Tag Archives: The Ben Towne Foundation

Eroding

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IMG_1270IMG_1282To be honest, Allistaire felt anything but strong against cancer on Thursday after being discharged from the hospital.  Nevertheless, it was a glorious day and this was to be our one shot for Allistaire to go to the pumpkin patch.  Minutes before I took this picture she was crying hard because of pain in her face.  Pain where the leukemia is eating away, eroding the bone.  After eating a couple of chips so her stomach wouldn’t be empty, I gave her a dose of oxycodone.   There is now a 3 X 3.8 X 3.6 cm mass of leukemia in her right sinus which is pushing her eye forward, and affecting her sinuses.  Her nose runs constantly now.

“There is expansion and bony erosion of the right maxillary sinus.  The mass extends into the right orbit resulting in mild mass effect on the right globe and minimal right proptosis.  The mass extends into the right nasal canal replaces the middle and inferior nasal turbinates.  The mass also involves the right ethmoid and right sphenoid sinuses and alveolar ridge.” (Brain MRI report)

There is also a growing mass in her left sinus measuring 2.5 X 2.3 X 1.5 cm.  The cancer is pushing its way into the roots of her molars.

It hurts to look at her.  It’s hard not to have my attention drawn right to that eye.  I wonder what other people see.  I feel some strange inward compulsion to tell everyone who sees her, this is not her.  You are not really seeing my sweet girl – this weak, crying, deformed child is not her.  But this is what childhood cancer looks like.

Originally, Allistaire was going to be discharged from the hospital Wednesday.  Her scans that had been rescheduled for Monday had to be changed to Tuesday because her blood sugar level was too low on Monday to make anesthesia safe and the docs couldn’t just replete her glucose because then the PET scan wouldn’t work.  So once Monday’s scans were cancelled we disconnected her NG tube from suction and amazingly 21 hours later she still hadn’t thrown up – this despite drinking a full cup of apple juice in relative short time to get her blood sugar level up Tuesday morning just in time for the cut off for the PET scan and anesthesia.  Thankfully all went well with the scans and the anesthesiologist said she did great.  So just before she woke up, the nurse removed the NG tube from Allistaire.  She was quite excited and proud when she woke up to find the tubie gone.  I was hopeful that with scans done and the tube gone we could get out of the hospital

Sadly, Allistaire’s potassium has been very low for over a week, so discharge was delayed.  The theory is that with all of Allistaire’s stomach contents being suctioned out, her electrolytes have gotten off their normal levels.  Low potassium is dangerous because it can cause arrhythmias in her heart.  So it would seem like the best course of action would be to give her a potassium supplement to replete her levels.  However, Dr. Rosenberg, the attending doc, feared Allistaire might either have or was going to have tumor lysis.  Tumor lysis is the breaking up/death of cancer cells in which the contents of the cells go into the blood stream and eventually have to be processed by the kidneys.  Extensive tumor lysis can be too much for the kidneys to handle and can actually cause acute or even permanent kidney failure.  This is what happened to Allistaire the last time she took the chemo, Mylotarg.  Cancer cells can lys as part of their normal life cycle or because of being destroyed by chemo.

Dr. Rosenberg originally suspected tumor lysis because Allistaire’s uric acid level jumped up.  I questioned this given that Allistaire had ceased taking Allipurinol, which removes uric acid, due to her ileus. Apparently, however, under normal circumstances, the body doesn’t produce uric acid, though Allistaire’s must because she has required long-term use of Allipurinol.  In order to quickly remove uric acid, Allistaire was given one dose of IV rasburicase (which turns out to be about $7,000 a dose).   Because tumor lysis can also cause a dangerous jump up in potassium, Dr. Rosenberg wanted to be conservative and only minimally replete her levels.  For this reason, a low dose of potassium was added to her fluids which helped keep her level up just enough to mitigate the risk to her heart.  However, her level remains too low for her to restart her Digoxin and Lasix at this point.

Allistaire’s face has been getting progressively worse, even in the course of days.  The side of her face along her nose is now numb presumably from a nerve being effected by the leukemia.  She looks like she’s been beaten.  The whole right side of her face is strained and bulging from the relentless march of cancer and its apparent impact on the draining of her sinuses.  There is something so wretched about it being in her face.  It feels like she’s being stolen away.  I look to her left eye to see the Allistaire I know, the one I know is in there, shrouded by this struggle.  She’s had pain before, pain her legs, arms, arm pit – so many places these chloromas have showed up – twenty-nine different tumors or “myeloid sarcomas” as her MRI refers to them.  But the face?!  Not her face Lord!  Please spare her pain and deformity there.

I am holding out for Monday.  Monday will be her first dose of Mylotarg.  Today is day 4 out of 5 for the chemo Decitabine which will be followed by doses of Mylotarg on days 6, 9 and 12.  For Decitabine we go to clinic but Monday she will be readmitted to the hospital in anticipation of the much hoped for, yet dangerous, tumor lysis.  Dr.  Cooper is strategizing how to best prepare her, knowing that due to the limitations of her heart, he cannot simply flood her with fluids to wash out the cancer cell guts we want to break open and spill out into her blood stream.  In coordination with cardiology, she will get what fluids she can and he is planning to give her another dose of Rasburicase to completely wipe out the uric acid.  However, the phosphorus and potassium can also rise to dangerous levels.  Sevelamer can be used to bind-up the phosphorus.  She will remain in the hospital at least through Thursday when she gets the second dose of Mylotarg on day 9.  Should she have any fevers, she would need to stay in the hospital for at least 48 hours.  Around day 21 she may have another brain MRI with the intention of determining what cancer is left in her face and planning radiation for what remains.  Our very dear Dr. Ralph Ermoian is the radiology oncologist who is responsible for determining if and when radiation is an option, what are the risks and benefits and what type of radiation will be best given the location.  He is an exceptionally kind man and I feel blessed to have him be a part of Allistaire’s care.

On another note, in case you haven’t read “The Emperor of All Maladies,” I will yet again highly recommend it.  Something I found so fascinating as I read through the history of cancer was the role of “serendipity” in the progress and advancement of the understanding of cancer and its treatment.  The author used this word on a number of occasions to account for circumstances in which unexplained events and even mishaps resulted in progress.  Whenever I would read of “serendipity,” my face would light up with a smile.  Am I just looking to give God credit where it was really just happenstance, chance?  Yes.  Yes I am.  Because I don’t believe in chance.  I believe in a God who orchestrates – down to the details.  I believe in a God who works through circumstances to accomplish His will.  Please be praying for “serendipity.”  AML experts from around the country will be meeting next week as part of the Children’s Oncology Group.  As well, my friend Julie Guillot, whose son Zach died of AML, will be in New York meeting with the CEO of the Leukemia and Lymphoma Society to challenge them to substantially increase their financial support of research for pediatric AML in their “Beat AML” campaign.  Collaboration of doctors, researchers, funding organizations and parents of kids with AML is imperative to drive us closer and quicker to lasting cures and less toxic treatment options.  There really is excitement in the air.

