Tag Archives: digoxin

Post T-cells

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IMG_1107I wonder how many times a day I see a bald head, a sweet face with that pale yellow tube leaving the nose, taped across a cheek.

September is Childhood Cancer Awareness Month.  My Facebook feed is literally packed full with pictures of kids with cancer.  Some with bald heads and sporadic hairs, tiny emaciated bodies, dark circles under their eyes.  So many dead kids.  Accounts of brutal treatments, how many rounds of chemo, of radiation, of antibodies, surgeries.  This is when we pull out all the stops.  This is when you drag out those dark pictures, the ones without the smiles, the ones you can hardly bear to look at.  These are the silent screams that declare, “DON’T LOOK AWAY.” Many of these faces I know.  Others are friends of friends, scattered across the country.  Of course there are also the pictures of happy, bright faces, eyes that shine.  These are the pictures that hope you realize these are just ordinary kids, they could be your own.  These are the lives that we are fighting for.

The last week and a half has been incredibly busy and at times brutally stressful and hard.  Even now I feel the tension that lately never seems to leave my neck and shoulders, clamped down like a vice, a viper with its fangs gripping the back of my neck.  I know, I know.  I must seem mellow dramatic.  But do you know what it’s like to see your friend’s kid with the leukemia literally pushing its way into their mouth, sweet lips that can’t even close over the intrusion.  This is the same sweet child that only months ago joyfully walked the hallways of the cancer unit with little shoes that squeak with each step.  These two girls fight the same beast, Acute Myeloid Leukemia. Allistaire’s eye is looking off again.  Something doesn’t seem right.  I fear these T-cells haven’t stopped the onslaught.  She rubbed her jaw today, saying it hurt.  She didn’t cry.  Within 15 minutes she hadn’t complained about it again.  But pain in her jaw, so close to her eye where we know there’s cancer…I am surrounded by cancer, drowning in it.

I wrote the above on September 11th, eleven days ago.  I could taste cancer on my tongue, some sort of acrid saliva.  The very cytoplasm of my cells seemed to swell with the dominating presence of cancer.  I wanted to scream and run, with fury, with rage, with terror, with ragged exhaustion, with desperation to flee, to at long last burst through that glass wall that isolates and corals us off from the life for which we so long.

For nearly two weeks Allistaire seemed to be growing literally more and more crazy.  Without exaggeration, I thought she was headed for some sort of psychic break, dragging me along right behind her.  Some sort of terror, fear was building in her, mounting to some peak or perhaps plunging to dark depths.  She would repeat to herself, “I’m afraid, I’m afraid, I’m afraid.”  Afraid of what?  “Afraid of throwing up, afraid of I don’t know.”  Meds, which she must take three times everyday, 24 doses in all, became an epic battle sometimes taking an hour, sometimes resulting in her throwing up and having to do it all over again.  She was completely irrational and nothing I could say seemed to get through her crazed state.  The intensity mounted.  Everything depends on her getting those meds in.  Her tummy pain was increasing.  She ate less and began to lose weight.  A feeding tube loomed. “It either goes in your mouth or up your nose,” I tell her.  I felt like I was failing on the two tasks most directly entrusted to me: getting her to eat and to take her meds. Our days felt frenzied. When my eyes opened to meet the day I would feel dread smothering, knowing it was only a short while before it would be time for her to eat and take meds again.

I was frantic for help. Karen, our PAC (Pediatric Advanced Care) Team person provided a referral for Allistaire to see the child psychologist. For the first time in my life and certainly in Allistaire’s treatment, I realized her little mind might really benefit from meds to help her calm down. I only hoped I could make it through the week until we saw her. We also had a GI (gastrointestinal) consult to try to sort out the tummy pain she’s been experiencing. It’s hard to know how much of the pain is anticipatory and in her mind and how much is real. After her incredibly severe typhlitus infection and the more recent ileus, it would be really great to know what’s going on inside and if there’s anything that can be done to help. But prior to these appointments, she would see cardiology for yet another echocardiogram and EKG.

On Tuesday morning, 9/8, I brought my bright green sticky note to Allistaire’s lab draw. “Digoxin,” was scrawled across in black ink. When Allistaire was inpatient for her ileus, a Digoxin level had been drawn with labs one day and showed that since she wasn’t taking her meds with food, it wasn’t being as well metabolized and so her dose was increased along with several other meds. Once her ileus resolved most meds returned to their pre-ileus dosages. Soon after she was discharged from the hospital, I called to ask the cardiologists about her Digoxin dose and to see if we needed to test her level again as they hadn’t adjusted it. I was told then that it was fine for now and would be retested in 2-3 weeks. I asked the nurse drawing labs Tuesday morning and was told it hadn’t been included on that day’s lab orders but could be added up to 8 hours later. Next I whipped out my green sticky note for the cardiology nurse and she said that Dr. Hong had mentioned wanting to get a level.

