Running Update:
1/25/2019
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Run
|
5.0 mi
|
48:07
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||
1/26/2019
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Swim
|
2100.0 yd
|
|||
1/27/2019
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Run
|
9.0 mi
|
1:31:26
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||
1/28/2019
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Swim
|
2100.0 yd
|
|||
1/30/2019
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Run
|
5.0 mi
|
48:27
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||
2/6/2019
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Run
|
2.0 mi
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18:36
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||
2/8/2019
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Run
|
5.0 mi
|
49:10
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||
2/10/2019
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Run
|
7.0 mi
|
1:08:26
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||
2/11/2019
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Swim
|
1500.0 yd
|
|||
2/15/2019
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Swim
|
2100.0 yd
|
|||
2/16/2019
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Run
|
5.0 mi
|
49:44
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||
2/17/2019
|
Swim
|
2100.0 yd
|
|||
2/20/2019
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Run
|
5.0 mi
|
49:15
|
||
2/22/2019
|
Run
|
5.0 mi
|
48:29
|
||
2/23/2019
|
Swim
|
2100.0 yd
|
I’m not sure
why I’m even posting this month’s stats—February has been a training
disaster! I lost a week and a half to a
bad chest cold, then another week and a half to a stupid knee injury. My knee is still not 100%, but I’m hoping to
get a long run in this weekend and get back on track. Only three weeks until my first race of the
season, the NYC Half Marathon, with the Children’s Tumor Foundation.
Jane/NF Update:
Last week
Jane and I returned to NIH for her semi-annual check-up. Thank you for patiently waiting for our
report. It sometimes takes me a few days
to process what happened at the visit and to recover from the trauma from our
trips, because they can be traumatic!
Even when we get good news, it always come with the price of worry,
discomfort, and exhaustion; and knowing that the results are only a temporary
respite from the chronic troubles that NF presents.
And we did
get mostly good news from this visit!
But that simple accounting belies the hard work we had to do to obtain
it. I thought I would give you the hour-by-hour
details of our whirlwind trip so you could get a taste of our experience. I therefore present:
NIH February 2019:
There and Back Again in 36 Hours
This is the itinerary we got from our care team ahead of our trip:
An ambitious schedule (maybe even overly so), but doable as long as
we stayed on task.
Here’s how
it actually played out:
Monday
2/18/19, 10am.
Jane and I listened
and sang to most of the first act of Hamilton during our drive to the airport. (A pleasure!)
We navigated the airport without any problems and made it to our
gate. Then, just as we were boarding,
Jane told me her head was starting to hurt.
Jane is prone to migraines,
whether because of her medication or because of NF itself, we’ve never been
sure. And her migraines, when they happen, are not just bad headaches. They’re
knock-you-down headaches with nausea and vomiting that last for hours and only
resolve by sleeping it off.
Jane spent the first half of
our flight trying to get comfortable while retching into the airsickness bag. (She went through two.) She finally fell asleep on my shoulder and slept
for about a half hour.
2pm.
Once we deplaned,
we sat quietly in the airport for about 45 minutes before Jane felt well enough
to drive to NIH. Thankfully, we made
record time in the cab and once we got to the Children’s Inn at NIH Jane
immediately felt better. (Phew!) Someone crocheted a zillion scarves for the Children’s
Inn residents, so when we arrived, they gave us each one (and even one to take
home to Helen).
4pm.
Jane and I
found a perfect niche to play Bananagrams!
(I had brought this favorite game of ours along.) The Inn is still under construction because
of roof damage from last summer, so one of the hallways is now a dead end,
perfect for a quiet board game.
One of Jane's rounds |
6pm.
We joined
the communal dinner the Inn provided, then Jane had a chance to do some glass
painting with the other children.
Jane's creation has a black rim, in the center, middle row |
8pm.
Bed! We had to be up early the next morning!
Tuesday,
2/19/19 7am.
We started
the day at the Pediatric Clinic at the NIH Clinical Center for Jane’s vitals,
blood draw, and pre-MRI medication.
FYI: Jane is now 5’6”. Five feet six inches at eleven years
old! Everyone we meet exclaims about how
much she’s grown when they see her.
8am MRI.
MRI number 26 for Jane—she’s
getting pretty good at them. Jane fell
asleep during the second part of the MRI. I could tell because her legs
were twitching like she was dreaming! It seems the combination of not
sleeping well the night before and the 0.5mg of Ativan they gave her did the
trick.