I didn’t realize it until I was saying it, but I told Dr. Cooper the other day, “We parents are your biggest advocates and promoters.  We are the biggest believers in cancer research.  We are the keepers of the stories and faces that can turn people’s hearts to give to cancer research.  You can’t expect us, of all people, to give up hope, to say we are done fighting, to raise the white flag.  We CANNOT.”  The world of cancer treatment is on the move due to the accomplishments of cancer research.  Just around the corner, yet out of sight, might be the thing that will provide Allistaire’s next open door.

Today such a thing is hard to imagine.  Today there were blasts (cancer cells) in her peripheral blood.  She wants only to sleep.  When she is awake she tenderly holds her hand to her right cheek and cries, saying “ouchie” over and over and over.  She doesn’t want to eat because it hurts to chew.  I will turn to look at her and again see bloody snot running from her nose.  She is miserable.  The last few days have been the first time I can imagine ever saying yes to hospice.  If it were not for the hope of Mylotarg, the hope of something that would work…if this cancer was left to progress…it’s nauseating.  It is a magnificent fall sunny day.  Families are headed to the pumpkin patch while my child languishes in a dark room, moaning in her sleep.  It hurts.  It hurts so bad.

I want to sincerely thank Keith & Janet Stocker of Stocker Farms for their compassionate and generous hearts that have chosen to give the proceeds of this year’s Pumpkin Patch to Strong Against Cancer which is a collaboration of doctors, nurses, researchers, hospitals, companies and people like you who are supporting the medical breakthrough of using immunotherapy to treat cancer – much of which is being developed at Seattle Children’s Ben Towne Center for Childhood Cancer Research.
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Jail Break

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IMG_3589I used to think I was safe, that wild animals, the beasts, the possibility of having my flesh torn off of bones, lay up there, out there, far off in dark mountainous woods.  I thought it would be easy to simply steer clear of such terrors.  As though somehow my own willing of my footsteps could keep me from entering their realm, that by hope, optimism, some silly assumption of impenetrability, it would not be so hard to keep those ravages at bay.  I walked in a sunlit land, blithely believing, perhaps not even believing but never even thinking that they might tear down the hillside at terrifying speeds, absolutely bent on destruction.  They do not see a heart full of hopes, of dreams, of ideas, of lists of yearnings, eyes bright.  Their horrible feet carry them, saliva flinging back behind as their daggers flash, crazed eyes.

Flood waters tearing homes in half, separating husband and wife with children.  Father of Solveig’s classmate, life cut short from heart attack.  Jens on a mountainside.  Nine year old girls sold into slavery by Isis.  Kassidae home from yet another T-cell trial that utterly failed to stop her cancer.

What is it like to have no more options?  How can I fathom a journey where suddenly the road simply ends.  No destination reached, just a faint trail blending into nothing, melding into the landscape.  And then what?  And then what?  Where does one go from there?

I see a small child standing alone in an open space.  Nothing in their hands.  No clothes.  No defense.  Utterly vulnerable.  I stand and watch, unable to move, unable to raise my hand to stop what I know will come, what is coming.

The child shivers, confusion in their eyes.  And then you sense it, before even sound reaches your ears.  Some sort of terrible rushing, some silent invisible foe rushing through the forest.  At last it breaks through the trees, snarling, feet hardly touching the ground as it bolts for your child, savage mouth wide.  And do you turn away?  Can you stand to watch the beast tear into your child’s flesh?  Dare you know the moment their life is extinguished?  How much will be ripped and torn before their eyes go limp and lifeless?

I heard these words in a beautiful song, a song meant to comfort, a lullaby.

“Quiet your heart
It’s just a dream
Go back to sleep

I’ll be right here
I’ll stay awake as long as you need me
To slay all the dragons
And keep out the monsters
I’m watching over you

My love is a light
Driving away all of your fear
So don’t be afraid
Remember I made a promise to keep you safe

You’ll have your own battles to fight
When you are older
You’ll find yourself frozen inside
But always remember

If you feel alone
Facing the giants
And you don’t know
What to do

My love is a light
Driving away all of your fear
So don’t be afraid
Remember I made a promise to keep you safe”

My heart was breaking as I listened to these words.  Hot silent tears slid down as I drove, facing forward, intent on the task of getting there.  “You’ll have your own battles to fight when you’re older.”  But no, no, Allistaire did not get to be older before she had her own battles to fight.  She was just 21 months old when her battle against this ravaging beast first came, intent on taking her life.

“Mommy, I like that part, ‘you feel alone, facing the giants, and you don’t know what to do.”  Her soft sweet voice came to me from the back seat.  Of all the words in all the songs, these are the one’s she speaks out loud, repeats back to me, the words that most resonated with her little girl heart.

You think, unconsciously believe, that as a parent you can protect your child, that somehow, by force of will you can magically keep them from harm.  Surely there is nothing more core to being a parent, to being a mother, than protecting the life of your child.

But my love, oh my love, so fierce, stuffed full with all my might and zeal, my hope…it is powerless to protect against some enemies.  I never made that promise to keep her safe, I just assumed it would be true.  Of course she will be safe.  Of course I can wrap her up in a hug and overcome any giant.

No.  There may come a time where there are no options left and I will hear the rushing of wind through branches as that beast comes tearing through the forest, breaks out into the opening and sinks its wretched brutal teeth into the one I love, this time sparing nothing.  I may be left with my heart bleeding out in the open space, tattered, wounded, ravaged child in my lap, never again to see her bright eyes, never again to hear the most beloved sound on the whole earth, her laugh, her voice full of wonder.

But I know this.  She will not stand alone.  If such a time comes, I will stand with her, hand gripped in mine and I will face that beast with her.  I will not turn away and I will not leave her, and that may be all that I can do.  My eyes will weep until my own flesh is laid to rest.

To Shannon, to Kate, to Susan, to Becca, to Rachel, to Julie, to Beth, to Devon, to you many more mothers who have walked this road, who stood with your hand gripping your child’s as that beast came to devour, my heart weeps with yours and oh how I desperately long for a better day.