So it turns out Allistaire’s Digoxin level was 5. The goal range is .5 to .8 with 1 being fine and anything over 2 being bad news. Digoxin originates from Foxglove and in high doses can be very toxic. Her Digoxin was immediately held in order to get the level down.  It wasn’t until about a week later that I thought to look up side-effects of Digoxin toxicity.  Though these are listed as “less common”, I’m guessing having a level that is 5 to 10 times higher than desired might amp up these effects.  “Agitation or combativeness, anxiety, confusion, depression, diarrhea, expressed fear of impending death, vomiting, loss of appetite, weight loss, low platelet count.”  These are just the ones listed that seem to directly relate to what Allistaire was experiencing.  In addition, her Pozaconazole level, an anti-fungal, was about 4,000 when the goal level is 700.  Some “more common” side effects of pozaconazole are, “abdominal or stomach pain, body aches or pain, confusion, diarrhea, nausea or vomiting.”  Other less common effects include “anxiety, change in mental status, mental depression.”  Again, I have only listed those side effects which I specifically saw Allistaire exhibit.  I only thought to look up side effects later because of the dramatic improvement she made once her Digoxin was stopped to get the level down and the pozaconazole was nearly cut in half.  There was a night and day difference.  The girl who fought me for an hour on meds can now take them in 3 minutes.  She is not afraid anymore.  I did switch to lactose free milk at the same time her pozaconazole dose was decreased, but either way, her stomach pain has reduced to nearly nothing.  She has been doing a much better job eating and has actually gained back  some of the weight she lost.

Her other big cardiac med change was the exciting switch from Enalapril to Entresto. Entresto is a drug newly fast-track approved by the FDA this July for heart failure. In a massive, well-conducted trial, Entresto was compared to Enalapril, the leading heart-failure med, and shown to have significantly greater impact. The heart-failure team first told me about it way back in February or March. I asked Dr. Law about it in August and he said that it had just been approved but it has never been studied in children and he wasn’t sure the hospital would approve him prescribing it, if even it was available. The man, who is typically quite mild-mannered, was visibly excited about it. So Allistaire began her first low doses of Entresto a week and a half ago. Assuming her blood pressure doesn’t bottom out, they can continue to increase her dose until it reaches the optimal level. This is exciting given our utter dependence on her heart improving for any hope of curative cancer treatment.

While the calculation of her ejection fraction on this latest echocardiogram was less (previously 41 and now 37), Dr. Hong said the function of the left ventricle squeeze looks the same and there was actually significant improvement in the dilation of her heart. Her left ventricle went from 4.7 cm to 4.2. A year ago before all of this, it was 3.9cm. A dilated heart indicates a heart working too hard and quite ineffectively. When I think back over the last 9 months, I am overwhelmed at how rough the road has been, but the truth is, it has been vastly better than it could have been. I will never forget the sensation of my legs falling away beneath me as I read that horrifying echo report in March where her ejection fraction was 11. I will never forget the solemn nods of affirmation in our subsequent care conference when I said, “So in summary, none of you think she’s going to make it.” The cardiologist said there was pretty much no way she could recover her heart function. A weak heart cannot begin to endure all that is necessary to beat AML between hard-core chemo, intense infections and simply unbearable pain in transplant that necessitates everything going into the body be given by IV. And yet here we are, here we are. With tears immediate, I smiled a great heaving smile with cheeks pressing up against my eyes when the cardiology nurse, Jen, told me Allistaire’s BNP was 51. FIFTY-ONE!!!!!!!!! This was the very first time Allistaire’s BNP, a measurement of heart distress, had ever been in the normal range of 0-90. On the day of that wretched, heart stopping care conference in March, her BNP dropped from the astronomical height of “greater than 5,000,” for the very first time in weeks. Gosh this has been a crazy-making, exhausting, brutal road but I laugh out loud with joy for the number of times we have been told that Allistaire just won’t make it and then she just keeps going. Maybe she won’t. But she has overcome what has been described as insurmountable obstacles.

How many times have I called out to You for mercy Lord? Mercy. Mercy. And He has, over and over and over. Thank You Father for all the days you have sustained us!

Wednesday the 9th arrived and we got to meet Joanne, the psychologist. I left feeling encouraged that there might really be some tangible ways to help Allistaire learn coping skills and overcome her fears. That day we also met with Taryn, her new hospital school teacher, who schedule allowing, will meet one-on-one with Allistaire for an hour on Wednesday and Friday afternoons. I won’t lie, I find myself zooming past the endless Facebook posts with “first day of school,” pictures. All those smiling faces with cute outfits by the front door with chalkboard signs declaring the next grade, sobs choke my throat and I try to turn away. This is Solveig’s fourth year of school in a row of which I will miss significant chunks. I missed her first day of 2nd and 4th grade. And Allistaire, her first day of preschool last year was nothing like I had hoped or imagined. She cried with no way to be comforted for hours. It was her arm. Her right arm up near her shoulder where a month and a half later we would see evidence of leukemia eroding the bone. Of course she was crying. Her cancer was literally eating away at her flesh. This is not what I thought my daughters’ elementary years would look like. It grieves my heart. I turn away from my visions of what I think “should have been,” and focus on what is our reality. This is the land the Lord has given me.

