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Pancreatic Cancer | Last Active: 9 hours ago | Replies (2046)Comment receiving replies
Replies to "Did they remove any of your Lymph Nodes and if so, how many had PC ?..."
What a beautiful story and one I can clearly identify with as my ca19-9 was 13,900 up until about 2 weeks ago. I'm 68 and thriving and keeping as active as I can and will be attending my 50th high school reunion this Friday. I've been on the reunion committee via Zoom for several months now and went from an antigen of 11 for almost 6 months to a high of 13,900 and down to 4840. I too have pains that come and go which I know is the activity of the disease so I do not rest easy. I walk almost 2 miles each day and run my single-owned environmental consulting business which I've started the legal steps to hand down to my daughter. I'm scheduled to take a test this month which will guve a certification I've been trying for since 2024; crazy it might seem to others. That's the hope side of me since I am giving gem-abraxane another try, currently. I also have my bucket list, though not much left in it now as I've crossed off a lot since 2023 though I'm writing a small guide for pancreatic cancer patients thst will hopefully help others a bit even after I'm gone. I'm glad you and your husband are enjoying life together now and you are lucky there as my husband's back and neck are so riddled with arthritis now that the majority of his time is spent sleeping just to relieve the pain. But we had many years (since 1980) having carefree fun before we graduated from college and got our careers and settled down with kids, etc. I wish you and your husband well and applaud your approach and am praying for a cure for all of us with this disease.
@suelannon Same story for my husband, Surgeon said he got it all and surgery was curative. Our oncologist refused to believe that and there was friction between surgeon and oncologist. She kept my husband on Gem-Abraxane for 14 months. He was in relatively good health and we traveled a little. Then he had to do knee replacement surgery (I thought it was a good idea so we can do hikes again). At that point, PET scans were clear and he looked disease-free. Then complications from knee surgery, a stress fracture and CA19-9 markers climbed from normal to hundreds. Still clear scans. Surgeon recommended more tests but there seemed no reason to do it. Then the next scan picked up recurrence at the resected edge. He went for VMAT with Capecitabine but that did not work. And with the months off chemo, there is some peritoneal spread. He suffered what we thought were side effects from the radiotherapy for over weeks. He could not eat; he had nausea, threw up, had chest pains, had reflux, lung infection and a persistent cough. Chemo (a new regime) could not restart. The onco warded him and now doctors are trying to figure out what is causing all these eating problems. He is being fed intravenously now. My husband developed a volvulus stomach after surgery and I hope doctors are looking into that. The onco will put my husband back on chemo once my husband gets some nutrition into him and gains some weight.
Surgeon miffed with us for not doing more tests. This journey is hard enough for lay people like us; we know nothing and rely on doctors. And sometimes doctors do not help! My mantra is to be our own advocate (read, reasearch, ask questions, change doctors if really necessary) and my husband is not a statistic.
I have kinda 'lost' my husband because he was the problem-solver, the optimistic half-cup-full person, the one who would drop me at the entrance so I need not walk in my heels from the carpark, the one who went to the grocer's when I forgot some ingredient in the middle of cooking. He is now battling depression plus all the other problems and cancer. I am fighting to get him back.; not giving up!
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We hear your frustration. And your fears. The reality is as you said.
The key to fighting this disease is overall health. If he has no co-morbitities it is much easier to fight this. We are working hard to make this a chronic disease and there are long term survivors. But the initial treatments must be spot on, from the beginning, which many of us battling this have learned. Now is the time to get second opinions. Very important.