For those of you who know that Allistaire was discharged from the hospital almost two weeks ago, these words must come as a surprise.  What you see on the surface is so far from the full story. People constantly comment, “She looks great!”  They ask, “How is she doing?”  How do I answer that question?  On Monday at the playground, after having climbed up the slide twice in a row, Allistaire suddenly said she didn’t feel well, she was panicked and in pain but couldn’t explain what was really happening.  There was terror in her eyes.  I cradled her and hoped she would calm down. Maybe she just overexerted herself a little.  She cried out in anguish, “Mommy,” over and over, yet I could not understand the source of her pain or her fear.  I asked my five-year old daughter, “Do I need to take you to the hospital?” as though she could answer this question.  Was she overreacting?  What was she feeling?  She threw up in the bathroom.  Well, she was on day 6 of chemo and this was the first time she threw up, so really not concerning in itself.  Of course nausea can be a sign of heart failure too. I scan through all I know in my head, assessing her energy, her sleep patterns, her appetite, food consumption.  Could it be her heart?  She continued to freak out after throwing up and we left the bathroom.  “Mommy, can I feel the sand?”  I took off her sandals and gently sat her feet down in the sand at Golden Gardens.  Immediately she calmed.  Immediately she was fine.  What was real?  What is true?  How much of that was based on something of significance?  How much is her just working herself up?  I dreaded having to relay this incident to the cardiologists.  It’s a lovely day at the park, but just below the surface are constant swirling realities that threaten to steal it all away.

In the first days of being out of the hospital, Allistaire and I gorged on our sudden freedom, on sunlight and bird song and starlight and bright moon, on playgrounds and sleeping without interruption, on hours of daytime without nurses and doctors and hospital food trays.  Solveig and JoMarie arrived last Wednesday evening and my heart swelled with the joy of their laughter and heads clustered together in play.  Everyday playgrounds, picnics and beaches, throwing rocks into water and sun glinting off lapping waves.  Caterpillars on fingers and squealing.  My faced beamed with delight, with wonder at simple ordinary life.  How much more wondrous it is than people realize!

You think that leaving the hospital is some signal of victory, of progress, of normalcy.  And so it may be, often is, though not always.  We left on May 18th, not having accomplished what we came to do.  In some ways the girl who left the hospital was worse off then the girl who came to Seattle back in October.  The great victory was that she successfully weaned off Milrinone.  A huge accomplishment which has made way for a few options, far more than none.  But her heart is far too weak to endure a standard transplant for AML which includes TBI (Total Body Irradiation).  So we left the confines of this hospital after 130 straight days, her only moments outside were the 30 seconds here and there strapped onto an ambulance stretcher as she was transported to and from The University of Washington for radiation.  We went straight to the playground.

For 11 of the past 12 days since she was discharged, Allistaire has been to the hospital for a variety of appointments.  On Tuesday the 19th she finished focal radiation to her left leg where one new chloroma (solid leukemia) showed up on her last PET/CT scan.  On Wednesday she saw Dr. Todd Cooper, her new primary oncologist.  Dr. Gardner is pregnant with twin girls and so we are making the transition to having Dr. Cooper, who is the newly hired head of the leukemia department and an AML expert.  He is the doctor that Dr. Pollard had hoped would come to Seattle Children’s.  He has been tasked with developing a High-Risk Leukemia program for Seattle Children’s.  So when Dr. Gardner asked who I’d like to have as Allistaire’s new primary oncologist, it was a no-brainer to ask for Dr. Cooper, a kind man from Atlanta who is a super smarty pants AML doc.  In our first outpatient visit with him, he relayed that Dr. Pollard had called him about Allistaire to make sure he was up to speed with all the details of her medical history.  I cannot tell you how amazingly cared for I feel here at Seattle Children’s.  We are blessed beyond words by the team that journey’s with us.  After seeing Dr. Cooper, Allistaire began seven days of Azacitadine, the same chemo she got last time.

Prior to leaving the hospital, I met with Dr. Gardner and Dr. Marie Bleakley, the transplant doctor we’ve worked with at several significant points.  It was really great to have them both present for the conversation.  Dr. Gardner began with explaining her reasoning for waiting so long for Allistaire to begin chemo again.  I had grown frightened with the incredible amount of time since her last round of chemo, knowing the immense need to keep her in remission and being aware that she was a month beyond the traditional time of starting a new round.  Dr. Gardner stressed that because Allistaire’s marrow has been so incredibly slow to recover, her greatest immediate risk is that of an infection that one: she wouldn’t have the white blood cell defenses to fight and two: that could overwhelm her heart.  So finally, nine weeks after the beginning of the previous round of Azacitidine, Allistaire would begin another round.  She also stated again that given Allistaire’s heart, TBI, known to have long-term consequences to the heart, was not in her best interest at this time.  Dr. Bleakley went on to describe a “midi-transplant” which has much lower levels of radiation (4 centigray as opposed to 12 in TBI) and heavy-duty myeloablative chemotherapy, and a “mini-transplant” with even lower levels of radiation (2 centigray) and non-myeloablative chemotherapy but high-dose steroids.  I’ll forego going into the details of how each of these work and the pros and cons, but suffice it to say, the mini-transplant is not a good option as it is intended to extend life in the old who cannot endure hard-core conditioning.  It is unlikely to provide a cure and has a lot of potential for GVHD (Graft Versus Host Disease).  So while the “midi-transplant” is an option for Allistaire, with a gleam in her eye, Dr. Bleakley had a different proposal.

I left the room with hope.  With fear yes, always there is fear, we walk ever into black, into unknown.  But with hope, with a bit of upturned grin.  Dr. Bleakley has proposed that Allistaire’s best option is to participate in the WT1 trial.  This is a trial through Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research and uses genetically modified T-cells which have a specially designed receptor to bind to the WT1 protein found on 90% of leukemia patients cancer cells.  Normally a bone marrow test would be done to confirm expression of the WT1 protein in the cancer cells, because if it is not present, the receptor is useless.  However, because Allistaire has not had any detectable disease in her marrow since she relapsed in October, they decided to proceed without this info for now.  At the end of this round of chemo, she will have another bone marrow test performed and if there is disease, they can then test for the WT1 protein.

So far 17 people have participated in this trial.  Of the people who were in remission going into a bone marrow transplant and remained in remission leading up to getting the modified T-cells, 100% have remained in remission for over a year that they have been followed so far, this in light of a normally high relapse rate post-transplant.  There are two people who relapsed after transplant and then got back into remission and then received the modified T-cells.  This is the arm of the protocol that Allistaire would fall into.  I believe I was told these people are also remaining in remission. The remaining group relapsed after transplant and did not get back into remission and despite having the T-cells are not doing well or have already died.  It seems the T-cells work best when there is little to no detectable disease.  We will know the state of Allistaire’s disease after we get results from her next set of tests around June 16th.  How I pray she remains in remission, but she has been receiving very mild chemo and has gone great lengths of time with little to no defense.

