Thursday, October 24, 2013

The Brain Game Day 3-4

After two bouts of brain radio surgery I was becoming an old pro as the masked man with the x-rayed head so I thought I would combine the 3rd and 4th treatment into one post.  There was a lot going on the last two days and, interestingly, a lot of it did not involve my sessions at Duke.  On Wednesday morning our host Rick Wilson was doing a little repair work on one of the doors in the house.  He is very handy and does excellent work so I was surprised to see him walking down the hall with his thumb wrapped in a paper towel which was slowly tuning pink.  It turned out he had nipped his thumb on the table saw and one glimpse at the wound told me that it was time to head to the ER for an expert opinion.  So off to the UNC hospital ER we went which completed our circuit of hospitals (Duke, Veterans Hospital and UNC).  Out visit involved a lot of waiting around and we were glad to be there to keep Rick company.
The Man With a Red Thumb
The hospital at the University of North Carolina is huge and the emergency room is busy so the three of us waited for a few hours until Helen and I had to leave to get to Duke for my treatment.  We had fun telling that to the nurses at UNC - "Take good care of Rick, we have to run to Duke for brain surgery".  So off to Durham we went.  When you have radiation at the Cancer Center they have valet parking so you just pull up and walk in.
Valet Parking at the Cancer Center
A quick trip downstairs to Radiation Oncology passing some inspiring words along the way.
Words to Inspire

After checking in it was just a short wait before Rick came to fetch me back to radio land where I donned my plastic mask and said goodbye to a little more of that nasty hitchhiker in my head.  Thanks to the wonderful organization of the Cancer Center we were out the door and on our way back to Chapel Hill in just 45 minutes.  When we got back in the car we gave Rick a call.  He was still in the emergency room and just could not help himself from pointing out that I had gone to Duke and had brain surgery in lest time than it took them to bandaged his thumb.

After a crazy day like that we all were glad to lay low at the Wilson residence.  I tried to get a good nights sleep but the steroids were back playing havoc with my sleep along with a headache that would come and go.  After the radio surgery is over I can ween myself off the steroids and  I look forward to the day I no longer have to take those nasty pills.

Thursday, day four, was pretty much a replay of the day before without the drama of accidental cuts and ER visits.  I am really getting used to the treatment now and almost fell asleep mask and all while I was being treated.  Afterwards Helen and I headed to Raleigh for a visit the State Fair where we learned that anything and everything can and will be fried and offered up as food.
If It Moves, Fry It!
We sampled some of the deep fried fare and it all tasted like deep fried nothing - yuk.  It seems like everyone comes there just to eat this stuff because it was about 90% food stalls and 10% other stuff.  We specifically wanted to check out the Yesteryear Exhibit where Helen found some great stuff to bring back for the Mercantile so the trip was a success.

Tomorrow brings the last of my radio surgery treatments and, hopefully, the end of my brain tumor.  We also have meetings scheduled with my radio oncologist Dr. Patel and my oncologist Dr. Hanks so by tomorrow evening I hope to have a pretty good picture of where I stand now and what the plan is for going forward.

It has been a long week and both Helen and I miss our home in Todd.  It was cold up in the mountains today with spits of snow, sleet and rain - a sure indicator that winter is coming around the corner.  After dealing with the traffic, congestion and "me first you second" atmosphere that sometimes exists in all urban areas I am so looking forward to getting back to our peaceful but always interesting and inspiring life on the banks of the New River.

J

Tuesday, October 22, 2013

The Brain Game Day 2

Just a short post today because Day two was a lot like day one.
I did get a decent nights sleep last night especially compared to my sleepless evening the night before.  Chalk it up to exhaustion, an over the counter sleep aid and Karen and Rick's wonderful home in Chapel Hill.  By the way, it is for sale in case you know anyone looking for a beautiful home in Chapel Hill.
Karen and Rick's Beautiful Chapel Hill Home
My treatment at Duke was scheduled for 3 pm so we had some time to kill and decided to head to the Imax Theater in Durham to see Gravity which stars Sandra Bullock and George Clooney.  It was an awesome experience.  All the reviews said to be sure to see it in 3 D and I would agree so get to the theater soon if you want to catch this space adventure.