Wednesday morning also brought a significant turn of events. In my heart, back in the corner, in a place unwilling to stand out in full exposure of light was a secret hope stowed safely away. I wanted to bring Allistaire home. What I really desperately wanted was two weeks at home with all four of us. The problem was that Allistaire had a clinic appointment at SCCA on Tuesday, 9/15 with a lab draw for the T-cell research study. So the night of the 15th would be the earliest we could head home. Bordering the other end of a trip was the necessity to re-stage Allistaire’s disease. Dr. Cooper had recommended doing another bone marrow, brain MRI and PET/CT three to four weeks after the T-cell infusion. Given the changes I had been seeing in Allistaire’s right eye, Sten and I did not feel in good conscience we could delay even a week which would on one hand give us an additional week at home and on the other given that blasted cancer one more unfettered week. This meant we’d have to be back in Seattle by the 21st. But that morning I received a wonderful call back from the research study nurse who said there was no reason that Allistaire couldn’t be seen in Bozeman and have the research lab drawn there and simply Fed-Exed back to Seattle. There was a moment of elation and then it was game on. To get Allistaire out of Seattle required an extraordinary amount of coordination and details especially now that her care was being coordinated between Seattle Cancer Care Alliance, Seattle Children’s Oncology, cardiology and our beloved pediatrician, Dr. Angie Ostrowski, in Bozeman. This meant making sure I had sufficient quantities of all her meds, dressing and line care supplies, and clear orders on how to deal with fevers, infections, fluids, blood pressures, labs, transfusions and clinic visits. Thursday she got tanked up on platelets and on Friday we spent the first half of the day at the hospital while she got red blood before we headed off to the airport. Allistaire was literally beside herself with joy. She could not stop squealing. She would shake her head in awe and stutter to get out the words, “ I can’t, I, I, I can’t believe it! We’re, we’re going home!”

On Friday night, September 11th, fourteen years after the Twin Towers fell and changed America forever and five months after my sweet brother-in-law, Jens, died and changed our family forever, Allistaire and I boarded a plane bound for Bozeman.  She skipped.  She hopped.  She laughed.  She squealed.  Her eyes were bright bright bright.  She was excited about everything!!!  At long last the time came when we walked through the security doors in Bozeman and into the arms of Sten and Solveig.  I cried with joy, with sorrow weakening my legs.

We didn’t do really much of anything exciting.  We just spent the next eleven days together.  Chocolate chip pancakes at the kitchen counter and the girls running around the house, laughing and coming up with strange horsey games.  Emptying the dishwasher and waking to the sight of tall evergreens and swaying grasses outside of my bedroom window, knowing Sten lay next to me in the night, wind chimes in the breeze and a shocking array of stars and thick gauze of Milky Way, morning stars and elk bugling, watching a massive rain storm heading east over the valley, engulfing hills in gray mist, waiting for the tell-tale stirring of leaves and fir needles as the wind approaches, light slipping away and at long last feeling cool rain drops on my face.  Extravagant.  Luxurious.  The girls playing on the driveway in the bright sun of a windy fall day, attempting to fly the dragon kite and eventually asking to walk up to Grandma and Grandpa’s.  I tugged at weeds and pruned raggedy bushes, defied the bur weeds and stood with all my body weight on the shovel to remove ugly shrubs.  My arms thrilled at the fatigue of pushing the wheelbarrow up the hill over and over again to the burn pile.  Hawks circled and screamed in the wondrous blue above.  Chipmunks with elegant little black stripes flitted about the yard.  Aspen leaves shuddered in the wind, flashing green and yellow.  Familiar faces, missed, loved, at Solveig’s school fun run where she proudly protected her little sister.  Solveig.  Oh Solveig, giggly girl with gorgeous gray-blue eyes, flecks of green and brown, ever rosy cheeks.  Tucking her in for bed each night with a blow-kiss to end the day.  In town, sweet friends at the school, at the soccer field, everywhere faces that love us, miss us, pray and cheer us on.  Cheering on Pam as she ran her first marathon to help fund childhood cancer research.  Running a short stretch with her toward the end – marveling at how the crossing of brutal paths has brought about this flourishing treasure of friendship – proud watching my friend persevere, propelled to push through the pain because of those 26 kids’ names neatly written out on the card pinned to her shirt.  Allistaire laughed and laughed as she stood in the lake at Hyalite, ripples shimmering out around her in endless rings.  “Is this better than Ron Don?” I asked.  Smiles too big for her face as the fire light wavered orange, reflecting in her eyes and instruction on how best to roast a marshmallow.  “Is this better than Ron Don?” I asked again.  “Everything’s better than Seattle,” she declared with satisfaction.

Everyday I flushed her lines, took her blood pressure and temperature and gave her meds, encouraged her eating.  But cancer, other than that wonky eye, sat in the back drop, it’s yell not so dominating over the hush of grass in the wind, of blue expanse of sky, of sleek brown horses flicking their tails, of rain storms and deer in the evening, of creeks tumbling over rocks and two sisters laughing, laughing, Sten and I smiling.  I see that eye, that right eyeball that bulges just a bit, too much white showing under the pupil.  I see it.  It demands my attention, fairly screaming its urgency.  But I tell it, “shush.”  Be still.  Be still.  What will be will be.  We’ve faced terrifying prospects many times before and yet she runs and laughs and bursts her bright being into the world.  She may yet be given open doors, she may yet thrive.  And if not…if not?  Well, love her all the more Jai.  Love her fiercely.  Let go the insignificant things.  Cherish.  Savor.  Focus in.  See the beauty and life bursting right before me.  Listen to the sweet lilt in her voice, watch her mind try to sort out how things work in the world, delight in her childish perspective.  Sit and watch.  Observe.  Take it in.  Swell with the incalculable delight of now.  We are guaranteed so little in this life.  We have insatiable desires, ever grasping for more, for better.  But pause.  Pause.  What here?  What bounty have I swept past, swept aside in pursuit for something more.  I am deprived because I refuse to slow, to stop, to dwell in this present space.  Somehow, imperceptible millimeter by millimeter the Lord is etching His ways into my heart.  My spirit turning to His.