What makes Allistaire unique in this trial, is that, should she be able to get these TCR T-cells, she will be the very first child to do so.  I will have to ask again if this is being done anywhere else, but she is certainly the first child ever to have this sort of therapy here (Seattle Children’s/Fred Hutch).  There are many kids with ALL (Acute Lymphoblastic Leukemia) who have by now received modified T-cell therapy.  But the targets are quite different.  In Lymphoblastic leukemia, the cancer is in the B-cell line and CAR (Chimeric Antigen Receptor) therapy is used to destroy the cancer and in doing so, it forever destroys the patients’ B-cell line, requiring life-long transfusions of Immunoglobulin.  The first child ever to receive this therapy was a little girl named Emma in April 2012 at CHOP (Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia).  She has remained in complete remission since then.  Seattle Children’s Research along with the Ben Towne Foundation has provided this therapy to a growing number of children with great success.  People are coming from around the world for this treatment.  A month ago I met a woman named Solveig from Germany who was here with her son, Nicolas, who was getting CAR-19 T-cell therapy.  Allistaire’s cancer (Acute Myeloid Leukemia) is found on the myeloid line – cells that you cannot forever destroy and rely on transfusions for, cells like red blood cells, platelets and granulocytes.  Thus the scientists have needed to find another way to attack these cells.

The folks at Fred Hutch have been incredible.  I am amazed, honored and humbled by their passionate desire to make a way for Allistaire to participate in this trial.  Through conversations with Dr. Bleakley, Dr. Dan Egan (the principal investigator on the trial) and Dr. Phil Greenberg (the head of the lab who has designed this therapy), it is so abundantly evident that they see Allistaire as an individual and they see her as the child that represents the children who are also in desperate need of this therapy, children who have run out of options, children “destined to die of their disease.”  They have re-written the protocol to accommodate her, to make way for future children.  The original weight requirement was 30kg because of the numerous blood draws required for testing.  They worked it out to reduce the limit to 15kg, Allistaire was 17kg at the time they made this change.  Additionally, because this weight change equals treating much younger patients, they went through a lengthy, involved process to set up approval to give this therapy at Seattle Children’s.  Up to this point, the youngest patients have been in their teens and were treated at The University of Washington where adults are treated.  They have worked hard to make a way through for my girl.

On Sunday evening, May 17th, I was delightfully honored to be invited by Julie Guillot to the Premier Chef’s Dinner, a fundraiser for Fred Hutch.  As I have mentioned before, Julie and her husband, Jeff, lost their son Zach to a complication of his third transplant for AML.  At that time they were helping fund the research that would create T-cells that would give Zach another measure of defense against AML.  When Zach died in February 2014, Julie’s zeal and wild fiery passion to bring an end to AML and better treatment options, only intensified.  When Allistaire relapsed in October 2014, she invited Allistaire and I to a little party for Dr. Greenberg’s lab to celebrate the $1.7 million dollars Julie and Jeff had helped raise for his research thus far.  It was at that time I first met Dr. Greenberg in person and introduced he and his lab staff to Allistaire.  Jeff and Julie were the challenge fundraisers for the fundraiser on May 17, 2015, having pledged to match up to $400,000 of money raised that evening.  In making this commitment, they were given the privilege to direct where the funds would go.  Their whole motivation was to see the immunotherapy through Dr. Greenberg’s lab flourish and accelerate.  By the end of the amazing evening, $1,280,000 was raised to accelerate targeted cellular immunotherapy research at Fred Hutch.   I had the joy of standing up and representing the hopeful first child to benefit from his research.  Dr. Greenberg spoke to me on two different occasions during the evening, each time with multiple hugs initiated by him.  You could see the eager joy and hope in his eyes.  It was a wondrous thing to stand alongside a man who has dedicated several decades of his life to this research, generous donors, a fellow cancer mom who lost her son – for whom this therapy is coming too late, and I, the mom of a child who is desperate now and who needs this treatment immediately.  The full circle was there – scientist, patients, donors.

Doors are opening but still the tension remains high-pitched.  There is the illusion of normalcy, there is light-hearted laughter on the surface, but there is a mighty undercurrent, ever threatening to pull Allistaire down, deep into the suffocating dark.  First financial approval for the trial was required which was confirmed by Blue Cross Blue Shield of Montana this Wednesday.  This allowed the Unrelated Donor Search Committee to initiate their part which is to request Allistaire’s original donor to be contacted and for a request for consent to use remaining donated cells for this trial.  At this point, unlike the CAR t-cell trials, the WT1 trial must use bone marrow transplant donor cells.  While Allistaire is not in a position to get a transplant at this time, she thankfully does have cells stored at Fred Hutch from her original donor from her transplant in June 2013.  Extra cells are stored for two years at no charge and then you have the option to pay to have them stored.  This June 18th, will mark two years.  I pray this woman can be found quickly, quickly and that her heart will be moved again to give, this time solely of her consent.  It feels sort of terrifying to know that Allistaire’s one shot is dependent on a woman on the other side of the world, but then again, she gave once in a much greater way, we so hope she will help make a way through for Allistaire again.  If we can gain her consent, processing of the cells will begin and takes approximately a month and a half.  Speed is of essence.  The T-cell therapy much be coordinated with Allistaire’s chemo schedule.  It is my great hope that there may be a way for Allistaire to get these cells prior to needing to begin another round of chemo.

This therapy could be Allistaire’s cure.  That would be BEYOND AMAZING!!!!  And if not a cure, we pray the T-cells will buy her more time, time for her heart to heal, time for her heart to gain strength to enter the next battle of a second transplant.  What’s so wild to me is that Allistaire would be inpatient for ONE day for this therapy.  ONE DAY!!!!  And this T-cell therapy does not result in the intense cytokine storm response as it does in the CAR T-cell therapy which puts most kids in the ICU for some period of time.  No one in the WT1 trial has had to go to the ICU.  In fact, Dr. Gardner told me that Allistaire would not be able be eligible for the CAR t-cell therapy because of the extreme dangers it can pose.  For the WT1 trial, they would ask her to stick around for a few weeks for some blood draws and observation and then remaining blood tests could be done at home and simply mailed over to Fred Hutch.  It all seems too good to be true.  What a wondrous world it will be when this is the way cancer treatment is conducted.  Can you even imagine?!  I must highly, highly recommend the documentary, “The Emperor of All Maladies,” by Ken Burns!  It is based on the book of the same name which is also extremely fascinating and worth reading.  It is simply thrilling to see how far cancer research and treatment has come and the heightened hope that immunotherapy will change the course of how cancer impacts our lives – for one in every two men and one in every three women who will get cancer at least once in their lives.

