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Showing posts with label Rare Cancers. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Rare Cancers. Show all posts

Tuesday, 10 July 2018

Three Years Ago Today...

07/10/18 - Exactly three years ago today, I had a 25x13x8.7cm round cell/myxoid liposarcoma (MRCLS) cancer tumour removed from my left thigh. Besides leaving a 10” scar, sarcoma forever changes you in ways the eye can’t see. Like many life altering events, there is life before sarcoma & life after. We have a saying in the sarcoma community, sarcoma is a marathon, not a sprint. Over the past three years, there have been times where I wondered if I would ever get to this crucial point. With sarcomas being so rare & many survivors never having met another person with the same sarcoma subtype, the online sarcoma community has become very close knit. Since my diagnosis, several fellow survivors whose journey started out quite like mine have lost the battle due to their MRCLS returning with a vengeance, which makes me all the more grateful to reach three years with NED (no evidence of disease). I still have to be monitored for life, as sarcoma can return many years later (i.e., 7, 8 & even 11 years in some cases), but I take comfort in the fact that many cases of mets (metastasis) occur in the first three years for my subtype, so three years is a huge milestone.

Left Image: MRI of my tumour five months before removal.  Upper right: Most of my 10" scar line (yes, it goes further up than that!), five days post-surgery.  Bottom right: We Don't Know How Strong We Are Until Being Strong Is the Only Choice We Have, Sarcoma Awareness.

So much has happened since my diagnosis. While in the middle of cancer treatment, I was laid off my job of nearly two decades, which was a bit of a mixed blessing, as it gave me time to heal & process everything. While 2015 was spent recovering physically, 2016 was spent recovering emotionally. Still, the winds of change continued over the past year with the relief & challenge of finally finding a new job, and the heartbreak of losing my two older dogs who passed away five months apart. Throughout all this, some bonds have strengthened while others have been broken. But with mom, my youngest remaining dog & good friends by my side, both new & old, I have come through. :)

To be honest, for the past three years, I have in many ways been waiting for the other shoe to drop, but I refuse to do that anymore. Sure, it’s always at the back of my mind that it could return when I least expect it (there is no blood test & often no symptoms with sarcoma), but something changed in me this year. I don’t know if it was witnessing the passing of my two older fur-babies or just the process of time, but I've decided that life is for the living, so I am going to move forward until the universe decides otherwise. Deciding to get another dog was the first step towards this, and I am so excited to have Molko join our little family later this summer! During the months following my diagnosis, Placebo’s music was the only thing that could take my mind away from it all & give me some kind of peace, so what better way to honour that than by naming my newest fur-baby after the singer whose lyrics mirror my soul. Placebo was also the soundtrack to my five months of physio that followed, when my sole purpose in life was to recover well enough to make it to their 20th anniversary tour! Well, I guess you could say I succeeded & then some, as I just came back from my third trip this tour, three weeks before my third NED anniversary. Seeing my favourite band in a historic city with amazing friends, it doesn’t get much better than that! :)

Next big milestone: 10 years! Better start saving my travel points now! ;)  Meanwhile, I'm just happy to graduate to six-month scans (previously every four months)! :) 
#SarcomaSurvivor, #SarcomaAwareness, #LifeIsWhatYouMakeIt, #Placebo30




Thanks for reading! :) If you enjoyed this post, please help spread #SarcomaAwareness by sharing it on Google+, Twitter or Facebook using the buttons below. You can also subscribe to this blog using the links on the left.

Have a sarcoma blog of your own that you'd like linked? Feel free to drop me a line or post your link in a comment below.

Saturday, 4 February 2017

#WorldCancerDay




02/04/17 - Today, February 4th, 2017, is #WorldCancerDay. This day is near & dear to my heart, because not only am I a recent high grade cancer survivor, my grandpa is a two-time cancer survivor, my grandma, great grandma, first love, best friend's mom & a coworker all died of cancer. So, for me, it's personal.

Each year 12.7 million people around the world discover they have cancer. 7.6 million people die of cancer each year worldwide. In 2016, it was estimated that there would be 202,400 new cases of cancer and 78,800 deaths from cancer in Canada during that year alone. Broken down further, on average, 539 Canadians are diagnosed with cancer each day and 214 Canadians die daily of cancer. Cancer is the leading cause of death in Canada and is responsible for 30% of all deaths.

Although survival rates for all cancers combined at the five-year mark are 60%, only one third of cancer cases can be "cured" if caught early enough, leaving the remaining two thirds to face metastasis, recurrence or distant metastasis. The five-year disease specific survival rate (i.e. not dying from the disease) for lung cancer is 17%, whereas prostate cancer and breast cancer are 95% and 87% respectively. For soft tissue sarcomas (of which there are 50-70 subtypes, including liposarcoma), the five-year survival rate is 56%. With extremity round cell myxoid liposarcoma (the kind that I had), the five year survival rate is estimated to be 60% (as confirmed by my oncologist and several liposarcoma nomograms but estimates range from 57% to 74% depending on which study you read...#ChallengesOfHavingARareCancer). It drops down to 50% at the 10 year mark, whereas in contrast, the 10 year survival rate is 83% for breast cancer and 98% for prostate cancer if non-metastatic at the time of first diagnosis.

Over the past few years, deaths from cancer across Canada have gone down, but there's still a long way to go. Here's hoping that one day there will be a cure for ALL cancers, not just the more common ones but the rare ones, as well.

References:
www.cancer.ca
www.cancer.net
www.cancer.org
www.mskcc.org/nomograms/sarcoma
www.sarculator.com
www.sarcomahelp.org


Thanks for reading! :) If you enjoyed this post, please help spread #SarcomaAwareness by sharing it on Google+, Twitter or Facebook using the buttons below. You can also subscribe to this blog using the links on the left.

Have a sarcoma blog of your own that you'd like linked? Feel free to drop me a line or post your link in a comment below.