Pancreatic Cancer Group: Introduce yourself and connect with others

Welcome to the Pancreatic Cancer group on Mayo Clinic Connect.
This is a welcoming, safe place where you can meet people living with pancreatic cancer or caring for someone with pancreatic cancer. Let’s learn from each other and share stories about living well with cancer, coping with the challenges and offering tips.

I’m Colleen, and I’m the moderator of this group, and Community Director of Connect. Chances are you’ll to be greeted by fellow members and volunteer patient Mentors, when you post to this group. Learn more about Moderators and Volunteer Mentors on Connect.

We look forward to welcoming you and introducing you to other members. Feel free to browse the topics or start a new one.

Pull up a chair. Let's start with introductions.

When were you diagnosed with pancreatic cancer? What treatments have you had? How are you doing?

Interested in more discussions like this? Go to the Pancreatic Cancer Support Group.

@markymarkfl

@waltsocal ,

It's always good to "get everything in order" but not time to give up yet!!!

I had been meaning to get a will, living will, trust and all sorts of estate planning in order for decades before discovering I had cancer, but didn't get around to it until after the diagnosis. Finally got all that taken care of, but haven't needed it yet, thankfully! For others, it's a lesson to do sooner rather than later. Biggest disadvantage of my delay so far was a lockout from certain life insurance policies and other benefits, but it's definitely one thing I wish I hadn't been preoccupied with while dealing with my bigger cancer issues. Another piece of that lesson is how much complication that removes from your survivors. My dad had all of his docs in order (including Will and Trust) but lawyers still found some way to tie it up in probate court, dragging it out and costing us money.
-
All that aside... on the cancer front, not everyone is the same, as you know. Although Folfirinox is supposed to be the wonder drug with Gemcitabine reserved for the feeble, my response to Gemcitabine + Abraxane + Cisplatin after a Stage-4 recurrence (and ATM mutation) has been far better than it was to my pre-Whipple Folfirinox. Although I've been Stage-4 for a full year now, it's considered "stable disease" (knock on wood) for now.

I'm not really experiencing any effects of cancer now as far as I can tell, only some fatigue, low blood counts, neuropathy and hair loss after a year on the GAC chemo. I think I could do this a good bit longer with a blood transfusion, as long as the disease remains at bay, but aside from developing drug resistance, the chemo wear and tear on your body sometimes limits how long you can remain on it.

Trials are a lot harder to get into than I imagined, but are definitely the next logical step. Some depend on any mutations you have, others depend on treatments you have or have not had, all depend on how often you have to travel to the trial site, and so on. I'm still trying to cross that bridge, and will post updates here when/if I do.

For now, just take hope that gemcitabine (maybe combined with some other drugs) will buy you time to explore all that.

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Thanks for the feedback on your treatment. I met with my oncologist today. I have a cancerous lesion on my spine that they will treat with radiation. Of course I have to have a biopsy first since the CT and MRI were not conclusive enough. Although they are sure that the radiation treatment(s) will wipe out the lesion on my T4 vertebral, they're pretty sure the cancer has gone to other areas of my body. (CA19 at 400 now).

So, I will be starting Gemcitabine+Abraxane in March. One treatment per week for 3 weeks and then a week off. And then start all over.

A few questions:
1. How bad are the side effects compared to Folfirinox? (which I had pre-whipple)
2. How long before the G+A was no longer effective?
3. Did they monitor this with CT and CA19 results?
4. What is your definition of "Stable"?
5. How debilitating was it for you - what helped you to overcome fatigue etc.

Thank you again for your feedback and insight.
The oncologist said that if I can tolerate the chemo, I may have "a year or so".....

REPLY
@waltsocal

Thanks for the feedback on your treatment. I met with my oncologist today. I have a cancerous lesion on my spine that they will treat with radiation. Of course I have to have a biopsy first since the CT and MRI were not conclusive enough. Although they are sure that the radiation treatment(s) will wipe out the lesion on my T4 vertebral, they're pretty sure the cancer has gone to other areas of my body. (CA19 at 400 now).

So, I will be starting Gemcitabine+Abraxane in March. One treatment per week for 3 weeks and then a week off. And then start all over.

A few questions:
1. How bad are the side effects compared to Folfirinox? (which I had pre-whipple)
2. How long before the G+A was no longer effective?
3. Did they monitor this with CT and CA19 results?
4. What is your definition of "Stable"?
5. How debilitating was it for you - what helped you to overcome fatigue etc.

