Saturday, April 6, 2013

The Ibrutinib story


Forbes Magazine
April 5, 2013

The Wild Story Behind A Promising Experimental Cancer Drug

Today, Pharmacyclics is a $5.3B company, a value attributable largely to its promising lead compound, ibrutinib, currently in late clinical development for chronic lymphocytic leukemia (CLL) and mantle cell lymphoma, and under investigation for a range of other B-cell malignancies.  A joint development and marketing deal with J&J was announced in late 2011, valued at nearly $1B, including $150M upfront plus significant milestone payments.  Analysts are already pegging future sales in the billions.
Ibrutinib’s emergence as a promising oncology drug – “The Gleevec of CLL,” as one oncologist described it to me – is an almost absurdly improbable story embracing the Human Genome Project on the one hand, and Scientology on the other.
A “Most Wondrous Map”
In 1998, a radically inventive biologist, J. Craig Venter, founded a company called Celera, with the goal of sequencing the human genome within three years.  He was competing against a much larger, well-funded public effort, led by Human Genome Project Director Dr. Francis Collins, who is now Director of the National Institutes of Health.
Both efforts succeeded; the initial draft map of the human genome was famously announced on June 26, 2000 by President Clinton, joined by Venter and Collins.  Clinton said, “Today the world is joining us here in the East Room to celebrate the completion of the first survey of the entire human genome. Without a doubt, this is the most important, most wondrous map ever produced by humankind.”
In 2002, Venter stepped down as President of Celera, and over the next four years, its promise progressively evaporated.  Turning information into value – arguably the key challenge of the genomic era – proved elusive.  The company’s attempts to try its hand at drug development — kick-started by the acquisition of Axys Pharmaceuticals in 2001 — had largely fallen short.  Electing to focus on diagnostic testing, the company unloaded its early stage assets – a phase 1 HDAC inhibitor and a few other preclinical molecules, which in 2006 were picked up for a pittance by a small struggling company called Pharmacyclics.
A Useful Tool
Included among the preclinical assets were small molecules targeting a signal transduction molecule called Bruton’s trysosine kinase – BTK – an enzyme that sits downstream of the B-cell receptor, and was targeted by Celera because of its putative role in autoimmune diseases such as rheumatoid arthritis (a thoughtful discussion of “immunokinase” drug discovery can be found here).  The BTK gene itself — tied through “classical” genetics to the disorder X-linked agammaglobulinemia (XLA) — was first identified in 1993.
As part of their efforts to screen candidate BTK inhibitors, Celera researchers created a “tool compound,” a molecule that would bind BTK permanently (i.e. covalently), and could also be fluorescently labeled.  This tool would help the company identify compounds that could bind BTK tightly, but not covalently, since drug developers traditionally shy away from compounds that permanently bind their target, concerned about their “potential for off-target reactivity,” as a recent review nicely summarizes.  That said, many drugs, both ancient– such as aspirin – and recent – such as clopidogrel (Plavix) and esomeprazole (Nexium) – work through a covalent mechanism.
As Celera researchers pursued BTK inhibitors, they made two important discoveries: first, they learned that their molecules seemed to show activity in arthritis models; second, they progressively appreciated that their tool compound seemed more promising than any of the other molecules emerging from their screens.  It was at this point that Celera’s assets were sold to Pharmacyclics.
Developing Science
Meanwhile, elegant experiments in mice by Harvard immunologist Klaus Rajewsky highlighted the importance of B-cell receptor signaling for B-cell development, stimulating cancer researchers to wonder whether inhibiting B-cell receptor signaling might help treat B-cell cancers.  In rapid succession, scientists from Stanford, Harvard, and other universities reportedly reached out to a small Bay-area biotechnology company called Rigel to request permission to study one of their lead compounds, fostamitinib, an inhibitor of the Syk kinase which is also in the B-cell receptor signal transduction pathway.
The initial results were promising but not stellar, although encouraging responses were seen in some patients, according to Dr. Jeff Sharman, who at the time was a Stanford oncology fellow in the legendary lab of Ronald Levy, and an early proponent of inhibiting B-cell receptor signaling in B-cell cancers.  (In 2010, Rigel partnered fostamitinib with AstraZeneca, and it is currently in late-phase development for rheumatoid arthritis).  Sharman (disclosure: we trained together at MGH) recalls that a frequent visitor to the Levy lab was Dr. Richard Miller, an oncologist and entrepreneur who at the time was CEO of a local drug development company: Pharmacyclics.
Local Hero
Richard Miller was already a bit of a legend in the Bay area; in 1984, he co-founded IDEC with Stanford colleague Levy, UCSD immunologist Ivor Royston, San Diego bioentrepreneur Howard Birndorf, and a trio of top-tier VC investors led by Brook Byers of KPCB (he’s the “B”), and including Tony Evnin of Venrock and Pitch Johnson of Asset Management; IDEC integrated an existing company, Biotherapy Systems, that Miller and Levy had founded in Mountain View.   In 1997, IDEC delivered rituximab, the first monoclonal antibody approved by the FDA for cancer treatment; it is also used for the treatment of rheumatoid arthritis.  IDEC merged with Biogen in 2003.
Miller ultimately left IDEC, and in 1991 teamed up with chemist Jonathan Sessler to co-found Pharmacyclics, a collaboration that reportedly began when Miller was treating Sessler for cancer at Stanford in the early 1980’s.  The company was initially focused on a class of molecules called “texaphyrins,” synthesized by Sessler (who had moved on to the University of Texas); the name may reflect either the UT origins or the resemblance of the structure to the five-point star of Texas.
While initially promising, the lead molecule,  motexafin gadolinium (Xcytrin), was unfortunately not panning out in clinical studies of brain metastases (eventually leading to a much-publicized dispute between Miller and the FDA), prompting Pharmacyclics to start thinking about a Plan B.  Enter Celera.
A Prepared Mind
The opportunity to pick up potentially promising assets from Celera – essentially, acquire an early-stage pipeline – was appealing to Pharmacyclics; while the deal apparently was initially focused only on the Phase 1 HDAC asset, Miller reportedly was keen for the BTK inhibitor program to be included as well; it was an easy request to grant, as its perceived value at the time was just about zero.
Additional studies of autoimmune disease seemed to confirm the potential of the “tool” BTK inhibitor, now designated PCI-32765; however, Miller was eager to explore its potential in B-cell cancers.  The problem was that it was hard to find appropriate models to use, either cell lines or animal models, as it was felt essential to find a model in which growth was explicitly dependent upon B-cell receptor activation, rather than bypassing it as was more commonly the case in model systems.  Ultimately, the team decided their only option was to study the drug in spontaneously occurring lymphomas in dogs, and obtained results that were suggestive, but not overwhelming.  A partial response was observed in several animals, stable disease was seen in several others.