After the show we stopped at the Durham VA hospital (right across the street from Duke) to see our dear friend Lainey and her Dad who was admitted the day before.  That hospital is always full and Mr. Edmiston had to wait a while at the hospital in Boone to get a bed.  Father and daughter seemed to be in good spirits considering the circumstances and I think that both they were able to find a place at this excellent hospital.

After a quick lunch (thanks Lainey!) we went around the block for a little brain surgery.  This wound was easier because I knew what to expect - lay down, strap on the mask, wait for it to be over, walk out 30 minutes later with a slightly altered brain.
Lauren and Rick - The Brain Adjusters
After the latest session with Lauren and Rick - the Brain Adjusters - we headed back to Chapel Hill and then to dinner with Helen's dear West Virginia friend Rhonda, her husband Doug and Rick.  We had a great meal (thanks Rhonda and Doug) before heading back to the Wilson's for a hopefully restful evening to get us ready to get up and do it again tomorrow.

Before I go I wanted to say something about my wonderful wife Helen whose love and support have been such a blessing in my life.  On top of running her own business, volunteering for a number of organizations, and being a pillar of the Todd community Helen has had to deal with my disease and treatment (and believe me, that is a lot to deal with) all with a smile on her face and never, never a complaint.  Truly an amazing woman.  I am so blessed and so happy to have her in my life.  God bless you Helen - I love you so.

Monday, October 21, 2013

The Brain Game Day1

It was a rough Sunday night which involved a blistering headache and very little sleep.  In order to minimize the side effects of the steroids I have been taking Dr. Patel had slowly reduced the amount I would take daily.  I guess we missed a little on the low side which brought the headache back for a second act.  God bless Helen who loaded the car on Monday morning and did the chauffeur duties while I tried to catch a nap while we headed East.  As usual everything was extremely organized at the Duke Cancer Center and it was not long before we were escorted into the radio surgery area.  The techs laid me down on the table and proceeded to strap my head into my plastic mask.
Attaching the Mask
Once the mask was attached the techs moved out to the control room to work on getting everything calibrated so that my head would be in the exact position necessary for the xrays to hit the tumor.  I am so sorry I didn't get their names but the folks working on me were just great.  Before they left they flipped on some classic Billy Joel to keep me company.
Ready to be Zapped
The procedure took about forty five minutes and really was not too bad.  I just laid there, listened to the music and tried to find that happy zen place and wait until it was over.  It wasn't long before I was detached from my mask and on my way.  I never actually felt a thing the whole time - crazy!

Back in the lobby we waited a few minutes and were shown into an examining room where we soon met with Dr. Patel.  It says so much about the care at the Duke Cancer Center that I was able to meet with my Dr. on short notice without an appointment.  With Dr. Patel's guidance I had cut back on the amount of steroid medicine up to that point but, now that the headaches were back, he decided that I would have to add a bit more to my daily dose which hopefully will solve the headache problem.  He also was good enough to prescribe a sleep aid as it has been difficult for me to get more than a few hours of sleep at a time.  So with all of these problems solved we headed out to Chapel Hill where we are once again the guests of our great friends Karen and Rick Wilson.  One day down and four to go then it is bye bye brain tumor.

Thanks to all of my wonderful friends and family who sent me down the mountain full of prayers and good wishes.  It makes the load so much lighter.  God Bless you all.

J

Friday, October 18, 2013

NY Times Article About Immune Therapy

Hello all.  There was an excellent article in the New York Times this week about the immune therapy treatment I am currently receiving at Duke.  The drug that I have been given (actually it is an anti-body) is called Ipilimumab and is mentioned in the article.

 As I mentioned in my previous post, I will be at Duke next week for radio surgery on the tumor in my brain.  The reason that I am being treated separately for the brain tumor is that the Ipilimumab, being an antibody, has difficulty bridging the brain blood barrier which exists to prevent nasty viruses and bacteria from getting at our grey matter.

It is good to know that I am at the forefront of cancer research and that this type of treatment has the potential of offering successful treatment in the future not only for melanoma but for many other cancers as well.


