lump in the wall of my abdomen. The lump appeared 2-3 months after surgery and is right at the incision where one of my abdominal drains exited. I had it checked out back in January and it was deemed scar tissue. I am having it biopsied tomorrow so at least I’ll know if that's the case.
So finally to ask my question(s). Where do I go from here? My options at Yale are a drug trial or back to chemo: either FFOX or Gem-Nab. I know what living for Folfirinox is like but also know the side effects of Gem-Nab might be even more tolerable. My oncologist said normally she would recommend Gem-Nab but since I haven’t had treatment for over a year (last round of FFOX was May 2024) that it’s “up to me”.
There is a KRAS G12D drug trial at Yale (ASP 3082) that I hoped to get into but there’s no space right now. I am still waiting to hear if Yale has other KRAS trials available. I have a list of other trial options at MSK and Dana-Farber since both locations are relatively close by. I would be willing to travel even farther afield for a trial if I could manage it.
Thanks for taking the time to read my story and for any thoughts, personal experiences or other things you have to share.
Interested in more discussions like this? Go to the Pancreatic Cancer Support Group.
@mnewland99
Vis a vis SBRT-
This is based on results TGen labs and Dr.Boranzanci’s experience treating this cancer for many years. I have always been told SBRT is a spot treatment but not a cure. Another”buys time” tool in the bag. I had it on a small module in my lung in March. Later scans said the module was obliterated. It was suspected cancer but not confirmed. Meeting radiologist today on my liver lesion but rethinking histotripsy. However, the area has scar tissue from resection so may not be possible(?)
Hi there gamaryanne!
How is Naliri working on the lesion? I wish you the best news on whether histotripsy might be an option. I don't like that it's a 4-hr procedure under anesthesia since the Naliri was causing a slow heart rate for me. I did decide as a trial to take 1/2 dosage of atropine which is part of the normal chemo regimen and it kept my heart rate (above 60) to a normal rate this past infusion; so maybe I'll be ok. You are lucky not to have any peritoneal nodules! You don't have the ATM mutation as I recall. Seems like several of us are in the same place, though my CA19-9 seems determined to increase, but nevertheless, I'm still walking, baking, and possibly continuing to work and it seems maybe I'll get to go to my 50th high school reunion after all; it's mid-August! I hope you are continuing to trudge and outsmart this disease as you have in the past! My rosary prayers continue for you.
Well, turns out I was wrong about which trial I will be in, but I'm definitely in! The drug is QTX-3034, trial is https://clinicaltrials.gov/study/NCT06227377
Yale is waiting for the regulatory team to approve the most updated protocol documents; they are anticipating approval by the end of this month. The trial coordinator is predicting a mid-August start date.
Anyone out there who has thoughts about or experience with this trial?
Hi, wpprescott ! I had my Whipple surgery in October of 2024 while I was open the hit me with radiation IORT thought everything was going to be OK but at 3 month CT scan found out it went to my liver. I did the Gemcitabine and Paclitaxel did nothing for me the I grew more tumors. I also has Kras Q 61 I guess this is rare type the Q61 but I am on a clinical trial had a CT scan 6 weeks after I started on this show growth in 2 tumors one not very much and the other one a little more ( under 10%) so my clinical trial Doctor was to worried and said we would recheck in 3 weeks. Had another CT scan and this time at4 weeks and it's showing to be stable which I was happy about and so was the Doctor. The trial medicine I am on is ALTA3263. I know they have trials going on in Boston, Tennessee, and Texas with this drug. I know my clinical trial Doctor said that there were alot more trials coming out for the KRAS mutations but he said sometimes when you go on one trial and if it doesn't work they won't let you go on another trial he's hoping that they will change that. Because if this doesn't work my next thing is to back on chemo the FFOX. Good luck to you maybe one of us that goes on these trials will get on one that is the cure for Pancreas cancer . Not only will we help ourselves but we will help other people. Good luck to you and stay positive. Positivity goes a long way.