Thank you again for your feedback and insight.
The oncologist said that if I can tolerate the chemo, I may have "a year or so".....

Jump to this post

@waltsocal ,

1: I'm getting Cisplatin on top of the G+A. Just had 1 year anniversary, 27th bi-weekly treatment. It's been much easier for me than 12 rounds of Folfirinox was over my 6 months pre-Whipple.

2 & 3: The oncs told me people generally develop resistance to the drugs or too much neuropathy or low blood counts after 6-9 months. I'm still holding up well. I get CA19-9 tested before chemo every 2 weeks, an abdominal MRI, chest CT, and Signatera blood test every 2 months or so. CA19-9 dropped rapidly on GAC, from almost 700 last year to low 30's (normal range!) about 2 months ago, but it has crept up to 53 as of last week. Last MRI was the first one to actually show shrinkage of tumors, by a tiny bit. The added cisplatin might be helping me out because of the ATM mutation, but I think the Abraxane is also playing a large role, since the platinum (oxaliplatin) in my Folfirinox didn't seem to do much.

4: I can't really define stable, but two oncologists have emphasized imaging more than anything else. I think one defined "stable" as no new tumors and no growth more than 10%. CA19-9 has been mostly under control, and Signatera continues to be negative, so that's all "stable disease" on their reports.

5: I never really got over the Folfirinox fatigue until I finished, but it did always get better a week after treatment. Was living on coffee. On GAC, many factors at play, but some changes in sleep situation, reducing work-related stress, improved health of other family members, have helped. One blood transfusion, a prescription for Ritalin, and more coffee have all helped.

Two docs are pushing me to reduce the Abraxane, which might reduce fatigue even more, along with reducing neuropathy and maybe regrowing some hair and eyebrows. I'm hesitant to drop any drugs from a recipe that seems to be working, until I can get into something better by way of a clinical trial.

You could well be around for a lot longer than a year, so keep making plans for the future! Seriously, if the G+A does its job, you could actually be feeling good much of this year. If it's not controlling the cancer (soon), ask if adding cisplatin would help. I believe the GA therapy is typically 3 weeks on and one week off. I'm not sure if my GAC is every other week because of the cisplatin or because of my travel requirements, but getting a two-week break every time definitely helps with recovery, so ask if that's an option for you as well.

And be a really aggressive advocate for yourself and a non-stop researcher for clinical trials. If you develop resistance or intolerance to chemo, you'll want the backup plan to already be hatched instead of starting from scratch. Some of the clinical trial drugs are even easier to tolerate than G+A, and possibly more effective (depending on patient/genetics/etc).

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@weezi

Hell o everyone. I’ve been looking for group to join and happy I found this great site!

I count my blessings everyday that I reported white stool to my PCP who then ordered CT and a small cyst was found in the head of my pancreas.

Because my sister and grandfather had pancreatic cancer and an uncle with bile duct cancer, they followed me closely.
1 year after finding the 7 mm cyst an MRI was done and cyst was unchanged but was on main duct.
2 1/2 months later an EGD sono showed the cyst had grown to 10.1 mm.
On 5/13/2022 had a Whipple for suspicious main duct cyst which was found to have dysplasia!
I was fortunate to have to have a surgeon following me that averages 60 Whipples a year.
I tell everyone I can that we know our bodies and if you notice something unusual, call your PCP!!!
I’ll be 2 years post op and feel good except for some gas problems, abdomen cramps, with BM urgency but usually gone by late morning.
Good to hear what foods are better post Whipple. That was lacking by dieticians at hospital. There doesn’t seem to be a good recommendation.

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Hello @weezi and welcome to Mayo Connect. I'm also glad that you found this support group and I appreciate you sharing your experiences with everyone on this forum.

I certainly applaud you for being so proactive about your care. It really is important as you said, "...that we know our bodies and if you notice something unusual, call your PCP!!!" That is the best way to become our own patient advocate.

I am glad to hear that you are feeling good now. I understand that the side effects from digestive tract surgery can be ongoing. I've had three surgeries of the upper digestive tract, and it takes a lot of trial and error to find foods that trigger symptoms. It's not an easy task. Have you considered keeping a food, exercise journal to see if there are any food, drinks or activities that increase your symptoms?