I am weary, so utterly weary.  But what choice do we have but to walk on?  And we do.  We walk forward, giving thanks for so much blessing.  Sometimes it feels like there being a way through for her is an utter impossibility, but then I am reminded of how many “impossibilities” have come to pass, how the insurmountable has been overcome.  My yearning for her life is like a burning fever that never lets up.  Every moment is on high-alert, racing through the myriad of questions to try to determine how she is doing, to assess what is going on for her.  There are now so many interwoven layers of medical complexity and reality.  There is cancer, there is heart failure, there are medications (13 different ones every day – 26 doses), there is being deconditioned by months lived in the cramped confines of the hospital.  I see her on the play ground and I watch kids younger than her charge a hill or climb with confidence.  She tires quickly, she is fearful.  Her legs hurt.  Is it cancer on the move?  Is it lack of blood getting to muscles?  Is it simple fatigue brought on my muscles that have not been asked to do much in so, so long?  Is she nauseous?  Is it from chemo?  Is it from the magnesium she must take because her Lasix makes her waste it, magnesium that causes tumultuous abdominal cramping?  All her pain signals are mixed up so that she just finds herself in a frenzy of discomfort, in a frightful maze desperate to get out but with no clear direction.

Leaving the hospital balloons the craving for normal, it makes you think you should be normal, all the standards shift and you see your child not as one among the many other sick kids but among the normal.  At the same moment that I am delighting in the warm day and Allistaire playing in the sand, going back to the lake shore to fill her bucket again, I am aware of the dangers in that sand, in that water.  I’ve put parafilm on the end of her tubies and tucked them tight into her swim suit.  She wears her sun hat and is lathered in sunscreen.  Her medications make her more sensitive to the sun, more likely to burn.  I’d like to avoid skin cancer.  She doesn’t know what to do when the other little girl approaches silently to play with her and share her toys.  She is fearful and defensive.  My heart sighs knowing how little interaction she’s had with other children, how to navigate such situations.  In her cardiology appointment the great nurse, Jason, calls her precocious.  Yes, yes, she seems to be quite articulate for a five-year old.  There are ways that her deficits are glaring and there are odd ways that she has walked so much further in life than the vast majority of five-year olds.  What I know is that I love her dearly, I long to keep her safe, to see her have long life.

I pray to God, I seek to be reminded, imbedded in the truth of His infiniteness.  I ask Him to remember that I am finite.  I ask Christ to pray for me as He prayed for Peter, that my faith would not fail (Luke 22:31-32).  I ask Him to help me to lift my eyes, to take in the long view, to help me in this brutal moment, these series of endless days, in this tedious fight against cancer, in this relentless tumult to see His face throughout all these circumstances.  We go to the playground.  We look for the first stars at night, our necks craning back.  Alllistaire points eagerly at the moon, not framed in the hospital window, but in the vast expanse of the evening sky.  We listen for birds and bend our noses to flowers.  Our feet follow little paths through marsh land and cat tails, spider webs bright in the afternoon sun.  We live, we delight.  We go to the hospital again and again into little rooms with blood pressure cuffs and vials of blood that tell of the world within which eyes cannot see.  We walk forward through this intertwined life, messy, unclear, wondrous, of such enormous precious value.  We give thanks to the Lord and ask for more.IMG_3470 IMG_3483 IMG_3588 IMG_3591 IMG_3597 FullSizeRender-6
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Help The Hutch 2015-355-(ZF-8131-68186-1-002) Help The Hutch 2015-486-(ZF-8131-68186-1-001)

Lyrics above are from J.J. Heller’s song, “Keep You Safe.”

Get STOKED!

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The above three pictures are of Allistaire on February 4th in 2012, 2013 and 2014.  Each of the last 4 February 4ths she has either been in treatment or about to begin again due to relapse.

Today is World Cancer Day.  Today is a day to take note, to lift up your chin and force yourself to look cancer in the eye.  Because let’s be real, most of the time we want to look the other way and pretend we don’t see that dark shadow looming in our periphery.  Look around at your life – how many of those you love have been touched by cancer?  And I don’t mean “touch” in the desirable sense.  Maybe impaled, scarred, lacerated, bruised, wounded, ravaged.  Maybe these are better words to describe cancer’s impact. Yes, cancer has also brought a lot of good in my life, but I will not for a second pretend that I wish cancer on anyone.  How can I not desperately want cancer to be stopped, forever?!  And it’s not just Allistaire.  It’s my sister-in-law who didn’t have her mom there when her sons were born.  It’s my friend Megan who lost her baby because of her own cancer.  It’s my aunt who had to make the hard choice to have a mastectomy because her mom died of breast cancer.  It’s my cousin who has decide whether or not she must cut out parts of her body because she bares a gene known to show high risk for breast cancer.  It’s my friends’ sad, weary eyes that long to have their child back.

Today I bring you videos to tell the story.  The first was made by our friend Abi who was in treatment with Allistaire, also with AML.  I love this video because it is a window into our world.  I love this video because it’s full of faces dear to us.  But what I can’t ignore is how many faces are now gone, dead.  Cancer does not leave one unscathed.  If you make it out alive, one almost always bears the scars and damage of treatment.  The second is of a little 3 year old boy named Ben who died of neuroblastoma.  Out of the deep well of their grief, his parents started the Ben Towne Foundation which is linked to Seattle Children’s Research.  The goal is to find cures for cancer that do not rely on chemotherapy and radiation and to accelerate research to get to real patients who are desperate for options now.  The next three videos provide a window into one of the most thrilling and promising areas of research today – the idea that researchers can genetically modify our most powerful fighting cells, T-cells, to identify and destroy our individual cancer cells.  Lastly, to lift your spirits there is the “Stronger,” video filmed on the cancer unit at Seattle Children’s while Allistaire was in treatment the first go around.  Life is worth fighting for.  These kids are worth fighting for.  Your mom and brother are worth fighting for.

If you’d like to tangibly support cancer research, I invite you to support me in Obliteride which is a fundraiser bike ride for Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center.  Every dollar you give goes directly to cancer research.  There are a number of very worthy places to give your money to support cancer research.  I have chosen to focus my efforts to support research at Fred Hutch because Allistaire’s life has been directly sustained by their research through the clinical trials that have yielded her last transplant and holds the promise for her cure with this next transplant and subsequent T-cell trial.

Click HERE if you’d like to support me in OBLITERIDE – accelerate the cure and put an end to cancer for good!