It’s early evening, Tuesday the 22nd of September.  Fall is here.  Warm light skims the ivory blanket, reflecting back against the far wall of our Ron Don room.  Outside the city buses drive by, waning light seems to illuminate from within thousands and millions of green leaves, draped in layers and layers of organic veils like pieces of stained glass.  We arrived back in Seattle late last night and got to the hospital by 7:30 this morning.  It was supposed to be 45 minutes worth of procedures – a bone marrow aspirate and biopsy, intrathecal chemo, an endoscopy and a flexible sigmoidoscopy.  We finally left about 5:30pm.  After two hours of waiting in the pre-op area, labs drawn earlier revealed the need for yet another platelet transfusion, the previous only two days ago.  So upstairs we went to the Hem/Onc clinic to wait for STAT platelets and the hour to get them in.  Then back downstair to wait for the anesthesiologist finish his case because he had graciously insisted we were going to get this all done today.  All went well and he determined that Allistaire’s heart is now “robust” enough to no longer require cardiac anesthesia.  The GI doc was also pleased because all looked well with the exception of one overt and easily treatable problem.  Apparently Allistaire has a whole lot of hardened stool backed up in her colon that he said can actually cause pain on par with a burst appendix.  The fix is a big time dose of laxatives over the next several days to clear her out.  All was well in recovery initially but then for several additional hours she struggled with extreme nausea and threw up dark reddish brown flecks of blood from the multiple biopsies that were taken.  She sleeps now, Doggie tucked up under her head.

On Thursday Allistaire will have a brain MRI, a PET/CT and a CT with IV and oral contrast.  This will both provide additional information about her gut and, along with results from the bone marrow test, help give a clearer picture of where things stand with her leukemia.  A little over a month ago, pneumonia was discovered in her lungs from her previous CT.  Dr. Ostrowski heard weezing in her lungs last week, though the anesthesiologist did not today.  She’s been on antibiotics forever and was switched to an even broader spectrum anti-fungal once the pneumonia was discovered.  Her ANC has been relatively decent so everything is being done as far as I can tell, to combat the pneumonia.  The state of her lungs could impact her options going forward if more chemo is needed if the T-cells are not able to keep her cancer at bay.  Interestingly, her persistence research labs from Day+14 from the T-cell infusion show that the percent of the genetically modified WT1 T-cells has actually increased from the Day+4 persistence labs up to about 10% from 6%.  What this means as far as how effectively the T-cells might be working is unclear.  It does, however, direct the course going over.  Only once the percentage drops below 3% is the second and final infusion of T-cells given.  This means at this point there is no plan in place for the second infusion and Allistaire has been officially been dismissed from the care of Seattle Cancer Care Alliance back to Seattle Children’s.  She has tolerated the T-cells incredibly well with no known side-effects which is a great gift when dealing with experimental treatment.

As is ever the case, the days ahead are utterly unknown.  The nurse today asked Allistaire what she’s going to be for Halloween.  Halloween?  Are you kidding?  That’s a million years away.  Our life is lived in less than hour increments.  Last year we planned for the girls to trick-or-treat along Main Street at home in Bozeman with a party to head to afterward.  A week before Halloween Allistaire’s relapse was discovered and 24 hours later we were headed to Seattle.  I saw my friend Megan on the soccer field on Sunday.  Her husband told me what field to look for her at but as I scanned the folk before me I realized I had no idea how long her hair was.  We met at Cancer Support Community with her bald head and blue eyes as she battled lymphoma.  She told me of being shaken by the news of her friend’s son being diagnosed with a brain tumor just days after he and her daughter had played together.  He is one of two new cancer diagnoses of children in our town in the past few weeks.  “I don’t take having my kids for granted,” she said.

“I feel like flesh rubbed raw,” I told my mother-in-law.  Every touch, no matter how light, brings stinging pain.  My reserve is wiped away.  I have no buffer.  The pain just penetrates immediately.  Sometimes I gasp, fighting to get air, wondering how to keep going, disoriented by circumstances ever outside of my control that change constantly without warning.  I read some simple yet profound words by Paul Tripp that met me right where I was, where I am.  A friend shared a song.  A song I’d like to wake to, to end my days with.  The Lord provides.  He hems me in behind and before. He goes behind me and breathes life into death, redeeming the brokenness, the loss, the ugliness, the sin and death.  He guards my right foot from slipping.  He is invites me to dwell in the shadow of His wings.  He goes before me, sovereignly orchestrating the days ahead.  He lays down provision, provision that I cannot yet imagine nor even know I will need.  He gives me manna, sustenance each day.  He destroys.  He annihilates.  He ravages.  He calls me to harken to His voice that says what this life is about, what it’s not about.  Damn the closet doors.  They don’t matter.  Forget that stretch mark strained bulge of fat on your belly.  Let go.  At long last release that white knuckled grip on what you “think” this life ought to be.  Rest.  Rest.  Dwell now, here, in this fleeting moment, in the ragged land punctured through with un-doing beauty, with sights too glorious and too painful for words.