I was able to meet with a hospital dietician and her suggestions worked well for me. I hope that you are able to find some more guidance on an eating plan that might help with some of these symptoms.

Have you asked about a referral to a dietician since your surgery?

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@markymarkfl

@waltsocal ,

1: I'm getting Cisplatin on top of the G+A. Just had 1 year anniversary, 27th bi-weekly treatment. It's been much easier for me than 12 rounds of Folfirinox was over my 6 months pre-Whipple.

2 & 3: The oncs told me people generally develop resistance to the drugs or too much neuropathy or low blood counts after 6-9 months. I'm still holding up well. I get CA19-9 tested before chemo every 2 weeks, an abdominal MRI, chest CT, and Signatera blood test every 2 months or so. CA19-9 dropped rapidly on GAC, from almost 700 last year to low 30's (normal range!) about 2 months ago, but it has crept up to 53 as of last week. Last MRI was the first one to actually show shrinkage of tumors, by a tiny bit. The added cisplatin might be helping me out because of the ATM mutation, but I think the Abraxane is also playing a large role, since the platinum (oxaliplatin) in my Folfirinox didn't seem to do much.

4: I can't really define stable, but two oncologists have emphasized imaging more than anything else. I think one defined "stable" as no new tumors and no growth more than 10%. CA19-9 has been mostly under control, and Signatera continues to be negative, so that's all "stable disease" on their reports.

5: I never really got over the Folfirinox fatigue until I finished, but it did always get better a week after treatment. Was living on coffee. On GAC, many factors at play, but some changes in sleep situation, reducing work-related stress, improved health of other family members, have helped. One blood transfusion, a prescription for Ritalin, and more coffee have all helped.

Two docs are pushing me to reduce the Abraxane, which might reduce fatigue even more, along with reducing neuropathy and maybe regrowing some hair and eyebrows. I'm hesitant to drop any drugs from a recipe that seems to be working, until I can get into something better by way of a clinical trial.

You could well be around for a lot longer than a year, so keep making plans for the future! Seriously, if the G+A does its job, you could actually be feeling good much of this year. If it's not controlling the cancer (soon), ask if adding cisplatin would help. I believe the GA therapy is typically 3 weeks on and one week off. I'm not sure if my GAC is every other week because of the cisplatin or because of my travel requirements, but getting a two-week break every time definitely helps with recovery, so ask if that's an option for you as well.

And be a really aggressive advocate for yourself and a non-stop researcher for clinical trials. If you develop resistance or intolerance to chemo, you'll want the backup plan to already be hatched instead of starting from scratch. Some of the clinical trial drugs are even easier to tolerate than G+A, and possibly more effective (depending on patient/genetics/etc).

Jump to this post

Markymarkfl - THANK YOU - so much !!!

Great feedback and encouragement for where I am right now.
Wishing you the very best on your rough road. I can only imagine how tough it is to keep up work along with your chemo regiment. I can understand your reluctance to stop the abraxane. I'm hoping to find the magic mix that will keep me around longer - if I'm not bedridden all the time.

With your every two weeks of chemo, does it give you some recovery time that you can actual get around ok?

1. I'm concerned that my oncologist wants me to do three weeks on for G+A and then one week off before starting again. Seems like I would always be fatigued.

2. Is the cisplatin something specific to your cancer? How did they decide you needed it?

3. Not sure why my oncologist won't do a PET scan at this point. You would think he would want a baseline at this point with my high CA19 along with the cancerous lesion on my T3 vertebrae. How do you become more assertive about requesting the test?

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@waltsocal

Markymarkfl - THANK YOU - so much !!!

Great feedback and encouragement for where I am right now.
Wishing you the very best on your rough road. I can only imagine how tough it is to keep up work along with your chemo regiment. I can understand your reluctance to stop the abraxane. I'm hoping to find the magic mix that will keep me around longer - if I'm not bedridden all the time.

With your every two weeks of chemo, does it give you some recovery time that you can actual get around ok?

1. I'm concerned that my oncologist wants me to do three weeks on for G+A and then one week off before starting again. Seems like I would always be fatigued.

2. Is the cisplatin something specific to your cancer? How did they decide you needed it?

3. Not sure why my oncologist won't do a PET scan at this point. You would think he would want a baseline at this point with my high CA19 along with the cancerous lesion on my T3 vertebrae. How do you become more assertive about requesting the test?