New York Times

October 14, 2013
Breaking Through Cancer’s Shield
By GINA KOLATA
For more than a century, researchers were puzzled by the uncanny ability of cancer cells to
evade the immune system. They knew cancer cells were grotesquely abnormal and should be
killed by white blood cells. In the laboratory, in Petri dishes, white blood cells could go on the
attack against cancer cells. Why, then, could cancers survive in the body?
The answer, when it finally came in recent years, arrived with a bonus: a way to thwart a
cancer’s strategy. Researchers discovered that cancers wrap themselves in an invisible
protective shield. And they learned that they could break into that shield with the right drugs.
When the immune system is free to attack, cancers can shrink and stop growing or even
disappear in lucky patients with the best responses. It may not matter which type of cancer a
person has. What matters is letting the immune system do its job.
So far, the drugs have been tested and found to help patients with melanoma, kidney and lung
cancer. In preliminary studies, they also appear to be effective in breast cancer, ovarian cancer
and cancers of the colon, stomach, head and neck, but not the prostate.
It is still early, of course, and questions remain. Why do only some patients respond to the new
immunotherapies? Can these responses be predicted? Once beaten back by the immune
system, how long do cancers remain at bay?
Still, researchers think they are seeing the start of a new era in cancer medicine.
“Amazing,” said Dr. Drew Pardoll, the immunotherapy research director at Johns Hopkins
School of Medicine. This period will be viewed as an inflection point, he said, a moment in
medical history when everything changed.
“A game-changer,” said Dr. Renier J. Brentjens, a leukemia specialist at Memorial Sloan-
Kettering Cancer Center.
“A watershed moment,” said his colleague, Dr. Michel Sadelain. (Both say they have no financial
interests in the new drugs; Dr. Pardoll says he holds patents involving some immunotherapy
drugs, but not the ones mentioned in this article.)
Researchers and companies say they are only beginning to explore the new immunotherapies
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and develop others to attack cancers, like prostate, that seem to use different molecules to
evade immune attacks. They are at the earliest stages of combining immunotherapies with
other treatments in a bid to improve results.
“I want to be very careful that we do not overhype and raise patients’ expectations so high that
we can never meet them,” said Dr. Alise Reicin, a vice president at Merck for research and
development.
But the companies have an incentive to speed development of the drugs. They are expected to
be expensive, and the demand huge. Delays of even a few months means a huge loss of potential
income.
Nils Lonberg, a senior vice president at Bristol-Myers Squibb, notes that immunotherapy
carries a huge advantage over drugs that attack mutated genes. The latter approach all but
invites the cancer to escape, in the same way bacteria develop resistance to antibiotics.
By contrast, immunotherapy drugs are simply encouraging the immune system to do what it is
meant to do; it is not going to adapt to evade the drugs.
“We are hoping to set up a fair fight between the immune system and the cancer,” Dr. Lonberg
said.
Lowering Defenses
The story of the new cancer treatments started with the discovery of how cancers evade
attacks. It turned out that they use the body’s own brakes, which normally shut down the
immune system after it has done its job killing virus-infected cells.
One braking system, for example, uses a molecule, PD-1, on the surface of T-cells of the
immune system. If a target cell has molecules known as PD-L1 or PD-L2 on its surface, the Tcell
cannot attack it.
So some cancer cells drape themselves in those molecules. The effect, when T-cells are near, is
like turning off a light switch. The T-cells just shut down.
Cancers that do not use PD-L1 or PD-L2 are thought to use other similar systems, just starting
to be explored. Body systems have a lot of redundancy to tamp down immune attacks. But for
now, the PD system showed researchers how cancer cells can evade destruction.
“That is what has been realized in the past few years,” said Ira Mellman, vice president of
research oncology at Genentech. “Tumor cells are making use of this brake.”
The discovery led to an idea: Perhaps a drug that covered up any of those PD molecules, on the
cancer cells or on white blood cells, would allow the immune system to do its job.
(There is another immunotherapy strategy — to take white blood cells out of the body and
program them with genetic engineering to attack a cancer. Studies have just begun and are
promising. But researchers note that this is a very different sort of treatment that is highly
labor-intensive and has been successful so far in only a few types of cancer.)
The first indication that a cancer’s protective shield might be breached came in 2010, after a
trial of the drug ipilimumab in patients with otherwise untreatable melanoma. The drug
unleashes the immune system, letting it overwhelm tumors even if they have a protective
shield.
Patients who took the drug survived an average of 10 months, or 4 months longer than those
randomly assigned to a different treatment. And about 20 percent of patients who responded