But sometimes I just flat out tell Him, “NO!!!!”  I don’t want what you have for me God!!!  I want this to be done.  I don’t want this pain.  I don’t want this chaos.  We’re in the ER now (Wednesday morning).  Allistaire continued to throw up and I had to call the Hem/Onc Fellow on-call last night.  She took some of her meds but then threw up.  She essentially hadn’t had almost anything to drink since the night before.  I was worried about her getting dehydrated.  She moaned in pain all night long but didn’t actually throw up until 5:45am.  This time it was that dark green bile I had only ever seen during her ileus in July.  Dread swept in.  But right before she threw up she pooped which meant her gut had moved.  A few hours later she threw up the green bile again.  Immediately afterward I made her take all of her meds which she was able to keep in for over an hour which meant that hopefully they were absorbed.  I called the GI clinic who instructed us to go to the ER to get her assessed.  She has continued to throw up but is on fluids now and the CT w/contrast that was scheduled tomorrow will happen today as soon as we can get the oral contrast in.  The thought of another ileus and the adjoining hospital stay is daunting.

I tell God, No, this is too far, too much.  This has to stop.  But who am I?  What is the purpose of my life, of Allistaire’s?  Is it not ultimately to know God and make Him known?  Isn’t it really about yielding to His will because the source of His will is His love for us, His goodwill to all men, His desire that all might come to see Him as He is – the only source of true life?  Am I really going to say No to that?  Because that is not love.  Love yields and sacrifices for the good of another.  That is what God is calling me to – Jai, will you lay down your life for another?  Will you lay down your expectations and declarations of what you think you deserve and trust Me to walk you through this life in a way that allows My beauty and truth to be seen?  I used to think I wanted to be a missionary.  I had visions of jungles and Africa.  But isn’t being a missionary really just saying Yes to God that where you are is where He wants you?  Who am I to define the boundaries of the mission field?  What if there’s one conversation with one nurse or one fellow parent that this is all for?  What if there is one day that all these days will have brought me to that is the day the Lord moves in the heart of another through our brutal road?  Will I love?  Because loving others means yielding to the Lord right now, here.  Man it is so very hard to do because everything in me rages that this is all fucked up!  And it is!  It is!  Christ came into the world precisely because it is a mess and fundamentally broken.  God could have fixed everything that very moment it broke, but He didn’t.  Christ could have brought everything into redemption when He walked on earth but He didn’t.  God has been at work from before the beginning.  He is an epic God.  His scale is far vaster and more complex than I can begin to imagine.

One night at home this past week, Sten and I sat on the deck in the dark, looking up at the staggering beauty of the star filled sky.  I asked him about one particular cluster of stars.  He pulled out his iPhone with the snazzy app that’s supposed to allow you to point your phone in the direction of the stars of inquiry and it will show you their names and the surrounding constellations.  As he fiddled with the settings we discovered the app also allows you to see not just the visible light spectrum part of the sky, but also you can see it based on the gamma rays and x-rays present.  Each selection on the app allows you to “see” a different portion of the electromagnetic spectrum the our eyes cannot detect.  Eleven years ago I taught Physical Science to 9th graders.  I found myself swooning whenever we discussed the electromagnetic spectrum – so much reality always right there but utterly invisible to me.  My eyes, my body, my senses had no way to detect infrared light or radio waves and yet, they really were there – if only I had a way to “see” them.  I believe the way the Lord knows and sees the universe and time is a bit like the electromagnetic spectrum.  He can see ALL that is there, that is real, at once, in full clarity and detail.  I, well, I can only see the smallest segment of the vast reality that is.

Paul Tripp’s words that helped me last week

“It is Well” song that encouraged me

 

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Severely Diminished

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Pediatric Echocardiogram Report:   Name: Allistaire Kieron Anderson

Summary:

1.  Severely diminished left ventricular systolic function

2.  The left ventricle is moderate to severely dilated

3.  Ejection fraction (apical biplane) = 11%

4.  The left ventricular fractional shorting is 8%

5.  Mild to moderate mitral valve insufficiency

6.  Markedly abnormal left ventricular diastolic function

7.  Dampened systolic amplitude due to poor cardiac output

8.  Moderately dilated right ventricle

9.  Severely diminished right ventricular systolic function

10.  Estimated pulmonary artery diastolic pressure is 16mmHg above the right atrial pressure, based on a pulmonary insufficiency jet velocity of 2.00 m/s

11.  The peak tricuspid regurgitation velocity is 2.9 m/s=34mmHg

It goes on for three more pages giving the details that build the summary above.  I didn’t cry immediately.  My face stood still as I scanned and scanned the words, horrified at how many aspects of her heart are “severely diminished,” or “markedly abnormal.”  Somehow I made my way to the quiet room before I began gasping for air, eyes wide, eyes gripped closed and mouth wide with silent ragged terror.  What do they call it?  A flat spin, when a plane begins this awful downward spin from which there is no return?  It seems we are caught in this strong silent force, pulling her downward, down at frightening speeds.  I see the world whirling, whirling, images blurring, tears streaming and all the while mouth screaming in silence.  I can’t hear it.  I hear nothing.  I watch from outside and am trapped with her inside this gravitational horror from which it seems no effort can overcome.