9am EKG.
While
waiting for the EKG technician we were amused to find that the EKG staff use
the sticky EKG leads to tape things to the announcement board.
9:15am Pediatric
Clinic again.
A full
physical exam with the lovely new APRN on our team. All went well except that she had trouble
seeing Jane’s eardrums, so arranged for Jane to be seen by ENT later that
afternoon if we could fit it in!
10am Echocardiogram.
Easily the
most relaxing exam. The exam room is
dark and warm and filled with soothing heartbeat sounds. Jane has the EKG and echocardiogram every visit
because her study medication can affect heart function.
While in the waiting room
for this test we learned that the DC area was expecting 4-6 inches of snow starting
early Wednesday, the following morning. We were scheduled to fly home at
10am that day. I started wondering if we
could try to fly home Tuesday night, but with such a full schedule at the
hospital I didn’t think we’d ever be able to swing it.
10:30am Pediatric Clinic
again.
Back to meet with our research
nurse to go over medication diaries and other paperwork. By this time, Jane is getting antsy and starting
to pester me that she’s hungry. Already? Well, when you’re eleven and you get up an
hour earlier than you’re used to spend a day at the hospital, you don’t feel
like eating much breakfast. Thankfully
she was able to grab a granola bar and apple juice from the clinic fridge.
11:00 ID renewal.
Our NIH IDs were due to expire
soon. If we didn’t renew them this trip
it would make it very difficult to get back on the NIH campus on our next trip. Security is crazy strict on the NIH campus.
11:30 Lunch!
Jane even searched out her
favorite lunch lady to give her a hug and to allow her to marvel at how tall
Jane is getting :)
(Aside—eleven-year olds
should not spend enough time in the hospital to have a favorite lunch lady in
the hospital cafeteria.)
Noon Photography.
Photos taken to compare the
outward appearance of Jane’s tumor across visits. This appointment is usually quick and
relatively fun, though lately Jane will only pose for the photographer and not
for me!
12:30pm Ophthalmology Clinic.
Eye Clinic is the appointment
that take the longest—typically hours because of the many layers of testing
that take place. These are done because
Jane’s medication can affect the cornea and retina, and NF itself can affect
the optic nerve. That day we had a
miracle worker from the Eye Clinic staff who was able to complete Jane’s OCT in
record time. We were in and out in a little
over an hour!
1:45 Otolaryngology Clinic.
Jane’s right ear canal has
always been vulnerable. Before starting
selumetinib Jane’s plexiform neurofibroma (tumor) had surrounded and collapsed her
right ear canal, making it prone to obstruction and infection. In recent years that ear canal has opened
with the shrinking of Jane’s tumor.
However, today it seemed blocked again so our team’s APRN wanted it
double-checked by ENT. She managed to
get us in to see them in between Jane’s eye and skin appointments! They cleaned Jane’s ears and took a good look
at her ear canals and drums and pronounced them healthy.
2:00pm Dermatology Clinic.
One of the longest
appointments of the day. While waiting
to be examined Jane was holding up reasonably well. To pass the time she
read, played games on my phone, made balloons out of exam gloves, and we did
the New York Times crossword puzzle together.
Jane was scheduled with the
Dermatology Clinic in part to get recommendations for the significant eczema
that selumetinib has given her (OMG she’s itchy all the time! Despite oatmeal baths, gobs of moisturizer,
Vaseline, steroid creams, and Claritin!) but primarily to help address a
particularly nasty rash on her legs Jane has been dealing with for the past
month or so. It’s painful and itchy and
we’re not sure what is causing it. The
Dermatology team thought one possibility is a viral skin infection that can
occur when the skin is chronically damaged (as Jane’s has been from the
eczema); the other is a drug eruption—a reaction to her medication. The treatment for a drug eruption would be
steroid cream, but steroids would make the viral infection worse, so it was
important to determine what the cause was.
Unfortunately, that meant a biopsy of one of the spots. And not just a swab—it meant shaving off one
of the spots with a razor. By now it’s
almost 4pm. While this would not
ordinarily be a huge deal to you or me, try explaining that to an eleven-year-old
who has already been at the clinical center for 9 hours and who has already
gone through all the other testing I’ve described. Jane was not happy. There were tears and no small amount of
protest initially, but Jane agreed to let the doctors numb up her leg and take
a sample. The procedure itself took only
a few seconds, but all the discussion and anticipation ahead of the procedure
made it worse, especially coming on top of a long day.