Jump to this post

You're very welcome. Wish I had better answers, but I'll give you what I've got:

1) If I get chemo on a Friday, the fatigue usually lets up by Monday evening, so I have 10 good days before the next treatment. You would get 3 good days between 1st-2nd and 2nd-3rd treatments, then 10 good days between 3rd and 4th, etc... Maybe less fatigue for you without the cisplatin. Maybe less fatigue if you're also retired. 😉 Consider pestering them about a blood transfusion if necessary.

2) I've heard several oncs say people with mutations of the ATM gene do well with a platinum-based therapy. I don't recall seeing the paper, but my current onc cited Eileen O'Reilly from MSKCC in explaining his choice of my regimen. They wouldn't mix Oxaliplatin with Gemcitabine (untested and/or double serious risk of neuropathy), so GAC is what I got.

3) I'm not sure what's up with some doctors and their thoughts on PET scans. I've heard the radioactive sugar (FDG?) tracer is very expensive. I've heard docs say the PET is generally just used after finding a single tumor (at initial diagnosis) to get a "global" look at the rest of the body for mets. One doc told me they can see all the "attributes" distinguishing live tumors from necrotic tissue on their MRIs, and once they're only looking in a small region (e.g. abdomen) for tumors, they can actually see finer details on MRI than they can on PET. But, there are machines that combine the technology (PET+MRI or PET+CT) where they can get the benefits of both in one scan.

I have not had a PET scan since my initial diagnosis 2.5 years ago, despite asking several times. I might get one this spring if things work out, but it's iffy. My big beef is that I requested a PET scan 1.5 years ago after my recurrence was first spotted on MRI. They were not 100% sure the mass was cancer, so they immediately followed up with EUS biopsy, which was negative and diagnosed as chronic pancreatitis. The outcome of that was to wait 6 weeks and redo an MRI, which (along with CA19-9 and positive Signatera) convinced them it was indeed a recurrence of the cancer.

The bummer is that I think an immediate PET scan would have seen radioactive sugar uptake in the tumor and overruled the bad EUS biopsy soon enough for me to have surgery or start chemo before the mets occurred. 🙁

If I could rewind time, I would have been a LOT more assertive about getting the PET scan and paying for it myself if insurance didn't.

REPLY

Hi. I’m Diane and I was diagnosed with Inoperable Stage 3 Pancreatic Cancer in August 2023. It took the a trip to the ER to get diagnosed after being sick for a year. I just had my 10th chemo treatment and will most likely have radiation following. My last scan showed the tumor almost shrank by half. I know I have a long battle ahead but trying to be positive.

REPLY

@diana865 this is great news! Shrinkage means that you are on a regimen that is working! For some that is not the case and they have to keep changing regimens.

@waltsocal
I am now a 24 month thriver of this disease. Diagnosed stage IV.
I’ve seen se real for second opinions at different points and asked many questions. I have surmised that PETs are not seen as necessary when tumor markers, scans, and biopsies confirm cancer. Systemic chemo is their answer to cool the fires-wherever they may be raging. CT machines that incorporate PET scans exist and I have done this twice. It sometimes highlights areas that are not cancer-most often thyroid .

MRIs of the local areas like pancreas or liver are the most helpful to surgeons for truly understanding how/when/and possibility to get you to a
surgical next step.

I’m nothing special but I definitely have not quick work or volunteering where I can be useful. We can control a few things.. our diet, our rest, who we surround ourselves with but most important is your attitude. Choose to think of this as a chronic disease that can be managed. If your doctors don’t see it this way, perhaps look for a group that does. Often it’s led by our attitudes, not them!💜💜

REPLY

I have stage 3. Pancreatic cancer. I’m wondering if I can travel if I’m considered NED and between appointments?

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@markymarkfl

You're very welcome. Wish I had better answers, but I'll give you what I've got:

1) If I get chemo on a Friday, the fatigue usually lets up by Monday evening, so I have 10 good days before the next treatment. You would get 3 good days between 1st-2nd and 2nd-3rd treatments, then 10 good days between 3rd and 4th, etc... Maybe less fatigue for you without the cisplatin. Maybe less fatigue if you're also retired. 😉 Consider pestering them about a blood transfusion if necessary.