The cardiologist says she does not know, she cannot predict if Allistaire will be able to recover from this heart failure.  If she does, it will take months.  The primary question is whether or not we have the time for her heart to heal.  A question no one can answer.  A question that feels futile because I don’t see how it will impact what we’re doing here.  We don’t really know the status of her disease because her heart is not in a condition to sustain sedation for the procedures necessary to get the answers.  Fortunately, her ANC, which hangs around 200, is not so recovered that it is necessary right now, or even advantageous to pursue the answers.  But she will of course need more chemo.  It seems abundantly clear that if she can ever recover enough function, it will take a long time, longer than the leukemia will sit obediently back and wait for.

On Wednesday afternoon, we will have a Care Conference meeting with Dr. Gardner, her oncologist, one of the cardiologists, and one of the ICU attending doctors.  Ashlei our social worker will be there hopefully and last night through tears and few words, I called Sten to come, come to Seattle.  Sit with me Sten and bear the brunt of these words that pummel and burn.  Dr. Gardner will lay out the chemo options.  I know there are several that are not considered hard on her heart that have been effective in the past, whether or not she can endure them at this low functioning or not, I do not know.  I do not know.  Dr. Kemna, the cardiologist I met with yesterday, said we need to discuss now our plan, our desires, should some more extreme intervention become necessary.  She made the point that should Allistaire require interventions like being on a ventilator or on ECMO (a crazy amazing terrifying machine that circulates the blood for the heart externally), we need to have a degree of confidence that she could come off of them.  Yah, because otherwise, what would be the point?  What’s the point of putting her on a machine to sustain her life if there is no hope for life on the other side of these?  This is what the ICU doctor alluded to the other day when she said we needed to discuss codes.  If Allistaire codes, if her heart stops, should they intervene, should the room become a mass of swarming bodies intent on reviving her flesh, pulling it back from that dark place?

I’ve been here so long, circling, pacing, hunting and being hunted.  “Jackle on your heels,” is how my friend referred to it yesterday.  The shock doesn’t let up.  It seemed at last we had that beast pinned, we needed only to enact our last attack, the last twist of its wily neck to break it for good…but then I feel the unexpected pressure of noose cutting off my airway.  Without sound, without anticipation, the breath is being extinguished.  I stutter and am confused, “But don’t you see, don’t you see, we’ve almost killed this foe?  What are you doing?  Let me finish this act.  Let me at long last put an end to this stalker, that I have danced with night after night, lacing through the trees in the dark of night forest.”  No response, just greater and greater constriction.

The cardiologists have increased her Milrinone to .75 now and taken off the Carvedilol.  Apparently the Carvedilol can not only help with heart failure, but can actually induce it when the heart is so, so sick.  This morning they will have to hold her Digoxin because her potassium is a little low.  It is ever a careful, delicate balance, intricately monitored.  They can go up on the Milrinone, only to 1 or maybe 1.2 and then they would consider adding other meds, norepinephrine and/or epinephrine.  I feel myself giving over a little, letting go a little of my desire to be so involved in the details of this med or that at this level or that.  I am drawn to her neck, that warm incredibly soft place where I should like to stay.  I am pulled to gaze at her cheeks, the perfect slope of her nose, to run my hand up and down the beautiful softness of her arm, to listen intently to her sweet voice.  I wish to dwell forever pulling the curve of her little body into the curve of mine.  My whole body grieves the thought of ever being separated from her, having her pulled  gently, silently away, away…

Perhaps I can just take her and run.  How I long to soar with her away from this place.  I am just now realizing I had dreams of flying last night, of running soft through the grass and then just lifting off.  But there was too a severe hill, so steep that you could never, ever climb down, rather it was a ledge, a cliff.  But the girl in front of us said she thought she could make it despite having seen her brother fall straight to his death.  I told Allistaire, who crawled behind me, No, we will not go this way, we will go around, we will find another way down.  And then that girl jumped, she just leapt and indeed fell utterly to her death. I felt flattened as I slept last night, every single surface of my body pulled so heavy against the couch/bed. My face is flat.  It is weary and aches dull from hard crying.  A new beautiful day has come.  I acclimate, I adjust to this new reality.  Just I have done on countless turns in this spinning world.  Get slammed.  Slowly arise.  Walk tentatively, knowing it is likely you would be slammed again to the ground, cranium ground into dirt.

The light is growing longer in the evenings and on these clear days I am transported back to late summer evenings with Allistaire, out on pass from the hospital, going to Magnuson park after all the other kids have gone home, and then we come to play.  We would arrive as late as we could back to the hospital.  There is a sweetness to those memories, a glow of mango light at the horizon blending into green and the vast stretch upward into perfect blue of night.  Birds singing in the evening and trees all lush, green upon green.  I remember clear still mornings walking high on the sky bridge of the 7th floor, Mt. Rainier looming blue to the south, awaiting that pink fire of first sunlight.  The cold of new day, birds, ever singing, twittering, calling, glorying in their existence.  I felt strangely serene, with the cold clear thought that perhaps I was there to help her die well, to stay by her side, loving, caring for her through each step toward that end that seemed ever closer.  Those days two years ago loop around wide to now, linking, completing a circle.  I think back to those days and raise up those truths, those clarities the Lord showed me then.  The suffering and the joy sit side by side, neither undoing the other, both deep, both broad, both stretching to the horizons, swamping and flooding my heart.