have now survived up to 10 years. It was the first drug to improve survival for patients with
metastatic melanoma in a randomized trial.
“It was spectacular,” said Dr.Axel Hoos, vice president for oncology research and development
at GlaxoSmithKline, who helped develop the drug when he was at Bristol-Myers Squibb. “Until
that tipping point, immunotherapy had a bad name. It didn’t work.”
The drug was approved for melanoma in March 2011, with a high price tag — $120,000 for a
course of therapy.
It had another drawback. By unleashing the immune system, it sometimes led to attacks on
normal cells. In some cases, the reaction was fatal. But the trial was a proof of concept. It
showed that cancers can succumb to an attack by the immune system.
“That opened the door a crack,” said Dr. Pardoll, of Johns Hopkins. “People stood up and took
notice.”
A Signal Emerges
Dr. Suzanne Topalian, a professor of surgery and oncology at Johns Hopkins, was one of the first
to test the new drugs in patients. The trial began in 2006, with 39 patients who got a PD-1
blocker, made by Medarex, since bought by Bristol-Myers Squibb. The study included patients
with a variety of advanced cancers, who had failed all traditional treatments; most had tried at
least three, without any luck.
The study looked at safety, not effectiveness. But Dr. Topalian noticed something intriguing.
One patient with lung cancer treated at a collaborating medical center had a partial regression
of her tumor.
“It was very temporary; it was not enough to call it a response,” Dr. Topalian said. “But it was a
signal; it was there.”
That was surprising because researchers had assumed the cancers most vulnerable to an
immune system attack were melanoma and kidney cancer. Lung cancer was supposed to be out
of the question.
“Julie and I got on the phone with Medarex and said, ‘You have to include lung cancer in your
next clinical trial,’ ” Dr. Topalian said, referring to her colleague Dr. Julie Brahmer.
That led to studies of two Bristol-Myers drugs: one that blocks PD-1 and another that blocks
PD-L1. The studies included a 503 patients with a variety of advanced cancers who had
exhausted other options.
The findings, presented in October last year at a meeting of the American Society of Clinical
Oncology, were striking. A significant proportion of patients responded, including 18 percent of
76 lung cancer patients who got the PD-1 drug and 10 percent of 49 who got PD-L1 drug. Dr.
Pardoll, who is married to Dr. Topalian, said that when she and her colleagues presented the
data, “it was almost like a hush fell over the room: ‘Can this really be?’ ”
Emblems of Hope
As researchers continue to study the new drugs and ask if they can improve their results by
combining them with other therapies, they are heartened by some of the rare patients whose
cancers were halted by the drugs. They caution that these patients are unusual; critical studies
to reveal the drugs’ effects on populations of cancer patients are still under way.
“What you really want to know,” said Dr. Roger M. Perlmutter, the president of Merck
Research Laboratories, “is, are people living longer?” For that, “you just have to wait,” he
continued, adding, “What I don’t want to do is give people false hope.”
But some patients, like two treated at Hopkins, have become emblems of hope.
In 2007, M. Dennis Sisolak, who is 72 and a retired engineer from Bel Air, Md., learned he had
kidney cancer. The tumor was huge, and the cancer had spread. After he tried two new drugs to
no avail, his doctor, Dr. Charles G. Drake, a kidney cancer specialist at Johns Hopkins, enrolled
him in an early phase clinical trial of a PD-1 inhibitor. His cancer disappeared on scans and has
not returned, even though he has had no treatment for a year.
“I have a lot of people praying for me,” Mr. Sisolak said.
Dr. Drake said three of his patients had similar responses, including one who was treated five
years ago in the first study. All, with advanced disease, would have been dead by now, he said,
adding, “I have never seen anything like this, personally.”
David Gobin, 63, a retired Baltimore police officer, has a similar story. He learned he had lung
cancer in 2008. He had surgery to remove the two lower lobes of his right lung, then radiation
and chemotherapy.
The treatment was grueling: he lost 70 pounds. Two years later, the cancer was back, and it
had spread to the wall of his chest. He had more surgery, more chemotherapy, more radiation.
In 2010, Mr. Gobin entered a clinical trial of an experimental drug that interferes with cell
growth, but had no success.
Thenhis doctor at Johns Hopkins suggested a Phase 1 trial of an anti-PD-1 drug.
“Sure, I’ll do it,” Mr. Gobin recalled saying. “What do I have to lose?”
His tumors shrank significantly and have not grown, even though he stopped taking the drug
eight months ago.
“Every day I have my feet on the grass is a good day,” Mr. Gobin said. “I was in the right place
at the right time. I will always have cancer, but you know what, I can live with it.
“The Lord wanted me to be alive, and I am alive.”
This article has been revised to reflect the following correction:
Correction: October 17, 2013
An article on Tuesday about new immunotherapies for treating some types of cancer rendered
incorrectly the name of a patient who was undergoing experimental treatment for kidney cancer.
He is M. Dennis Sisolak, not Dennis M. Sisolak. The error was repeated in an accompanying picture
caption.