The team struggled with what to do next.  For starters, they had reached the limits of what they felt they could learn from preclinical studies, and needed to decide, in the words of a researcher, “whether it was worth $1M” to figure out whether the promising but shaky preclinical results would translate into patients.
In addition, the team was also agonizing about whether to move forward with a molecule that worked by forming an irreversible, covalent bond; perhaps it would make more sense to go back to the chemistry lab, and try to identify a BTK inhibitor that worked by a more traditional, non-covalent mechanism.
“I Have Patients Who Are Dying”
Reportedly, Miller asked the team what were the risks of moving ahead with the covalent mechanism, and when he received vague responses, he reportedly told his colleagues, “I have patients in clinic who are dying, and need something right away.  I can’t tell them they’ll need to wait around for another year because we have a concern we can’t even articulate.”
Hence, the clinical study was initiated, and while at first it was slow to recruit, it ultimately was completed and viewed as strikingly successful.  The drug – now in phase 3, and called ibrutinib — is not a magic bullet, but may emerge as a promising option for some patients with some B-cell cancers.
On The Road Again
In another strange twist, Miller hasn’t been around to see this; he was dismissed in 2008 by the chairman of the board, Robert Duggan, who is perhaps best known as Scientology’s biggest donor.  While a Bloomberg report seems to suggest Miller’s departure reflected Duggan’s disappointment in the Xcytrin program, and his preference for focusing on B-cell cancers, I’ve also heard a very different account, suggesting it was Duggan who was keen to pursue Xcytrin, and Miller who refused, preferring instead to focus on the promising BTK inhibition program.
Miller promptly teamed up with UCSF chemist Jack Taunton to co-found Principia Biopharma, a company that focuses on “reversible covalent” molecules – drugs that form covalent bonds that release when the target protein denatures; VC backers include New Leaf, OrbiMed, Morgenthaler, SR One, and the UCSF early stage fund Mission Bay Capital.
In 2010, Miller signed on with the University of Texas as “Chief Commercialization Officer.”  However, according to reports, this role ended abruptly with his resignation less than two years later “after UT officials insisted that Miller divest his ownership interest in three startup companies that intended to license tech discoveries from the school.”   He is said to be working on a new company focused on a novel drug delivery technology.
Lessons Learned?
1.Limitations of experimental models.   In this case, the team had the insight, and the confidence, to recognize that available model systems for the study of B-cell cancers wouldn’t accurately enable assessment of their B-cell receptor-dependent mechanism, and rather than force the molecules through traditional assays (and get a false negative result), they tried to use a less traditional approach (e.g. spontaneous lymphoma model in dog), and then proceed rapidly to the clinic.
2.            Value of a translational champion: This is evident on both the academic side (e.g. inquisitive physicians such as Sharman) and on the industry side (e.g. Miller’s ability to see the clinical potential of research compound developed for different indications).
3.            Courage to value clinical need over conventional wisdom, and empiricism over theory.   Miller challenged traditional pharmaceutical reticence about covalent mechanisms in order to speed an important new drug to patients.
4.            It helps to be lucky.  For each of the lessons here – and particularly, for each of the “brave” and “bold” choices — I can easily envision how following this exact approach might have led to a far less favorable outcome, and a very different narrative (e.g. “cavalier physician imperils patients in reckless pursuit of flawed vision”).
Bottom Line: Discovering impactful new drugs is far more difficult – and far less linear – than is typically recognized.  It’s wonderful to celebrate success; our challenge is finding a way to repeat it.

