Recently,
I was diagnosed with metastatic lung cancer.
This news has stunned my husband, our children, family, friends, our co-workers
and me. Although most of you know the
beginning of my story not everyone does, so here goes…
In
October, Nathan left home to work on an organic farm in Ibarra, Ecuador. On December 1st, Wynn, Nina and I
left to visit him on the farm, pick him up, and then we all went to see Machu
Picchu in Peru. All of that happened and
it was an amazing family trip. We walked
and hiked in both countries, including Huayna Picchu at ~10,000 ft. I felt healthy and strong. Wynn and I returned home to get back to work
and Nathan and Nina returned to the farm to work a few more days.
A
day or so after returning home, Wynn took me to the ER at the hospital where I
work and he is on staff, for abdominal pain and mild nausea. I thought I had a stomach bug from South
America, or more likely, a gallstone.
The good news was that the abdominal ultrasound and CT found a normal
gall bladder, but the bad news was they found metastatic lesions in my lung,
liver, and ribs. At the time, it was not
known where the primary cancer was, but we knew that it had already spread to
other organs.
Since
that day, I’ve had an extensive work-up and we now know that I have non-small
cell adenocarcinoma of the lung with metastatic disease to my liver and many of
my bones. (Reading the bone scan report
is really depressing.)
One
promising piece of information we learned early on is about tumor mutations and
targeted therapies. Some patients with
adenocarcinomas have particular mutations which, if present, can be treated
with a pill…an oral medication…no IV chemotherapies…no hair loss…no nausea. But I needed additional tests to know if my
tumor had a favorable mutation before I could start the medication. More tests…more waiting.
A word about being the sick person: It
is extremely difficult to be THAT person.
I watch the people close to me cry.
I’ve held my husband and my children as they wept for me. I wish I wasn’t the person causing all this
sadness.