Look At Me Now

The Story of Ben Towne

T-Cell Therapy Explained

Fighting Fire with Fire

The Mighty T

What Doesn’t Kill You Makes You Stronger

 

 

Juicy

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IMG_2153Ours is a sanitized fight.  I have only ever seen two insects on the Unit.  One would never know there was weather outside were it not for the horizontal planes of glass affixed to the side of the new building to contrast the vertical slices of blue, orange and green glass.  The rain hits the horizontal slabs, reminding the inside dweller that life does indeed exist out of these confines.  How I treasure those horizontal planes. Ours is a tedious, slow fight of absurd wealth.  The amount of financial, material, technological and human resources brought to fight for Allistaire’s life is staggering.  The light is bright with cheery images on the walls and flashes of exuberant color.  Countless groups come to the hospital and to Ron Don to make the season joyous.  Gifts flow in and in and in.  Everywhere smiling faces, time given to compassionate conversations and cheering us on and rooting for Allistaire.  Everywhere love and support.  Ours is a fight with so many allies.

In anticipation of the movie, “Unbroken,” coming out, I am determined to read the book first.  Much to my chagrin, I have not read much of history and this account of World War II in the Pacific gives me a much enhanced admiration and appreciation for our veterans.  How they faced the horrors common to war is awe-inspiring.  Their fight was poorly financed, poorly equipped and fraught with terrors I cannot begin to grasp – exploding flesh from countless weapons, disease, lack of medical care, sharks, exposure, starvation, torture.  In the same way that we press forward, unwilling to loosen our grip on life, they endured, they strove to hold onto life.  When Allistaire was first diagnosed, I kept thinking, if I was a Haitian mother, I would simply have a dead child.  There would be no fight.  There would simply be a swift succumbing to wretched disease.  So it has been throughout history and so it is in countless stories across this earth at this very moment – fights for life – lives cherished and infinitely valuable.

I went to bed Thursday night with the thought that we have been given SO much.  It is privilege to even have the opportunity to fight alongside Allistaire for her life.  Few have been given so much with which to battle, to persevere.  Who are we to have been so blessed?  The thought of what people must endure on this earth is utterly heartbreaking.  This fight tears constantly at my heart and yet, it is gift.  It could be so very different.  I went to bed more at rest in my spirit.  I woke less and still woke with heightened anticipation, but not terror.  I know the Lord is good and He sees the whole expanse while my sight is limited to a ridiculous degree.  Who am I to say what is best and thus what tomorrow should bring?  I keep handing her over to Him, entrusting her to Him, entrusting my heart and my life to Him.  Do as you please Lord.  You are my whole heart and it swells with longing for you Lord.  I live a dual anticipation – what will come to pass with Allistaire and looking for what the Lord will do.  The question of “why,” has never dominated my thoughts.  The earth and all that is in it is broken and it longs with eager anticipation for the coming of Christ to fulfill all His promises and restore and redeem.  The question of why rests far more on, “Oh Lord, why have you brought this wild, wringing sorrow into my life?  You are not an arbitrary God.  You are a sovereign, beautiful God, so what is your good intention for this road you are having me walk?  Why us, why now, why here?  Who will you put in our path?  How can I walk these halls and these days with face radiant because I HAVE seen you?!”  I don’t believe in accident.  I ask, “why,” because I am on the lookout for the beauty of what the Lord will raise up out of these days.

I actually experienced rest Thursday night and woke Friday once again in prayer, once again asking the Lord to orient my heart to Him – that He would fill my vision.  He has provided so abundantly, will I curse Him now if things do not go as I desire?  He is not a fickle God.  Is He not still the same good God when blasts appear on the lab sheet, when Flow Cytometry reveals an ugly diseased marrow?  I rose from my surprisingly comfortable couch bed to go and find our nurse, Nate, to discover what the Lord gave this day.  Allistaire’s ANC was 230 and there were zero blasts.  This meant a green light for her bone marrow test and ecstatic joy.  My joy was compounded when the doctor who did Allistaire’s bone marrow brought out a bright red, juicy sample of bone marrow to show me and tell me how good things felt in there, how simply good the sample looked.  On Friday they did a bi-lateral biopsy and aspirate, meaning they took sample from both hips in order to ensure sufficient sample given how hard it was to achieve last time due to the fibrosis.  Friday’s sample showed a changed marrow.  So, no blasts, rising ANC, platelets and hematocrit, a juicy fabulous sample of her marrow, lots of energy and no pain – as Dr. Gardner said, we have “guarded optimism.”

After I put Allistaire down Friday for her nap, I went to Ron Don and laid down, intending to read, “Unbroken.”  With lights of the room blazing around me I allowed myself to succumb to sleep.  Three naps in one week – what in the world?  A year could go by and I would not have typically had a nap.  Naps don’t work for me.  But an incredible exhaustion settled me flat on the bed and I dozed.  Perhaps I should be packing clothes for the next few days, but who could know which way the next few days would twist and turn.  I met with Dr. Gardner on Thursday afternoon to discuss three things: what was necessary to move forward with transplant, Denver and discharge.

As Allistaire’s ANC rose over the past week, the team started talking about discharge.  One might think that I should be excited about getting booted from the hospital but in fact “out there,” is a terrifying world I’m not excited to take Allistaire into – especially not now.  The docs pointed out that she has an ANC now which means she has a few lymphocytes (white blood cells) to fight illness.  Yeah, but perfectly healthy people with astronomical ANCs are getting taken down left and right with the flu and various other horrid colds and such, not to mention the Hand, food and mouth disease and Whooping cough going around Montana that could carry itself in the backs of our family.  Now more than ever, it is utterly essential to protect Allistaire from getting sick.  If the chemo has miraculously succeeded in getting her disease knocked down enough to move forward with transplant, then a very precise timing begins where two very separate lives must intersect at exactly the right moment.  The “conditioning,” (chemo and radiation), for transplant is timed in alignment with the donor prepping for the removal of their stem cells.  Cells are living organisms and can only survive so long outside the body and as conditioning begins for Allistaire, the process of permanently destroying her bone marrow has begun.  So, it is imperative that nothing stands in Allistaire’s way of walking each carefully planned step forward to transplant if we are given that option.  Something like RSV (a respiratory virus) is actually fatal in transplant.  She won’t have time to “get over being sick.”  The thought of leaving the hospital means she and I will be trapped alone in our room at Ron Don.  She can’t be in the communal areas and in order to get food I would have to take her with me to the grocery store which is a hot-house of hacking, sick people and kids.  Our best option is to go very early in the morning or late at night when we have a chance at steering clear of the sickos.