Thursday, April 4, 2013

9-month milestone on Ibrutinib


My son is running the Rock ‘n’ Roll San Diego Marathon to raise money for research for the Leukemia & Lymphoma Society on June 2, 2013. This event funds clinical trials for leukemia and lymphoma. Please read his story.

I am personally grateful every day that I have had an opportunity to participate in a clinical trial, and I am grateful every day for the wonderful people who have funded all the clinical trials through their donations.

On another note, I just returned from the National Institutes of Health in Bethesda, Maryland last night about midnight. It was my 9-month milestone on Ibrutinib. I got the best blood work report I have had in a long while. My white blood count has gone down from 53,000 to about 35,000 in the last three months. (approximately 4,000 to 10,000 is normal). I am where I was shortly after I was diagnosed. Nothing would make me happier than to become “normalized.” Dr. Farooqui said for me NOT to expect that I will be within the normal range at my next appointment at the end of June. But as long as I am headed in the right direction, I am okay with that.

I am not anemic. My kidney function, LDH, and other organs appear normal. Hemoglobin and platelets are stable. Absolute lymphocytes are coming down. Nutriphils are normal now (They were not last time). Bone marrow does not show anything suspicious.

I am off Acyclovir, since I have not had infections. Hurrah!

My only issue is on-and-off cramping when I get in an odd position. My thumbs, my middle toes, my ankles, my shoulder blades… Strange places to be cramping. My electrolytes are not low and I am apparently drinking enough water. It happens at the oddest times. It only lasts a short while until I pull my muscle the opposite direction. Other participants have had the same side effect.

NIH doctors are keeping an eye on the unusual trisomy 13 that has cropped up in my genetics, since it has nothing to do with CLL/SLL, and may or may not develop into another blood disorder. It is not related to the trisomy 13 (Patau syndrome) in which some babies are born, involving physical and mental disorders. Trisomy 13 in adults usually doesn’t occur until people are in their 80s or 90s. I have always been told I am an “old soul,” so now I have proof. LOL.

Another strange thing is the presence of the protein CD34 on my baby platelets. Usually those are found on baby white blood cells. Doctors are researching this odd phenomena. There I go again… being an anomaly.

I am happy with the medical report. I am happy with my son and our dear friend Tyler running a marathon. And now I am off selecting the new tile for my house …

Saturday, March 30, 2013

This is a new day! With smart T-Cell vaccines


Recently I had the incredible experience of having a face-to-face discussion with Dr. Lou DeGennaro, the Chief Mission Officer of the Leukemia & Lymphoma Society (LLS) in the United States, on the up-and-coming potential cure for those with 17p deleted CLL/SLL -- CARs (chimeric antigen receptors). My son Rocky made it all happen for me and I am so grateful.

On behalf of the Arizona Chapter of the LLS, Dr. DeGennaro was scheduled to give a presentation at the Ritz-Carlton in Phoenix on the topic “Someday is Today: A discussion on the latest advancements and strategies in cancer research.” Rocky invited me to the event and took me to a cocktail reception before the presentation. So with my glass of red wine in hand, Jim Brewer, the Executive Director of the Phoenix LLS, introduced me to “Dr. Lou”.

We were having such an animated and scientific discussion about CARs that I think we were boring some of the people in our circle. LOL. I have discussed CARs in prior posts, but it doesn’t hurt to summarize what this means to my potential cure.