Thursday, October 17, 2013

Last week was an interesting one.  After finding out that I had a hitchhiker riding around in my head, an appointment was set up at Duke for some imaging and consultation about where to go from here.  But before that all happened a little Todd magic was on the agenda.

Charles Welch the longtime friend and accompanist to Doc Watson came to the Mercantile for a little concert in the Gallery.  He brought his buddy John Kirby who plays an amazing tenor guitar (a four string guitar tuned alike mandolin).  The lucky folks that were there were treated to a wonderful concert of music and stories of playing and touring with the famous Doc Watson who was most definitely there in spirit.
Charles Welch and John Kirby pickin' at the Mercantile.  Amazing!
Charles has very generously offered to help me with a little musical project I am trying to organize and I am overjoyed to accept his generous offer.  More about that in future posts.

After the concert we ran over to Julie and Cecil Gurganus farm on Cane Mill Road for their yearly Molasses Boil.  Julie, Cecil and their friend John grow cane all summer and come fall harvest it to make that sticky brown sweet brew that makes everything, especially cornbread, taste wonderful.  Helen has always used Cecil's brew for her famous mountain molasses cookies.  The boil is an all weekend affair that involves running the raw can through a grinder to extract the juice then an all day boil to concentrate the liquid down to the final product.  Lots of friends and neighbors come for a pot luck meal and it doesn't take long before the instruments are pulled out and music fills the holler.
Mountain Molasses Hot off the Fire

After all the weekend excitement it was a quiet few days waiting to go down to Durham on Thursday and Friday.  Once again our good friends Karen and Rick offered their home in Chapel Hill for Thursday evening.  The first scan was an MRI set for Thursday at Duke (formally Durham) Regional hospital.  After a bit of a wait I was escorted in and had to remove anything and everything metal so that I could lay down and have this helmet type thing attached to my head then into the tunnel I went.  It was a tight fit all around and so I did my best to get into that happy zen space so I could just zone out but that machine was LOUD and not in any kind of a melodic way.  After a while I was pulled out of the tunnel so they could shoot contrast into my arm then back in for more noisy fun.  Not that big a deal but I have had better times.  After the ordeal Helen and I caught a movie and a nice meal before heading to Chez Wilson for the evening.

On Friday it was time to meet with Dr. Patel my radio oncologist.  Like all of the doctors I have met at Duke Dr. Patel was an amazing combination of talent, empathy and intelligence.  When we had looked at the film he explained that I had three treatment options - whole brain radiation, radio surgery and traditional surgery. Dr. Patel very patiently reviewed these options and answered every question that I could think of.  Although a meeting with the traditional surgery team was scheduled for later that day I was certain that the radio surger option was the best choice for me - effective, non invasive with minimal side effects.  

Radio surgery is an interesting little procedure.  Using maps of your brain and a custom made plastic mask the exact tumor location is zapped by high energy Xrays which kills the tumor but (hopefully not) the surrounding tissue.  In order to be ready for the treatment I needed another CAT scan and had to have my mask made.

Who is that Masked Man?







The mask goes on warm and soft then hardens has it cools.  The idea is that it keeps me from moving my head while the X-rays do their thing.  I am scheduled to have the radio surgery next week October 21-26.  They say it is painless and just involves laying still on the table for a half an hour or so.  Keep your fingers crossed that they hit the right spot. 

Well I have been trying to post this for something like ten days or so and just haven't had time to wrap it up and hit the publish button so I thought I would just send it "as is" and hope that you all will forgive me for the abrupt end to this chapter.  

Thanks so much for all of your thoughts and prayers.  
j