Facing up to chemotherapy
Bottom line, the oncologist felt, statistically, in the case of my size and type of tumor and my age of onset etc, that without chemo followed by hormone therapy, that I had a 25% chance of dying from recurrence within the next 15 years. He felt that statistically chemo followed by hormone therapy would reduce that chance to 10%. This was based on this occurring in someone without my immune deficiencies, meaning the prognosis would perhaps be even tougher in that context if I don’t do chemo followed by hormone therapy.
Of course they did take out my tumor and my lymph node showed no cancer, but when tumors become invasive they are solid at their core but the cells at the outer margins are as able to float away into the blood stream and lymph as dust particles on an old sweet retrieved from under a sofa where its been for 10 years. Can you envision retrieving that solid sweet without a single dust particle becoming airborne? Well, that’s the analogy. Left alone, those stray cancer cells have a 25% chance of killing me if we don’t get to them first, before the develop into new tumors. So in 2-3 weeks time we will start a 12 week chemo run. I will get chemo for 3 hours on one day, then get 3 weeks to recover. Then I’ll do that again, then again, then again, then I’m finished. Yes, my hair will fall out, I will likely have problems with my mouth, throat, digestive tract and bowels. But I will be killing any stray cancer cells before they have a chance to develop again. If I wait and take my chances, survival rate would be significantly lower.
As for white cells, they will give me injections that will stimulate production of new ones. And IgA, well apparently if we give me enough white cells we can probably compensate for the impact of IgA deficiency on poor white cell activity.
I will double check my recurrence risk through the Oncotype DX test before we start to be SURE the benefits of chemo will outweigh my risks.
I will shave my head before treatment. I have some cool hats. I am well stocked to try and recover between chemo sessions. Chris is right there with me. My friends are a great team. Wish me luck. I’m off to battle.
Donna Williams, BA Hons, Dip Ed.
Author, artist, singer-songwriter, screenwriter.
Autism consultant and public speaker.
http://www.donnawilliams.net
I acknowledge Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people as the Traditional Owners of this country throughout Australia, and their connection to land and community.
Good luck Donna. You and Chris are in my thoughts.
You’re well prepared, and being cheered on from the sidelines. Luck!!
We got your back, brave mate. Standing by your side through thick and through thin.
Best wishes and best of luck, Donna, and Chris, with love, Your Friend, Varun
You have the tenacity and focus to get through this Donna. Just keep believing in yourself, and remember this is but a temporary battle once fought you won’t hopefully have to ever repeat again. The rest of this cancer, if it is there, is going to get it’s ass kicked!Good Luck!
Go Donna you tell those bad bugs to “stick it”. Luv you always, Heather.
Andrew and the kids and I will be thinking of you alot. Bringing out the heavy artilary, I bet those bugs don’t stand a chance. All the best
and I have the most gorgeous dreadlocks I’ll be wearing thanks to you 😉
Let it track down and gobble up those stray cells, like a pac-man!
Thinking of you,
Kerry
Hi Donna, you don’t know me, but I read two of your books , my 5 years old son was diagnosed with autism, and, seemingly clever, he struggles to get the meaning of things. That’s my link to getting to know you just a tiny little bit through your two books.
I wish you all the strenght in the world and the best of luck.
Lana
Hi Lana, if he is meaning deaf and meaning blind, his hands will be his eyes and ears and a teacher aware of visual and verbal agnosias can teach him accordingly. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Agnosia
🙂 http://www.donnawilliams.net/jumbledjigsaw.0.html … all the best to him and to you. thanks for your best wishes.
Your established strength as a warrior for Autism and self will help you power on into your fight with challenging this unwanted part of your life.
My thoughts are with Chris too, as he helps you (and each other) with the road ahead.
Your arts will help soothe your soul.
I wish you all the very best and hope for a speedy recovery.
P.s. I’ll keep the kettle ready and waiting for our next cuppa together.
Hugs to you both, Louise 😉
Hope all goes well with your chemo
I’ve been told fish oil helps keep your hair
love to c u lecture when u get better
Justine Arnold
asperger woman
not with Taxotere. Different chemo causes different hair loss… with Taxotere hair loss is guaranteed and it won’t care about fish oil. I’ve been on fish oil for 20 yrs, incl through chemo and I’m bald as a baby’s bum right now.