LLS is funding Carl H. June, M.D. at the University of Pennsylvania in Philadelphia for the personalized cancer therapy he initiated on T-cell re-engineering. Dr. Weirda at M.D. Anderson is also researching CARs. In fact, there are about seven CARs trials taking place today at a variety of locations. Here is the summary of the first procedure at UPenn:
(1) T-cells are removed from the patient’s body through a procedure called “apheresis.” Blood is removed from the patient and cells are separated through a process of centrifugal force. (NOTE: I had this done when I donated my cells to science. My cells were injected in a number of mice in the NIH lab to research why I am so resilient. LOL.) This is a painless procedure, similar to donating blood to a bank. My friend Janis witnessed me resting in the bed during this procedure in June of last year.
(2) The extracted T-cells from the patient are engineered to express a “chimeric antigen receptor” (CARs). The T-cells are harvested and injected with benign HIV cells.
(3) After the T-cells are re-engineered, they are ready to be infused back into the patient.
(4) The T-cell “serial killers” erradicate the cells with the CD19 enzyme, and the procedure climaxes at about two weeks or so. Because healthy B-cells also have CD19, the engineered T-cells cannot differentiate and kill them as well.
(5) The patient often has the worst case of the “flu” ever with sometimes a fever of 104 degrees.
NOTE: The first three clinical trial subjects at UPenn were rushed to the hospital thinking they were dying. Shortly after the episode, the three patients were tested for cancer, and found that there was no leukemia in two and a minimal residual disease (a small number of leukemia cells remaining, but no symptoms or signs of disease) in one.


NOTE: I was unable to credit the graphic designer who did this informational graphic, because there was no name attached to the image. If you are out there, let me know and I will give you full credit for your work.

For those of you not wanting the timeline details, skip to the paragraph after the indented text.

CARs TIMELINE
• In 1987 it was discovered that CD28 is the gatekeeper for T-cell proliferation.

• CARs research was actually pioneered in vitro in 1989, but it took two decades for it to be tried on humans.

• In 1993 a CD culture system was produced with CD3/CD28 beads. Cell size were 4.5 microns each and they were grown in vitro (test tubes)

• Three clinical trials were conducted in 1998 with HIV patients.
The first HIV CAR patients were treated targeting CD4z modified T-cells. They were infused with the re-engineered T-cells like a blood transfusion. 41 of 43 patients have CAR T-cells that have persisted more than a decade with no adverse effects.

• In 2006 the first cancer patients were treated NCI and in the Netherlands. No clinical efficacy, because T-cells did not engraft on the patients. Cells had half-lives and lasted less than a week.

• Clinical trial.gov #NCT01029366 at the University of Pennsylvania treated 12 subjects as of September 2012:
July 31, 2010 the first cancer subject was treated. The target was CD19, since it is expressed on the surface of most B-cell malignancies. Ten patients had CLL/SLL and two had ALL (acute lymphocytic leukemia). The patients were infused a 10-30-60% dose for three days. Seven had a complete remission (CR). Two had a partial remission (PR), and three had no remission (NR). No one has relapsed, and T-cells continue to produce antibodies (Now for two years). Each person had a total of 3.5 to 7 pounds of tumor cells removed from their body through this procedure. Each re-engineered CAR T-cell (“serial killers”) can kill 1,000 tumor cells.

My Australian blog friend John also passed on these links for my nerdy friends wanting more information on CARs:

• Interview with William Wierda on CARS at
http://www.patientpower.info/video/new-t-cell-car-research-for-cll?autoplay=1


• CLL Global Research magazine 2-2012, particularly Page 4 for Kinase inhibitors & CARS at http://www.cllglobal.org/Resource_Files/CLL_NL_Issue2_2012.pdf 


• CARS research, a talk by Dr. carl June at
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jQfFCC6i5_o.

The initial problems with the CARs trial at UPenn were:
(1) the enzyme CD19 is also found on normal B-cells, so patients are left immune compromised,
(2) Because the T-cells are harvested from each patient, it is an expensive and time-consuming procedure, and
(3) the patient has to be in good enough health to provide enough T-cells.

Researchers are getting closer to a cure. Future solutions:
(1) Now the new procedure involves re-engineering T-cells to bind with a certain protein – ROR1, which is expressed in leukemia cells. ROR1 becomes the target.
(2) In order to be more cost-effective, as well as efficient, researchers are exploring using healthy donor cells. This will also help those patients who are deficient in T-cells to harvest.

An interesting bit of information is that research and finding treatments and cures for blood cancers often leads to application to other cancers. For example, the CARs trial at the University of Pennsyvania is now using the concept of the re-engineered T-cells for trials in pancreatic cancer. This CARs immunotherapy is a cure for leukemia and it is just around the corner. This is a new day!

Check out this video:




Friday, March 8, 2013

CLINICAL TRIALS


Over one million people in North America alone were affected with blood cancer this year, according to the Leukemia & Lymphoma Society. Anyone can get blood cancer. Scientists are studying the possible familial connection or environmental connection. Sometimes it is just plain luck of the draw.