The music slows, vast space between each note.  My heart calms, slows, rests.  As I came down the hall to the Unit at the end of nap time and saw that perfect white sparkle of first star, alone in the evening sky, I paused long, wondering, wondering, what do I pray?  What do I come to You and ask oh Father, oh Father.  I seek to abide in you, rest in you, just rest, still my sore arm from its work, let me lie here and rest in You.  I have no idea what the days ahead hold.  I have no strength to look out long, scanning the horizon, squinting to try to make out what is ahead of us.  Rather, I shall curl here with my sweet girl and rest in the shadow of His wings, sheltered, beloved, held.  Be still my soul.

 

Wait and See

Standard

IMG_2792Strange how you can have expectations, just ideas you’ve grabbed from where?  Thresholds and time frames constructed of air, of nothingness, no structure to sustain them and yet, they hold power, they help you to endure or enforce the heavy feeling of defeat.  Somehow in my mind, when Allistaire first moved to the ICU, I thought, oh, we’ll be here for several days, maybe a week.  Upon what basis did I come up with those numbers?  Out of thin vacant air.  Today marks her 37th day in the PICU.  Today we begin our 6th week.  I remember a friend telling me they were in the PICU for two months.  “How in the world do you do that, survive that?” I wondered.

But here we are, now with no end in sight.  Last Tuesday, 2/17, we were scheduled to be transferred to the  BMT (Bone Marrow Transplant) team.  We were supposed to be at Ron Don with a few weeks of testing to complete before conditioning for transplant was to begin.  It stings to move past those dates, knowing transplant, well, who knows if and when transplant will come.  In my mind I had counted it out and we were going to be home by the end of June and then we lost July with the idea of pushing back transplant another month to give her heart time to heal.  The reality is sinking into me that she may never get to transplant, or at the best, it could be far off.  A summer gone.  The doctors tell me we must be patient, and wait and see, that it is often best to be patient.  Patience, yes, I know something of patience.  But while I’m seeking to be patient, leukemia cells will divide and multiply totally irrespective of our best laid plans.  While I’m here with Allistaire cloistered away in the hospital, Solveig’s life goes on and I will have missed nearly an entire year her schooling, this added on to the many other months of her life from which I have been absent.  To sum it up, I just feel sad these days, a deep pool of sadness ever below.

After 48 hours of being off of Milrinone early last week, the cardiologists decided to put her back on it.  Her heart rate and respirations trended up slightly and there was the issue of nausea to consider.  They hoped the Milrinone would allow them to titrate up her Carvedilol and deal with these symptoms.  While her heart rate and respiration have dropped slightly, her BNP which was 4800 last Monday, trended down only as low as 3400 and is 4600 as of today.  I feel disheartened.  Yesterday they decided to put her on Digoxin, another heart med.  Digoxin is an older med that like Milrinone, can help with symptoms of heart failure but does not necessarily help the heart to heal.  The idea is that by carefully monitoring the blood levels of Digoxin and adjusting the dose as necessary (Digoxin can be toxic at higher levels), they can address her symptoms of heart failure in the scenario of a future weaning of Milrinone.  They will continue to have to monitor closely her potassium levels as a number of her meds can impact potassium levels.  Adverse effects and toxicity of Digoxin are more common when potassium levels are low, “since digoxin normally competes with K+ ions for the same binding site on the Na+/K+ ATPase Pump.”  Her Lasix draws off potassium which they replace in her TPN (IV nutrition).  On the other hand, she also takes Spironolactone which, “often increases serum potassium levels.”  It is amazing the delicate balance of electrolytes that allow our body to function properly and thus the need for careful monitoring by the doctors.  Blood pressure must also be monitored closely given that a number of these heart meds reduce blood pressure.  Yesterday, they held her Enalapril for one dose and then decided to gone back down a little on her Carvedilol given her blood pressures over night were a little low. Too low of a blood pressure will prevent her from being able to take the heart meds she so desperately needs.

Tomorrow she will get another echo.  I don’t feel very optimistic.  The BNP hasn’t gone down really.  We’ll see.  She did not get her BMA (Bone Marrow Aspirate) done last week for two reasons.  It was originally planned for Tuesday solely based on protocol.  If there are no blood counts by Day +35 of the round of chemo, they go in and take a sample of the bone marrow to see what’s going on.  As it happened, her ANC (absolute neutrophil count) finally started coming up last Sunday so the BMA was automatically pushed back until her ANC reached 200 which is the standard time frame with the idea that at that point there are enough cells to look at to make a determination of how her body and cancer is recovering.  However, while her ANC has reached 200, they are still choosing to hold off on both the BMA and the PET/CT because both require sedation.  At this point, her severe heart failure makes anesthesia more risky.  Any sedation would be done in the OR (versus the room or clinic procedure room) and require a special cardiac anesthesia team.  Because it is not necessary that her BMA or PET/CT take place right now, they will hold off until her heart recovers more or it becomes imperative to see what her leukemia is doing.

