› Forums › General Melanoma Community › 10 years Stage IV- husband still free of disease after biochemotherapy
- This topic has 28 replies, 9 voices, and was last updated 12 years, 8 months ago by
odonoghue80.
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- May 29, 2011 at 3:50 am
This month marked 10 years since my husband got the news that his scans were clear. In Jan of 2001, lung mets turned up in both lungs. He received a biochemo regimen that was being studied at the time at MDA by Dr Legha. (high dose IL-2 plus interferon, cisplatin, vinblastine, and dacarbazine) Then a year of just immunotherapy. Our oncologist says he is “cured” because the data is demonstrating that people who live at least 5 years after high dose IL-2 continue to be free of disease at 10 years, and further out, too, I guess. So grateful for the guys in the labs doing the research!This month marked 10 years since my husband got the news that his scans were clear. In Jan of 2001, lung mets turned up in both lungs. He received a biochemo regimen that was being studied at the time at MDA by Dr Legha. (high dose IL-2 plus interferon, cisplatin, vinblastine, and dacarbazine) Then a year of just immunotherapy. Our oncologist says he is “cured” because the data is demonstrating that people who live at least 5 years after high dose IL-2 continue to be free of disease at 10 years, and further out, too, I guess. So grateful for the guys in the labs doing the research!
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- May 29, 2011 at 4:02 am
THANK YOU! for your timely posting!!! I just signed up for Biochemotherapy at California Pacific Medical Center in San Francisco with the same drug regimen. Out of 135 patients followed they had almost 28% complete response. I am scheduled to begin June 6th as long as a new brain MRI is clear and I pass their cardio stress test. I was diagnosed in March and this will be my first treatment after investigating 140+ clinical trials and treatments.
What was included in the year of immunotherapy?
I thank God for this forum and people like you that continue to share their experiences. Knowledge IS power!
Robert
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- May 29, 2011 at 4:02 am
THANK YOU! for your timely posting!!! I just signed up for Biochemotherapy at California Pacific Medical Center in San Francisco with the same drug regimen. Out of 135 patients followed they had almost 28% complete response. I am scheduled to begin June 6th as long as a new brain MRI is clear and I pass their cardio stress test. I was diagnosed in March and this will be my first treatment after investigating 140+ clinical trials and treatments.
What was included in the year of immunotherapy?
I thank God for this forum and people like you that continue to share their experiences. Knowledge IS power!
Robert
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- May 29, 2011 at 1:33 pm
In 2001, there was a doc at John Wayne doing trials on a biochemo follow-up regimen. I think his name was O’Day. Steve was not enrolled in the study, but O’Day was kind enough to communicate with our oncologist. For six months, Steve was admitted to the hospital for a quick, high dose “blast” of IL-2 each month. They did decrescendo doses, so the first few hours were the worst. It would take about 24 hrs, and they would observe him for another 24 hours. Then home, and daily shots of GM-CSF and IL-2. (thank God our insurance covered it 100%- I remember that the bill for the IL-2 that was delivered to our house was $12,000 each month). Anyway, after the first 6 months, the inpatient “blasts” were every other month.
The best thing was that, after biochemo and 12 weeks of feeling awful every day, with neuropathy that was so bad that he had double vision and could barely feel his feet, during this follow-up treatment he felt great! We took our four kids on a 28 day trip to visit family and all of the Civil War historical sites that Steve had always wanted to see. (we were in Manhattan on 9-1-01) We carried a special cooler for Steve’s “inectables”. We made wonderful memories.
May God bless those of you on the front lines….We think of you often and pray for you. This experience changed both of us, and our kids- and while I would not wish it on anyone, neither would I wish to be the person I was before 2001. Love with abandon, keep short accounts. -
- May 29, 2011 at 1:33 pm
In 2001, there was a doc at John Wayne doing trials on a biochemo follow-up regimen. I think his name was O’Day. Steve was not enrolled in the study, but O’Day was kind enough to communicate with our oncologist. For six months, Steve was admitted to the hospital for a quick, high dose “blast” of IL-2 each month. They did decrescendo doses, so the first few hours were the worst. It would take about 24 hrs, and they would observe him for another 24 hours. Then home, and daily shots of GM-CSF and IL-2. (thank God our insurance covered it 100%- I remember that the bill for the IL-2 that was delivered to our house was $12,000 each month). Anyway, after the first 6 months, the inpatient “blasts” were every other month.