Last month I attended an informative Leukemia & Lymphoma Society event at Arizona State University’s Sky Song in Scottsdale on the topic of clinical trials. I now wish to take this gift of knowledge and pass it on to all the readers of my blog.

CLINICAL TRIALS
If you qualify for a cancer clinical trial, my first response would be: “What are you waiting for?” The majority of participants find that a clinical trial is a positive experience, and that they were treated with quality medical care, dignity, and respect (Harris Interactive 2001). I will second that motion. Having a research doctor answer the questions you have submitted by email with a personal phone call is the best kind of medicine. I know how busy they are, so I try not to abuse this wonderful option.

On the practical side, it does cost money, if the clinical trial is far from your home. We have spent a good amount of money this past year on flights, hotels, and meal stipends to travel across the United States from Arizona. NIH reimbursed about one-third of the costs, which helped a lot. Some sites do not reimburse any travel costs. Many participants are lucky to find a clinical trial near their home and they can drive or have someone drive them. Since traveling is stressful, you also need to consider whether the patient is physically able to travel and be away from home.

Every available cancer therapy begins with research. Researchers are not able to begin their discovery without funding. That is why research grants are so vital. So here is a shout out to all those people who raise funds for research! Thank you.

Once funding is available, the development of the therapy is accelerated through clinical trials. The trial, however, is at a standstill until cancer patients volunteer to participate. The sooner the number of participants is reached, the sooner the research is conducted and presented.

 Clinical trials go through several phases. In a nutshell, here is a summary of the phases:
• Phase I trials test for safety of the drug, the best way to administer it, and if cancer responds.
• Phase II trials test if one particular type of cancer responds to the new treatment. Everyone gets the drug. For example, I am in a Phase II clinical trial and the arm of the trial I am in is for participants over the age of 18, who are untreated or treated, who have the poor prognosis of 17p deletion.
• Phase III trials compare the new treatment to the standard treatment, and test to see if it works better. There is no placebo. The computer determines whether you get the new drug or the standard treatment.
• Phase IV trials continue researching long-term benefits and side effects.

The process costs time and money, and requires investigators, institutions, the federal government, the pharmaceutical industry, and the public to cooperate and trust the process. Here is an interesting fact from Banner M.D. Anderson (MDA): Out of 5,000 great ideas, five go to clinical trial, but usually only one gets approved by the United States Food & Drug Administration (FDA). The average cost is over one billion dollars for a new drug application (NDA). The NDA is the process through which drug sponsors propose that the FDA approve of a drug for sale to be marketed in the U.S and become commercialized and available to patients.

Without clinical trials there would be no new cancer therapies. Funding and participants are integral to the success of cancer research.



Monday, February 18, 2013

Clarification of trisomy 13


I began the ibrutinib clinical trial in July 2012, so I am now completing Cycle 7. I have a high percentage of trisomy 13 in my blood work that is not found in CLL/SLL. In 2010 I had 23%, January 2012 I had 93% and January 2013 it is 100%. So what does this mean?

Trisomy 13 is a marker and is found in myelodysplastic syndromes (MDS), which in the worst case can develop into a fast-growing and severe leukemia called acute myelogenous leukemia (AML). In the best case can be mild and easily managed.

According to Dr. Farooqui, it is clinically insignificant for me today, because (thank God) my hemoglobin, platelets, and LDH (lactate dehydrogenase) are normal now. My blasts are between 4% and 5%. Through anecdotal observation only (and not statistical data) ibrutinib appears to increase the regeneration of cells in the bone marrow. I am on watch and wait mode and will see what my bone marrow biopsy has to show this June. So according to Dr. Mohammed… not to worry. More easily said than done.

I did, however, breathe a breath of fresh air after that phone call. 

Monday, February 11, 2013

ENDING 6-MONTH CLINICAL TRIAL and TEST RESULTS



I have mainly good news to report, along with some not-so-good news. The not-so-good news is at the end of the blog. I have been running a marathon and I have moved passed the “block wall.” I see the finish line, but I have stubbed my toe and it is broken. I now have to continue the race knowing full well that the broken toe may be my demise.

For weeks I have been waiting for different doctor’s translations of three tests – colonoscopy, bone marrow biopsy, and cytogenetics. I know enough to be dangerous. So I haven’t felt inspirational. I haven’t felt positive. I haven’t felt courageous. I have felt fatigued and introspective. That is why I had to write my blog “Letting Go” posted February 3rd not only for you, but for me as well. I needed to remind myself that it is important to listen to my own words. Many times I have a cognitive understanding of things, but emotionally it takes a little longer to process. I like to get all the facts first, and then I process them emotionally.

The results are in and now I am ready to write this blog.

