Day 2 and Diagnosis Story

Well I’m back at the Oncology office waiting to get started. Today I have my Mommy here with me. I definitely slept better last night and feel pretty good—not as nervous, not as tired or achy. I’ll update this post after treatment today, but while I’ve got some time I’ll tell the story about how I got here—

For a while now I’ve been bruising easily—I can recall thinking this all the way back to 2020. It would seem to get worse if I was also fighting a cold or flu or virus. It started to get to a point where I was suspecting I had an autoimmune issue. Well in early March, Zev (my nine-month old son) pinched my arm and it left a 2 inch bruise on my bicep that stuck around for a while. Kelli had had enough at that point and made me an appointment with my general doctor to have some blood work done. My blood work showed I had very low platelets. For context, normal levels are 137-397 K/cumm but mine was 29 (and has been very gradually dropping since my first check, down to 23 yesterday). My other blood levels aren’t great either (white blood cells, red blood, hemoglobin) but they’re just below the healthy threshold.

My family doctor sent me to a hematologist/oncologist (blood and cancer specialist) to get to the bottom of my blood issues. I got into the office the next week and they sent many vials of blood to labs. One lab tech noticed hairy B cells in my blood and that’s how they discovered I have Hairy Cell Leukemia. It seems like I have what they call “classic HCL” which is good news. It’s very treatable. Nearly 100% remission rate. I’ll have to keep doing regular blood work even after being in remission because it could come back but it sounds like it’ll be easy to kick each time it comes back.

I’ve joined Facebook groups, an online community and a HCL patient registry. From what I’ve read online, remission lengths really vary from person to person. Some people relapse only after a couple years but most seem to make it 6-10 and one man has been in remission for 46 years and going strong! They don’t know what causes this disease. There is a genetic mutation involved but they don’t believe it’s hereditary which is good news for my boys.

The initial shock was a lot for me—was feeling scared, sad, guilty, overwhelmed. But it didn’t take long for me to become very relieved and grateful for this optimistic diagnosis and for all the love and support that I have. Thanks for the prayers, thoughts, good vibes and support! Here’s to hoping today is uneventful!

POST TREATMENT UPDATE:

Today was easy. No bad reactions to the drugs today. I woke up with a bit of a rash on my right foot and it (my foot) felt warm for the second half of my treatment today but the nurses seemed unconcerned and it’s not painful or itchy. Was done with treatment a little after 2:00pm and today was my last long day. I have chemo the next three days which should only take a couple hours in the mornings. And then Monday I’ll get my second immunotherapy dose. I’ll get 8 doses in total once a week. My immune system will likely take a blow from the chemo but I should bounce back quickly and get back to my daily life in no time!

Day 1 of Chemo

Hey friends! I thought I’d go ahead and start this blog to update everyone on my journey with Hairy Cell Leukemia (HCL). Today I start my little 5 day chemo treatment. I’m nervous about putting this stuff in my body but I had a buddy tell me to think of Chemo as my friend so that’s what I’m focusing on. I had a hard time sleeping last night and I’ve read that they may give me Benadryl to mitigate any allergic reactions so I may fall asleep in the chair. Kelli’s here for moral support and to watch TV with me. I like the folks in this office. I’m being treated by Tennessee Oncology and they seem to have a good reputation. I’ll make a post later about my diagnosis story in case any of you are curious about how we figured out I had HCL. Here we go!

POST TREATMENT UPDATE:

Today was a long day. Met with the Doctor. Didn’t really learn anything new just sort of caught up. Before any treatment they give me my “Pre Meds”— two Tylenol pills, then through my IV they give me Benadryl and some steroid. These are supposed mitigate any allergic reactions to the meds. I got my first dose of chemo, Cladribine, which is a pretty mild one. It shouldn’t make me lose hair or anything. And then they immediately started me on my immunotherapy rituxen which has antibodies that are supposed to teach my body to fight this cancer cell I think.

The Chemo drip went smoothly. Took a couple hours. Immunotherapy took a long time because they were stopping every thirty minutes to check my vitals and make sure my body wasn’t freaking out. About halfway through the immunotherapy I did have a bit of a bad reaction. I started shivering (like the kind of shaking you get when you’re freezing cold but I wasn’t) and I had an awful headache. The nurses were there and ready to help me through it though. They stopped the immunotherapy drip to give me the “pre meds” again. Then we got back to it and the rest of the day was fine. Left around 4:30pm after getting there around 8:15am.

I didn’t finish my first dose of immunotherapy so I’ll have another long day tomorrow when I do the same—chemo followed by immunotherapy to finish the first dose. Hoping it goes a bit smoother but all in all, today wasn’t so bad.