The best thing was that, after biochemo and 12 weeks of feeling awful every day, with neuropathy that was so bad that he had double vision and could barely feel his feet, during this follow-up treatment he felt great! We took our four kids on a 28 day trip to visit family and all of the Civil War historical sites that Steve had always wanted to see. (we were in Manhattan on 9-1-01) We carried a special cooler for Steve’s “inectables”. We made wonderful memories.
May God bless those of you on the front lines….We think of you often and pray for you. This experience changed both of us, and our kids- and while I would not wish it on anyone, neither would I wish to be the person I was before 2001. Love with abandon, keep short accounts.
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- May 29, 2011 at 4:14 am
I love to hear such great news!! What drug was the year of immunotherapy?
Linda
stage IV since 06
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- May 29, 2011 at 4:37 am
Dana thanks so much for posting. It's been hard days lately on here, so always great to hear from someone who has had a sustainable response to treatment. It gives others hope.
Also, we don't hear that much about biochemo anymore now that so many other new things are being studied, but there have been plenty of people here over the years who've had great results with it, so nice to have it come up now and then so people remember it is an option.
Congratulations!
Dian in spokane
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- May 29, 2011 at 4:37 am
Dana thanks so much for posting. It's been hard days lately on here, so always great to hear from someone who has had a sustainable response to treatment. It gives others hope.
Also, we don't hear that much about biochemo anymore now that so many other new things are being studied, but there have been plenty of people here over the years who've had great results with it, so nice to have it come up now and then so people remember it is an option.
Congratulations!
Dian in spokane
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- May 29, 2011 at 11:35 am
This is the kind of news that keeps hope alive in all of us and I thank you for sharing this post. Congratulations!
I have a follow up CT scan in a week for some small "nodules" they found in my lungs. When I read posts like this, it reminds me that anything is possible.
Lisa
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- May 29, 2011 at 11:35 am
This is the kind of news that keeps hope alive in all of us and I thank you for sharing this post. Congratulations!
I have a follow up CT scan in a week for some small "nodules" they found in my lungs. When I read posts like this, it reminds me that anything is possible.
Lisa
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- May 29, 2011 at 12:19 pm
Congratulations, what wonderful news. I hope and pray to receive the same news some day as my husband has just started his treatments of IL-2.
Best Wishes,
Debby
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- May 29, 2011 at 12:19 pm
Congratulations, what wonderful news. I hope and pray to receive the same news some day as my husband has just started his treatments of IL-2.
Best Wishes,
Debby
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- May 29, 2011 at 1:44 pm
Thank you so much for sharing this news and congratulations to your whole family! With so many losses lately, it's wonderufl to hear such a positive victory! Enjoy your weekend and blessings to you all!
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- May 29, 2011 at 1:44 pm
Thank you so much for sharing this news and congratulations to your whole family! With so many losses lately, it's wonderufl to hear such a positive victory! Enjoy your weekend and blessings to you all!
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- September 20, 2012 at 7:30 pm
Hi Robert,
Just wondering how this biochemo has gone over the past year plus? I am also considering this treatment at CPMC while investigating other options. I just finished ipi summer 2012 but have had some progression and might need to move onto a new therapy.
Hope all is well,
Shane
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- September 20, 2012 at 7:30 pm
Hi Robert,
Just wondering how this biochemo has gone over the past year plus? I am also considering this treatment at CPMC while investigating other options. I just finished ipi summer 2012 but have had some progression and might need to move onto a new therapy.
Hope all is well,
Shane
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- September 20, 2012 at 7:30 pm
Hi Robert,
Just wondering how this biochemo has gone over the past year plus? I am also considering this treatment at CPMC while investigating other options. I just finished ipi summer 2012 but have had some progression and might need to move onto a new therapy.
Hope all is well,
Shane
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- September 20, 2012 at 7:30 pm
Hi Robert,
Just wondering how this biochemo has gone over the past year plus? I am also considering this treatment at CPMC while investigating other options. I just finished ipi summer 2012 but have had some progression and might need to move onto a new therapy.
Hope all is well,
Shane
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- September 20, 2012 at 7:30 pm
Hi Robert,
Just wondering how this biochemo has gone over the past year plus? I am also considering this treatment at CPMC while investigating other options. I just finished ipi summer 2012 but have had some progression and might need to move onto a new therapy.
Hope all is well,
Shane
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- September 20, 2012 at 7:30 pm
Hi Robert,
Just wondering how this biochemo has gone over the past year plus? I am also considering this treatment at CPMC while investigating other options. I just finished ipi summer 2012 but have had some progression and might need to move onto a new therapy.
Hope all is well,
Shane
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