Then there was the issue of Denver.  So the bummer news is that the initial findings of the study, in the adult patients anyways, is not too impressive.  Only about 25% had a good response.  As Dr. Tarlock later told me, these aren’t such poor statistics for a single agent and likely this drug will be combined with other therapies in the future to have a far greater effect.  The truth is too, that this trial is Phase One, meaning they are only testing for safety, not efficacy.  The point being, it doesn’t seem worth it to send Allistaire to another state, another hospital, another group of doctors for a drug that isn’t a likely hit for her – unless there are no other options of course.  Dr. Gardner was going to see if she could contact the principal investigator and get a sense of how the pediatric patients were responding, as it could be quite different from in the adults.

By the way, here is yet another plug for pediatric cancer research – did you know that the NCI (National Cancer Institute) only gives 3-4% of its annual budget to funding pediatric cancer research specifically?  Here’s the problem, far fewer children get cancer than adults so it is not in the pharmaceutical companies financial interest to fund research to treat pediatric cancer.  So really, kids only get what eventually might trickle down to them from cancer research in adults which means much more time passes before there are any breakthroughs for kids with cancer.  Additionally, there are a number of cancers that only children get, like neuroblastoma.  Even AML, which is the most common form of adult leukemia, most likely has different origins and characteristics for children than in adults.  When a child is treated for cancer, their body is rapidly growing and every organ from the heart to the liver and brain are being poisoned from the chemotherapy and radiation.  Chemo targets the fast growing cancer cells.  In kids, all the cells are growing far more rapidly than in adults which means their healthy cells are much more vulnerable to the onslaught of chemo and radiation.  When an adult is cured from cancer, their life has been extended by and average of 15 years.  When a child is cured from cancer, their life has been extended by an average of 71 years.  So if the NCI won’t fund pediatric cancer research and the pharmaceutical companies have no incentive to do so, it means the real hope for children with cancer rests with the private donor.  Allistaire has benefited directly and significantly from research at Fred Hutch which treats adults as well and I will continue to root for them and seek to raise money for what they are doing, but there is also a place for giving directly to childhood cancer research.

Okay, back to the most significant issue at hand – what reality will enable Allistaire to move forward with transplant?  What must be true from the results of the bone marrow aspirate and PET/CT?  Dr. Gardner said the most important piece is that the disease in her marrow must be quite low.  The less there is in her marrow, the more likely the transplant is to succeed.  So while the transplant allows the patient to not be in remission, it is still far better that they are.  She said that if the pathologist looks at Allistaire’s sample under the microscope and she is morphological remission which is defined as 5% or less disease (this is the lowest detectable amount with the microscope), then she will be in good shape to move forward with transplant.  Of course there is also the issue of her chloromas (locations of solid leukemia).  One would presume that if the chemo worked in her marrow, it would do the same in the chloromas but apparently tumors have their own micro environments that can allow and promote cancer cell growth that doesn’t take place outside of them.  Only the PET/CT will tell the truth about what’s going on inside, but so far she has not had any pain which is a good sign.  Neither Dr. Gardner nor Dr. Bleakley are super concerned with the chloromas simply because they can be treated with focal radiation if necessary.  Of course this is not optimal as every part of the body that is exposed to radiation is more prone to develop cancer in the future and can be damaged or deformed.  I am sure that an increase in the number or size of the chloromas would require quite a discussion, even if her marrow was in good shape.

I left my time with Dr. Gardner with the plan that she would see what she could find out from Denver, and that if her marrow looked good, we would be discharged from the hospital and if not, we would stay in.  So what’s the point of packing I thought.  I lay in a flattened, utterly still state.  The phone rang with that attention grabbing number ever emblazoned into my brain: (206) 987-2000.  My heart jumps every single time that number shows up on my phone.  Even when all has been well that number gets my heart thumping and dampness of the palm.  It was Dr. Shoeback, the attending doctor at Children’s.  “The pathologist can see no cancer cells in Allistaire’s sample.”  WHAT?  Utter ELATION!!!!!!!!  I could not believe my ears!  Allistaire is in morphological remission and only the possibility of a horrible PET/CT stands in her way of moving forward with transplant.  After the exhausting torture of her last relapse, I could not have imaged this being possible.  But it worked!!!!!!  On Monday we should have results back from Flow Cytometry, but that will only give us a number below 5% and while it would be awesome if it was zero, it doesn’t need to be any less than 5% to be given the open door to transplant.

On Monday at 1:15pm, Allistaire will have her PET/CT scan and by the end of the day, I should hear from Dr. Gardner with the results.  Of course a plan can’t really be formulated until all the data is in, but the AML docs and Dr. Gardner are discussing with Dr. Bleakley what would be the best plan for “bridge chemo.”  It is necessary to have some form of treatment between the end of this round of chemo and conditioning chemo because you ethically can’t get the donor moving forward with their steps until you know you really can have a transplant.  By the way, while Allistaire has no U.S. donor, Dr. Bleakley is trying her best to exhaust all possible options for Allistaire.  She is in contact with the German version of the FDA to get approval on their end to get a consent process with the overseas donor to manipulate the T-cells.  I think the idea is that this is an additional step taken with the donor’s cells and because the donor’s cells are technically part of the donor or owned by the donor, they have to give consent.  If you want a super interesting read on this topic, check out, “The Immortal Life of Henrietta Lacks.”  If approval is given through the German system, Dr. Bleakley can then seek out approval from the FDA.  Even if all this approval goes through, there is still the issue of the timing and age of the cells given the additional time that would be required to process the cells in Seattle.  If the donor is from a “major center,” in the German system, this increases the likelihood that the quality and timing of the cells could work.  Dr. Bleakley says that ultimately it will be up for Sten and I to decide what we want to do.  It’s a gamble really.  The conditioning chemo for the trial transplant and the standard transplant are different.  The donor cells could arrive from overseas and it be determined that they are not in good enough condition to be processed and take out the naive T-cells.  In this case only the minimal processing that always occurs with donor cells would take place and Allistaire would get the transfusion of donor cells as is.  There is a lot to consider, if even we end up having that choice to make.  In the mean time, Allistaire will need some chemo to keep the bad guys down.  This could either be another round of the DMEC (Decitabine, Mitoxantrone, Etoposide, Cytarabine) which she just had – in the clinical trial it has been given in one to three courses.  Because her heart remains in good shape, this would be an option.  Additionally, Decitabine can become even more effective over multiple courses in the same way that Azacitadine does, which she had post-transplant last time.  Another option would be Decitabine alone.  Lots of brainstorming amongst the docs is necessary.