This was the hardest part
for both of us. Jane was quite angry
with me from this point on. She blamed
me for making her have a biopsy. I
completely understood her frustration and anger, and knew I shouldn’t take it
personally, but that doesn’t make it easier for a mother.
4:15pm Family Meeting.
Last
appointment of the day! When it was time
for us to meet with our team, I went to collect Jane from the play room and found
her playing a board game with a girl who seemed to have a large tumor in the
same spot as Jane. As we walked away, I
said to Jane, “I wonder if she has NF, too.”
Jane said, “She does. I asked
her. She’s 17.” Jane never seems to shy away from making new
friends—it is one of her greatest strengths.
Finally, we heard some results: Jane’s tumor is stable, and perhaps even
slightly smaller! The decrease may not
be statistically significant, but that’s way better news than “slightly
larger”, as it has been on our last several visits. We are thrilled! We’re so relieved that the increased dose of
medication seems to be having an effect.
There is one very small section of the tumor that is a little more
prominent than before, but we’re just going to keep an eye on that for
now. All of Jane’s bloodwork and other testing
looked good as well.
Look at that lovely final plot entry! |
The radiologist created this comparison for us. It never ceases to amaze me how much progress we've made. |
The plan going forward:
-Jane will continue on same
dose of selumetinib. Her BSA is at the
lower end of the range for this dose, so she’ll stay on it for a while, unless
she grows significantly.
-Wait for the skin biopsy
results to see what can be done for the rash on Jane’s legs.
-Return to NIH again in 6
months. At that visit Jane will have a whole-body
MRI, instead of just a scan of her head and neck. Our team recommends this be done every few
years. The last time Jane had a whole-body
MRI was 5 years ago, as it was required for admission to the clinical trial for
Gleevec in which she participated at Indiana University. At that time, in addition to further
analyzing her known facial plexiform (and all its tentacles), we learned that
she also has a bony deformity in one of her cranial bones which is causing a small
herniation of part of her brain, and multiple 1-2 cm neurofibromas throughout
her chest, abdomen, pelvis, arms, and legs.
I don’t like the whole-body MRI because, quite frankly, I would rather
not know what other tumors may be lurking in Jane’s body since there is nothing else we can do about them. For me it will just be another source of
worry. But we trust our care team
completely, so we’ll do what they recommend.
5pm Travel Office.
Our appointments may finally
be complete, but we were not done with our day yet. Our next stop was the Travel Office to see if
we can fly home that night to avoid being stranded in the DC area with the
coming snowstorm. Miraculously, there
was a 10pm flight home available, so I took it.
Jane wanted nothing more to just head back to the Inn to sleep, but with
everyone at NIH telling us to get out while we could, I felt we’d be smarter to
leave then.
5:15pm Pharmacy.
We must pick up all of Jane’s
medication for the coming 6 months as selumetinib is not available by prescription
at any local pharmacy, and NIH is not supposed to ship it if at all possible.
This is what six months of chemotherapy looks like. |
5:30pm The Children’s Inn.
Packing up and checking out. OMG.
6pm Shuttle.
Caught the last bus from NIH
to BWI airport with time to spare!
7:30pm Diner.
We got to the airport starving
but with two hours free time before boarding, so we decided to treat ourselves
to a sit-down dinner at the airport diner!
Sigh.
Jane's favorite: an Oreo shake |
8:30pm At the gate.
As luck would have it, we
ended up taking a seat right next to Jane’s first grade teacher! She
recognized Jane before we even recognized her. She gave Jane a huge hug
:) She has always been one of Jane’s
favorite teachers, so it was a special coincidence to bump into her. And she was traveling with her puppy! What a delight for Jane after such a
demanding day! Jane’s teacher told us
that she herself was originally scheduled to fly home the following day, but
that her flight had already been canceled due to weather. I think we made a good choice to switch our
flights.
9:30pm Boarded!
We don’t
end up getting home until after midnight, but I’m so glad we didn’t get stuck
in DC! We both slept well in our own
beds that night.
And
there you have our hectic 36-hour journey, one of dozens we’ve made in our quest
to #endNF. You can see why we need a few
days to recover! At least now we have six
months to prepare for the next trip, though Jane will continue to face the
challenges of living with NF every day until then.
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