2) I've heard several oncs say people with mutations of the ATM gene do well with a platinum-based therapy. I don't recall seeing the paper, but my current onc cited Eileen O'Reilly from MSKCC in explaining his choice of my regimen. They wouldn't mix Oxaliplatin with Gemcitabine (untested and/or double serious risk of neuropathy), so GAC is what I got.

3) I'm not sure what's up with some doctors and their thoughts on PET scans. I've heard the radioactive sugar (FDG?) tracer is very expensive. I've heard docs say the PET is generally just used after finding a single tumor (at initial diagnosis) to get a "global" look at the rest of the body for mets. One doc told me they can see all the "attributes" distinguishing live tumors from necrotic tissue on their MRIs, and once they're only looking in a small region (e.g. abdomen) for tumors, they can actually see finer details on MRI than they can on PET. But, there are machines that combine the technology (PET+MRI or PET+CT) where they can get the benefits of both in one scan.

I have not had a PET scan since my initial diagnosis 2.5 years ago, despite asking several times. I might get one this spring if things work out, but it's iffy. My big beef is that I requested a PET scan 1.5 years ago after my recurrence was first spotted on MRI. They were not 100% sure the mass was cancer, so they immediately followed up with EUS biopsy, which was negative and diagnosed as chronic pancreatitis. The outcome of that was to wait 6 weeks and redo an MRI, which (along with CA19-9 and positive Signatera) convinced them it was indeed a recurrence of the cancer.

The bummer is that I think an immediate PET scan would have seen radioactive sugar uptake in the tumor and overruled the bad EUS biopsy soon enough for me to have surgery or start chemo before the mets occurred. 🙁

If I could rewind time, I would have been a LOT more assertive about getting the PET scan and paying for it myself if insurance didn't.

Jump to this post

Thanks again markymarkfl.

Few more questions popped up from the "home team"...LOL

1. May I ask why they did so many rounds (12) of chemo pre-Whipple for you and what was your
original CA-19 before chemo? I did 5 rounds to shrink the tumor as it was too close to the superior mesenteric artery. My CA-19 was 246 at its highest before surgery and dropped to 38 after chemo and before surgery. My first "check" now after surgery and recovery; CA19 is 400 now w/out the tumor.
2. How much has your weight changed, pre-Whipple to post Whipple to last 12 months while you've been on your latest chemo.
3. How is your “quality of life” on chemo for last 12 months versus pre-Whipple? (exercise, travel, work, etc.) I find even now without chemo for months I get tired easily and tend to move much slower. I use to bike, gym, swim before - now I'm only doing long walks and some light weights.
4. I tolerated Folfirinox very well pre-Whipple, however, after the surgery/complications when I
was finally ready and thought I was strong enough for chemo (4 months after surgery) I ended
up back in the hospital after only one round (dehydration due to side effects). Although
everyone says G+A is more tolerable, I wonder if I will be able to tolerate it, especially long
term? (for the next year - at 3 weeks on and one week off)
5. Are you aware of any PANCAN patient having the metastasis spread to the spine and their
experience/outcome? (My latest CT and MRI this month shows no growths in the abdominal area - although a couple of lymph nodes seem swollen)

Thank you once again.

REPLY
@gamaryanne

@diana865 this is great news! Shrinkage means that you are on a regimen that is working! For some that is not the case and they have to keep changing regimens.

@waltsocal
I am now a 24 month thriver of this disease. Diagnosed stage IV.
I’ve seen se real for second opinions at different points and asked many questions. I have surmised that PETs are not seen as necessary when tumor markers, scans, and biopsies confirm cancer. Systemic chemo is their answer to cool the fires-wherever they may be raging. CT machines that incorporate PET scans exist and I have done this twice. It sometimes highlights areas that are not cancer-most often thyroid .

MRIs of the local areas like pancreas or liver are the most helpful to surgeons for truly understanding how/when/and possibility to get you to a
surgical next step.

I’m nothing special but I definitely have not quick work or volunteering where I can be useful. We can control a few things.. our diet, our rest, who we surround ourselves with but most important is your attitude. Choose to think of this as a chronic disease that can be managed. If your doctors don’t see it this way, perhaps look for a group that does. Often it’s led by our attitudes, not them!💜💜

Jump to this post

Thank you for the feedback !

I was wondering if you could share what type of chemo mix you are getting at this point and how often?

thank you.

REPLY
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