I can hardly believe it.  I can hardly take it in.  I cannot stop smiling!!!!!  My girl has been given one more open door.  Every day of this journey feels like walking around a blind corner.  There is absolutely no way to predict what the next day will bring.  Often the entire trajectory of your world can shift from morning to night.  The wind blows, the seas rage and toss and yet the north star is unmoving.  I keep my eyes fixed on Christ, my one sure hold.  Tomorrow morning we rise to a new day.  I have no idea what will be known when I lay down to sleep Monday night.  What if this whole thing, this crazy journey is just so that I would meet Debbie today in the rug aisle in Target?  What if all these years of highs and dark lows are so that I could tell her, Debbie, my hope is in God!  My hope is in God!  Not that He will save Allistaire, though I have joyous confidence that He can overcome the most hideous of cancer cells, but that this whole crazy life and world are His and He will accomplish the beauty of His will which is more magnificent and glorious than we could ever, ever imagine.  His promises are sure footings.  Debbie, your hope can be in God, in Christ the Savior who was born to bring peace and goodwill to all men!  Oh let the whole earth, the whole wondrous earth sing His praises, may every cell of my flesh rise up and strain to declare His love, His beauty, His overcoming power to redeem and raise the dead, the dead heart, the dead flesh.  He is coming, He is coming and I am on the lookout!

(The top picture is of the vial of her bone marrow aspirate and the the tiny bit of bone is the biopsy.  I’ve included at the end a number of pics from three years ago – always wild to see some perspective on our journey)IMG_2149 IMG_2154 IMG_2155 IMG_2159 IMG_2160 IMG_2161 IMG_2164 IMG_2173 IMG_2181Allistaire with Papa sisters and cousins 1 Christmas Family Cancer Fears Me DSCN4804 DSCN4805 DSCN4806

How to Help – Round 3

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IMG_1547Sten and I sincerely appreciate all of the many inquiries and offers to help us in this challenging time. Many of you have already helped us so much and continue to offer more.

One thing I feel compelled to note, is that every single time you reach out to us, to cheer us on, to cheer us up, to say that you’re thinking about us, that you’re praying for us – all of it is so appreciated and spurs us on.  Please do not get discouraged if we do not respond back to you as quickly or frequently as you might like.  Please extend us grace.  I know a lot of people imagine we sit around in the hospital all day, but it is surprisingly busy and because our lives are literally consumed by the tedious, unrelenting fight against cancer, sometimes all I want is 30 minutes to veg out on a movie.

The other more important point is that you should never stay silent because you feel your words are lacking.  You are right that your words are insufficient if you expect that your words can make this all better and fixed, but we know that is an absurd goal for mere words.  But wrestling and groping to put words to your heart is an action that in itself demonstrates great love toward us.  When we put in the effort to try to pin down these immense feelings and aches and joys, we possess them more, we take ground, we gain ownership, we are more full and that is a blessing not only to us, but to yourself and it increases your ability to love others as well.  So, don’t think your words have to look all pretty, just try and that will be a bounty to us that far surpasses words that feel so small.

Lastly, life here at the hospital feels like a tsunami has carried us away from our home, our life.  While we appreciate all of your well wishes toward us, please don’t cut us off more by depriving us of the joy of knowing what’s going on in your life.  If you and I have a relationship, and you are not simply an onlooker, know that relationships are two-way and I still really care what’s going on in your life.  Don’t hold back the details because you think you’re trials don’t compare to ours.  Yes, our reality lends perspective, but we all have joys and challenges, extraordinary and ordinary, and I want to hear about it.  I want to know about the weather back home and what you did last weekend.  Send me a text every now and then of that great big sky or snow sticking in your hair.

 

Here are a few things that would be super helpful:

  • Pray for us
  • Text or call us up on the phone and even if we don’t pick up or call you back, know that we have felt the love
  • Send us a card and better yet – a picture of you to remind us of all those caring for and supporting us
  • Gas cards (Costco, Exxon)

 

For Sten and Solveig specifically:

  • Bring Solveig and Sten a meal. We have set up an online meal schedule which will give you all the details. Go to “Take Them A Meal” 
  • You can then sign up to bring them a meal on a Monday or Wednesday. Please look over what other folks are bringing so they don’t end up eating the same thing for a week or two straight.  Please note that Solveig is allergic to ALL NUTS so please be careful to avoid including nuts, even things like peanut oil.
  • If you’re not much of a cook or in a hurry but still want to help out, a gift card would be great (Co-Op, Papa Murphy’s, Town & Country, Ale Works, Pizza Campania)
  • If you have other ideas of how you may want to help, please contact our beloved sister-in-law, Jess at (406) 850-3996
  • Sten & Solveig’s mailing address in Bozeman: 14176 Kelly Canyon Rd, Bozeman, MT 59715

 

For Allistaire and Jai specifically:

  • Please don’t send stuffed animals, blankets, crayons, makers, coloring books or sticker books = we already have SO many 🙂
  • You can sign up to bring Jai a meal on the “Take Them a Meal” website.  Allistaire will have her food provided through the hospital.
  • Gift cards to local grocery store and restaurants (University Village, QFC, Pagliacci Pizza, Metropolitan Market, Starbucks)
  • If you want to send something to cheer up Allistaire, here are a few ideas: mixed CDs with happy music, small toys, lip gloss, small art crafts, happy decor for her hospital room
  • One thing I’d love is a few great DVDs that help her learn her ABCs (FYI: I think we have all the Leap Frog options at this point.  Thanks!)
  • Address for Allistaire & Jai:  Ronald McDonald House, Attn: Allistaire Anderson, 5130 40th Ave NE, Seattle, WA 98105 or starting 11/19 we can also receive mail at the hospital: Seattle Children’s Hospital, Attn:  Allistaire Anderson, 4800 Sand Point Way NE, Seattle, WA 98105

 

If you want yet more ways to help, have I mentioned that you can donate blood and sign up to be a bone marrow donor?  This is a gift that not only blesses Allistaire but many others as well!  If you do donate blood or sign up for the registry in Allistaire’s honor – please make a little sign saying so and send me a picture of yourself in the act so to speak!

To donate blood in Montana: United Blood Services

To donate blood in western Washington:  Puget Sound Blood Center

To join the bone marrow registry:  Be The Match

 

Do you just have more money than you know what to do with?  Here are three phenomenal places you can give to that directly support Allistaire and both children and adults with cancer:

Seattle Children’s Hospital (of the $3,800,000 dollars spent on Allistaire’s treatment so far, the $600,000 that insurance did not cover has been covered by the hospital’s foundation)

The Ben Towne Foundation (aims to create targeted therapies to cure pediatric cancer without the use of chemotherapy and radiation)

Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center (to whom we are indebted for Allistaire’s last transplant, Dr. Greenberg’s lab which we are holding out hope may offer amazing modified T-cells to target Allistaire’s cancer after a 2nd transplant, and just lots of amazing science that benefits a wide range of cancer patients)

 

Thank you immensely for all of your kindness, generosity and love toward us. You certainly diminish the weight of our heavy load and add joy to our lives!

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