THE GOOD NEWS
Colonoscopy Biopsy
I had a colonoscopy in January because my GP detected blood in my colon. I was off Ibrutinib for three days prior to the procedure to prevent internal bleeding. The doctor did a biopsy of a small polyps that was found. Somehow the test results did not end up on the doctor’s desk for three weeks. I kept calling and almost felt like a stalker. Results finally came in… No cancer found. No more colonoscopies for 10 more years.

Clinical Trial Continuation
The NIH clinical trial I am participating in is titled “A Phase II Study of PCI-32765 for Patients With Chronic Lymphocytic Leukemia (CLL) or Small Lymphocytic Lymphoma (SLL) Who Need Therapy and Are Older Than 65 or Have a 17p Deletion.” It states that “PCI-32765 (ibrutinib) will be given for six cycles of treatment. Those who benefit from the drug will continue to take it as long as there are no side effects and the disease does not progress. Those who do not benefit will stop treatment and have regular follow up exams.”

As I have mentioned before, I am in the 17p deletion arm of the clinical trial in which participants can be under 65. I like to tease my blood brother George and tell him that he is in the “other” category – the “elderly.” I am sure he chuckles about this as he is zooming across country on his motorcycle. LOL

The trial is non-randomized, which means that there is no placebo. Everyone gets the drug. It is an efficacy study, which means the study produced good results in a prior study (Phase 1) and this treatment provides positive results in a controlled experimental research trial. So now you know I am not as brave as you thought. I did my research.

I celebrate the fact that at the end of Cycle 6 I qualified to continue taking the experimental drug. I have my 2013 schedule in hand and am scheduled to fly back East every three months for my drug run. Hurrah! Hurrah!

Bone Marrow Biopsy
Boy, am I learning from this clinical trial! Dr. Farooqui called me on the phone to help explain how to read the bone marrow biopsy results. This is a lesson in a foreign language. Apparently I have been reading the tests incorrectly. My cellularity has remained at 40-50% during the duration of the study, which is normal for my age (just turned 61).

What I have to look for is the result of the immunohistochemical stains on the CD79a marker. This indicates the amount of CLL in the bone marrow. In the January 2013 bone marrow biopsy, the CLL comprised 15-30% of the cellular marrow. In September 2012 it was 20-30%. In February 2012 it was 40-50%. So the good news is that the amount of CLL in my bone marrow is decreasing.

THINGS TO KNOW
About Oral Cancer Treatment
In this blog posting I thought I would address certain myths about cancer treatment. First of all taking pills orally does not make them less toxic. The patient is still receiving chemicals in their body just as they would if the drug was administered through their vein.

The problem with oral injection of a drug is human nature. There is no nurse to give you the drug. Some people do not follow the instructions. They eat before the 20 minutes is up or they eat a couple hours before taking the drug, so it does not get absorbed correctly. They eat grapefruit, which nullifies the benefit of the drug. They do not take it at the same time each day. Sometimes they even forget to take it. I look at the habit of taking these pills as my lifeline.

About Leukemia Remission
Throughout this clinical trial, I have had good news for my prognosis. I have to keep reminding myself to be grateful for what I have been given. I am only human, however, and humans want more.

Ibrutinib can normalize your bloodwork, and that would be a gift. Some in our study have normalized and I celebrate for them.

Many have said they have prayed for my remission. What most people do not realize is that when a leukemia patient is in remission, it does not mean that the cancer is gone. It means that you have a normal life for 18 months, three years, five years, 10 years or more, but the cancer will return.

Experts don’t know when and if Ibrutinib will stop working for patients. Perhaps there will be other options when and if this happens. Perhaps by then there will be a cure. We can only hope, and continue to support the funding of research.

I have shifted to a paradigm of survivorship. I understand this drug is not a cure, but I am hopeful that it will control my disease and I can have a quality of life.

FISH Test
I am learning every day. One of the first tests I learned about is the FISH (fluorescence in situ hybridization) test, which is a cytogenetic test used to examine DNA on chromosomes. For those of you who glaze over when I use my technical jargon, skip over the next three paragraphs.

I read my FISH test from a year ago (January 26, 2012) and the FISH test showed evidence of the loss of one copy of p53 (17p13.1) in 97% of the 500 WBC nuclei examined, as well as a second abnormal cell population of 13q34 in 92.8%.

Today there are still large abnormal clones. The probes identified a deletion of one copy of TP53 in 242 (86.4%) of 280 nuclei scored, and a gain of one copy (trisonomy) of 13q34 in all (100%) of the 249 nuclei scored. There is no evidence of trisomy 12, any other deletion, or other chromosome abnormality of the ATM gene.