Coinciding with the rise of Allistaire’s ANC, she has had increased pain in her belly.  Once her ANC hit 200, the doctors decided to stop the three antibiotics she’s been on for the past five weeks.  I was a little hesitant to do so without a CT to be sure that her typhlitus hadn’t worsened.  So Friday afternoon she had the task of drinking four ounces of apple juice mixed with contrast.  After nearly 45 minutes of effort she threw up about half of what she had slowly sipped down.  The nurse re-loaded her cup and she finally got in the minimally required amount.  The results of the CT were mixed.  “There is minimal residual wall thickening involving the sigmoid colon.  The rectal wall thickening has nearly completely resolved.  New from prior, the cecum is decompressed and there are areas of mild cecal wall thickening.  There is a slight interval increase in degree of surrounding fat stranding.  The remaining gastrointestinal tract shows normal course and caliber without evidence of obstruction or focal inflammatory changes.”  So overall, she continues to heal and now that her marrow is producing cells, hopefully, the healing will soon be complete.  But because there is some additional locations that indicate typhlitus, they are putting her back on one of her antibiotics, Meropenem, for now.  Not surprisingly, but sadly, her lungs and liver show evidence of her heart failure, “Interval increase in size of small right pleural effusion with bibasilar subsegmental atelectasis and likely superimposed mild interstitial pulmonary edema.  These findings, in conjunction with apparent vascular congestion of the liver may be related to a degree of heart failure.”

The thought that Allistaire’s heart must improve sufficiently to hit that benchmark of an Ejection Fraction of 45 within two months has felt so daunting.  I was relieved to run into Dr. Gardner in Starbucks one morning and hear that she has been brain storming Allistaire’s situation.  My face immediately lights up when she says things like that – I love and am honored that she constantly holds Allistaire in her thoughts even when she is not physically near.  I love that she too is so passionate about finding a way through for her.  We are both assuming her marrow remains in remission.  So she proposes we put her on Azacitadine given that it worked before.  (Allistaire did 7 month-long rounds of Azacitadine when disease was found post transplant and it put her back into remission and kept her there.)  I wondered about possibly using Decitabine since it’s a little more hard-core than Aza.  We do still have her chloromas (solid leukemia) to consider.  She said she would consult the other AML docs.  She also mentioned Clofarabine as an option.  The conditioning chemo for Allistaire’s last transplant was Clofarabine combined with Busulfan.  Busulfan is definitely not an option but Clofarabine could be combined with Cytarabine.  All three of these chemo options are easy on the heart and have shown in the past to be effective against Allistaire’s cancer.  Wahoo!!!  I love options!  After Allistaire’s first round of chemo from this relapse, which put her into remission, I really did not think we would be in the position of being desperate for transplant.  But it seems that we are here again, desperate for transplant, a terror that may just bring her healing.

I called our financial counselor here at the hospital to see what Allistaire’s bill is.  I couldn’t help myself, knowing all that has transpired over this last month.  I told someone the other day I thought Allistaire was on at least 15 meds, so I asked the nurse to print me off her med sheet: twenty-five different meds each day, most of which are given 2-3 times per day.  Since she was admitted on January 9th for this round of chemo and the following PICU stay, her bill is $1.1 million dollars.  Her room alone is $12,700 per night and each GCSF shot costs $1,040 which she got each day for 33 days.  This puts her total bill since diagnosis well over 5 million dollars.  Isn’t that staggering?!  Isn’t it crazy that one round of chemo with ONE infection has cost $1.1 million?!  What if that money could be put toward cancer research?  What if we could invest millions of dollars upfront to find better, more effective ways of curing cancer?  What if we didn’t have to poison the body, destroying the heart and suppressing the marrow so far that the body is left without defense from even the most common attacks?  We cannot take the money that has been invested in sustaining Allistaire’s life, nor the money that will continue to be spent and give it instead to cancer research.  Such an exchange is not possible.  But the need for money put up front toward cancer research is so clearly desperately necessary!

Many, many of you have asked me how you can help.  You have felt powerless to do anything to help Allistaire.  Giving to cancer research may not feel like directly helping Allistaire but it is!  First, it is a tangible way that you can show your love and support for Allistaire and our family on this journey.  It is tangible.  I see your name when you give and I feel blessed that you would stand by my side in this fight, that you would cry out in anguish for more!  Will you stand beside me?  Will you give?  And you know what?  We don’t know how long Allistaire has, but she has lived long enough since her diagnosis to not only be witness to, but be directly effected by new developments in cancer research!  Cancer research in the last two years is literally what has provided this combination of chemos that has put stamped down HER cancer and put HER into remission!  This is not some ambiguous, indirect, vague blessing.  Cancer research is precisely what provided her last transplant which has given her life the past two years.  You say you want to help.  Your heart is heavy with grief for us.  You wring your hands wondering what you can possibly do.  GIVE!  Support cancer research at Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center!  It’s not hard, it’s not complicated.  Give.  Please.

Click HERE to support me in this year’s Obliteride where I will once again have the joy, the sorrow and the honor to tangibly fight this foe that seeks to tear away the life of Allistaire and many others, so beloved.IMG_2791 IMG_2790