Gene sequencing was not done at this time, because it is three times more expensive, so there are a couple findings that I am tagging as “most likely.” I am most likely one of the 81% who have 17p deletion and deletion of TP53 (tumor-suppressor gene). I most likely have monoalletic inactivation of TP53, which means I have a single deletion without a mutation on the remaining allele. Bialletic inactivation (having a deletion on both alleles) is worse than monoalletic inactivation.

The test interpretation states that “these results are essentially the same as a year ago.” A 6% change is not that much of a difference in the cytogenetic world. I would have liked to see a decrease, but no progression of the chronic lymphocytic leukemia/small lymphocytic lymphoma (CLL/SLL) in my world is good news.

THE NOT-SO-GOOD NEWS
I remember when I was in science class in my childhood and my teacher discussed that some day we will be able to have genetic tests to reveal our tendencies toward the diseases we may have to face in our lifetime. She asked us how many would want to know. There was a great deal of hesitation in the room. I raised my hand.

Well the future is here. When you want to know the truth, you need to be prepared that it may not be what you really want to hear. If you can’t handle it, then be an ostrich and stick your head in the sand. I am not good at that.

The NIH laboratory researchers examined my megakaryoctes. These are the bone marrow cells responsible for the production of platelets, which are used for blood clotting.

What I learned from my conversation with Dr. Farooqui is that trisonomy 13 is not usually seen in CLL/SLL patients. What that means is that instead of a deletion of the 13q34, which is commonly found in CLL/SLL patients, I have an addition of the 13q34. The staining indicated the amount is very low, and he assured me that it is of no concern today. I do not need treatment on this now.

But my inquiring mind wants to know what this infers. Apparently trisonomy 13 is found in myelodysplastic syndrome (MDS). This disorder means that the bone marrow is not producing cells correctly. These immature stem cells that accumulate in the bone marrow die prematurely and are called “blasts.” If a person has 10-19% blasts, he is categorized as a high-risk MDS patient. If a person has 20% or more of the blasts, he is categorized as having acute myeloid leukemia (AML), which is another type of cancer. So the optional bone marrow biopsy I was supposed to have this summer is now medically required, so the medical team can keep the potential for this secondary cancer in check. Not what I was hoping to hear. Now you know why I needed to get my mind right…

FINAL THOUGHT
I need to focus on what is, not what might be. I leave you with this quote:

“(S)He is a wise (wo)man who does not grieve for the things which (s)he has not, but rejoices for those which (s)he has.” — Epictetus






Sunday, February 3, 2013

LETTING GO


A Time for Everything
There is a time for everything,
and a season for every activity under heaven:
a time to be born and a time to die,
a time to plant and a time to uproot,
a time to kill and a time to heal,
a time to tear down and a time to build,
a time to weep and a time to laugh,
a time to mourn and a time to dance,
a time to scatter stones and a time to gather them,
a time to embrace and a time to refrain,
a time to search and a time to give up,
a time to keep and a time to throw away,
a time to tear and a time to mend,
a time to be silent and a time to speak,
a time to love and a time to hate,
a time for war and a time for peace.
     Ecclesiastes 3: 1-8 (NIV)

CELEBRATION OF LIFE
Recently my cancer support group had our first Celebration of Life ceremony for the Cancer Support Group at Chandler Regional Hospital. We wanted to show gratitude and love to the members of our group (caregivers and survivors) who are still with us, and those who have gone to the light. We decided that this circle of light ceremony will be our annual legacy of remembrance.

This is my prayer I shared during the ceremony:
We rejoice in your life and are forever grateful for how your life has touched ours. The good news is that we are all loved and cherished. We have nothing to fear. The moment we are born, we enter the circle of life in which there is a beginning and an end. The end of life as we know it is also a beginning. We are much more than our physical bodies. As Stephen Covey says, “We are not human beings on a spiritual journey. We are spiritual beings on a human journey.”
If tomorrow starts without you, we will celebrate your eternal spirit. We will dance for you. We will sing for you. And we will remember that you will always be with us in our hearts.

This ceremony to me was not only about being grateful, but also about being able to let go.

DEATH & DYING
Death is part of life. The moment you are born, you begin your journey. No one leaves this world alive. Death is inescapable.

Inhale… birth.
Exhale… death

And if you are fortunate enough, in between you will love and be loved.

According to my mother (the German immigrant), the American culture has a taboo on facing death and dying. She said that only when you have come to terms with death and dying, can you truly celebrate life, and life then becomes more precious.

THE CONSTANT DANCE
Living with cancer is a constant dance between holding on and letting go. Ask yourself: What is the kindest thing to do for yourself or for others? Maybe holding on. Maybe letting go.

As a patient, friend, or family member, sometimes the best thing to do is to hold on. If the patient is comfortable and has a decent quality of life remaining, then by all means, hang on and enjoy the ride.

But it is NOT a healthy choice when you are holding on waiting for the impossible to happen, when someone is in prolonged suffering, and when she is in her final stages of the illness and nothing else can be done.

People have often commented on my positive and fighting spirit, but I do not intend to fight gallantly until the end. I am a realist and when the time comes for me, I do not intend to rage against illness and dying, rather I prefer to go peacefully into the light with grace and dignity.
It may not happen. But that is my wish.

You see, after you have done everything in your power, you let go. That does not mean giving up. It means turning everything over to God.

The one thing you should never let go of is hope. Hope remains, but it gets redefined.

Receiving permission to die, relieves the dying person of the grief she has caused the family and friends. Knowing those left behind will be okay is a gift to a dying person.

I know that life will go on without me. I know that material things are inconsequential. You can’t take them with you. Ultimately, when I meet my maker, the most important thing in my life is that I loved and was loved in return.

UNFINISHED BUSINESS
In my life I have seen that attachments to people can be healthy or unhealthy. This leads me to another aspect of letting go… unfinished business with people in your life. I admit I still have a little of that left in my life.

This often brings about anxiety. “Worry pretends to be necessary but serves no useful purpose.” According to Eckhart Tolle, we create and cling to problems because they give us a sense of identity. Maybe this is why we hold on to our emotional pain far longer than its ability to serve us. I have always enjoyed the following quote: “Worry is like a rocking chair; it gives you something to do, but it doesn’t get you anywhere.”

It’s good to know that problems in life don’t define you. There are three things you can do: (1) Remove yourself, (2) Accept it, or (3) Change it.

Perhaps the best decision when taking care of unfinished business is to face the person and throw your cards on the table. Maybe the unfinished business is with your child, your ex-friend, a spouse, a sibling, or your parent. Perhaps the best decision is to forgive them, forgive yourself, and walk away. You can’t always make it right.

MY OBSERVATIONS
There are several things I have observed in my life when people are in the process of letting go.

Cancer gives you a loss of control with physiological realities at the end of life. Those people who have the need to control have a difficult time. I have witnessed both caretakers and patients at this phase struggle with the control issue and the need to be right. Let it go.

I have witnessed the pain caused when a parent and an adult child have unfinished business and the child is dying. All I can say to the parent is to be gentle with yourself. You may not have been the perfect parent, but your adult child’s problems are his own. As an adult, he has a choice to heal, just as each of us have had a choice to heal from whatever injustices have come our way. Let go with love.

Let go of stress, guilt, fear, worry, resentment, sadness, anger, and bitterness.

A CHOICE
Choose instead forgiveness and peace whether you are the patient or the caretaker. Be true to yourself. Be kind to yourself. Love yourself and forgive yourself. Relax. Take care of yourself and come from a place of love.

Be honest with yourself about your relationships. Face the void in your life that will be there when you let go.

Several times in my life I have seen beauty in the process of dying. So it is possible.

WHAT I DO TO KEEP MY HEAD STRAIGHT
Relationships are about making a connection with someone. It is not about being perfect or expecting perfection. I always told my husband that I wanted an imperfect man, because I did not ever want to be required to be perfect. He said he was the man for me, and apparently I am the woman for him. LOL

It is a good perspective to realize that there will never be a time when life is simple. With every moment we have an opportunity to let go of something negative and feel peaceful. It’s worthwhile to take the time to practice accepting that concept. To put it in Darlene’s words, “There’s always gonna be crap in your life, so put on your big-boy panties!” To put it in the words of my husband Carl, “Just deal with it!” (Did you notice I tried to interject a little humor here? LOL)

I try (sometimes successfully and sometimes unsuccessfully) to take responsibility in my life for my life. I find an avenue to rid myself of negativity and keep my head straight during this cancer ordeal. This is what I personally do:
• I laugh a lot. I surround myself with friends and family who embrace my heart. I watch comedies.
• Everyone is always in a hurry to get somewhere. Sometimes we need to just be. I take Tai Chi with my friend Sue to help me live in the present. I meditate.
• I sometimes cry. I cry about what was and what is. It is cathartic and releases toxic chemicals built up by stress in my body.
• I replay that recorder in my head, and replace my thoughts with ones that are healthy for my well being. I forgive myself.
• I spend time with those I love.
• I make a list of my causes of stress and another column on what I need to do to address them. Somehow writing it down helps me face it better.
• I create. I paint. I illustrate. I write. I design.
• I go to the gym. I dance. It gets some of that orneriness out of my system. (I used to beat a rubber chicken on the floor to relieve stress. Ask Dot about that one. LOL).
• I count my blessings everyday. I know what makes my life worth living and I embrace it.
• “La Verne,” I say to myself, “Everything is happening as it should be. Have a little faith. What will be will be.”