› Forums › General Melanoma Community › My husband Stage IV
- This topic has 3 replies, 1 voice, and was last updated 12 years ago by
kylez.
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- May 6, 2013 at 2:36 pm
Hello, my husband has Melanoma stage IV. He was first diganose Feb 15, 2012. At that time he had a mole that was bleeding and was removed and sent for test. Two days after it being removed he had a knot on the right side of the neck. The test came back regarding his back and it was Stage III Melanomia. A PET scan was done and the knot was cancer as well. AT the time they did surgery on the back and next. He had radiation and was done in August.
Hello, my husband has Melanoma stage IV. He was first diganose Feb 15, 2012. At that time he had a mole that was bleeding and was removed and sent for test. Two days after it being removed he had a knot on the right side of the neck. The test came back regarding his back and it was Stage III Melanomia. A PET scan was done and the knot was cancer as well. AT the time they did surgery on the back and next. He had radiation and was done in August. The Aug scan was good and the Nov scan was good. January 2013 scan showed something on the lung. They didnt believe it was cancer but since it grow from Aug and Nov scan (at that time was a small dot and they were not concern). And also there were lesions on the spleen and we was never told about that until later. The surgeron said they are not sure if its cancer that we can wait until next scan or remove it, she advised us she would remove it so we agreed. Sugery was done and was tested and it was Melanomia. Now April its in the lower left lung and still shows lesion on the spleen. They are saying it doesnt look like melanomia but neither did the right lung and it was. I requested to have it removed and they said they cant keep operating on him because it keeps coming back. They want my husband to take Lukine. We are waiting now on that. My question is.. what will this Lukine do.. will it slow it down, will it shrink what is there? No one will tell me what to expect with him in this stage.. How long he has, what do they think is next? I love this hosptial and the dr. are great.
With him being in this stage and it coming back so fast I want to know what to expect. Can anyone help?
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- May 6, 2013 at 4:16 pm
Hi,
I'm sorry your husband is going through this.
I have a few questions on what you're going through, based on my treatment experiences and interactions with my oncologists, and the experiences of others. This is a little long-winded, but probably so should your list of options from your doctors. As far as I know these are facts, and not medical advice.
1) At U of Md, is your husband seeing a melanoma specialist oncologist? Dr. Petr Hausner is listed (on aimatmelanoma.org) as one such specialist. Your experiences make me wonder if your husband is seeing non-melanoma specialists.
2) It seems unusual that when each of these spots pops up, their first reaction is that it's probably not melanoma. Do you think they're soft-pedaling you? I would want to hear things as they good or bad as they are. So far it sounds like each time they say "it's probably not stage IV melanoma" they've been proven wrong.
3) The suggestion of Leukine as a first-line systemic (drug) treatment sounds very unusual, is not FDA approved for melanoma, and is not standard of care for melanoma (as far as I know). No oncologist I've worked with has ever suggested Luekine.
4) Have they talked about Ipilimumab (aka Yervoy) or IL-2 (both of which are FDA approved melanoma treatments and standard of care for melanoma)? I was given a course of ipilimumab (Yervoy) as well as a course of IL-2.
5) What about Zelboraf? This is another part of the standard of care for melanoma. Has he been tested for the BRAF mutation (must test positive to use Zelboraf)?
6) What about clinical trials? For example one very promising drug class on trial is called anti-PD1. Two examples in clinical trials from different companies are a) MK-3475 and b) nivolumab aka BMS- 936558. Participating in most trials requires "measurable disease" and it sounds like (unfortunately) that he probably has both the right lung and spleen. Statistically the anti-PD1 trials look very promising, as much or perhaps even more so than Yervoy/ipilimumab). In a way, not removing the "measurable disease" via surgery may be a ticket into clinical trials.
I believe, from my experiences with 3 of my own melanoma specialist oncologists over the last 3 years, that all of these treatment options (4, 5 and 6) should have been the first treatments they talk about with you. If you're not satisfied with your care, and if your insurance allows you, have you considered changing doctors? From aimatmelanoma.org, a list of melanoma specialists in Maryland they know about is (including one from U of Md):
————————————————–
700 S Union Ave.
Havre-de-grace, MD 21078
410-398-4120
or
155 W High St
Elkton, MD 21921
410-398-4120
Promila Suri, MD
Cancer Center at GBMC
6569 N Charles St., Ste 205
Baltimore, MD 21204
443-849-3051
Gary Irvin Cohen, MD
Johns Hopkins at Greenspring Station
10753 Falls Rd., No 415
Lutherville, MD 21093
410-583-2970
http://www.hopkinsmedicine.org
William Howard Sharfman, MD
The Sidney Kimmel Comprehensive Cancer Center *
Johns Hopkins
Melanoma Program
OSLER 624
600 North Wolfe St.
Baltimore, MD 21287
http://www.hopkinsmelanoma.org/
Evan Lipson, MD 410-616-7660
Sinai Hospital of Baltimore
2401 W Belvedere Ave
Baltimore, MD 21215
410-601-4710
http://www.lifebridgehealth.org/sinaihospital
Pallavi Kumar, MD
University of Maryland – Greenebaum Cancer Center
22 S Green St.
Baltimore, MD 21201
410-328-7450
Petr Hausner, MD, PhD
——————————————————–
Best, Kyle
-
- May 6, 2013 at 4:16 pm
Hi,
I'm sorry your husband is going through this.
I have a few questions on what you're going through, based on my treatment experiences and interactions with my oncologists, and the experiences of others. This is a little long-winded, but probably so should your list of options from your doctors. As far as I know these are facts, and not medical advice.
1) At U of Md, is your husband seeing a melanoma specialist oncologist? Dr. Petr Hausner is listed (on aimatmelanoma.org) as one such specialist. Your experiences make me wonder if your husband is seeing non-melanoma specialists.
2) It seems unusual that when each of these spots pops up, their first reaction is that it's probably not melanoma. Do you think they're soft-pedaling you? I would want to hear things as they good or bad as they are. So far it sounds like each time they say "it's probably not stage IV melanoma" they've been proven wrong.
3) The suggestion of Leukine as a first-line systemic (drug) treatment sounds very unusual, is not FDA approved for melanoma, and is not standard of care for melanoma (as far as I know). No oncologist I've worked with has ever suggested Luekine.
4) Have they talked about Ipilimumab (aka Yervoy) or IL-2 (both of which are FDA approved melanoma treatments and standard of care for melanoma)? I was given a course of ipilimumab (Yervoy) as well as a course of IL-2.
5) What about Zelboraf? This is another part of the standard of care for melanoma. Has he been tested for the BRAF mutation (must test positive to use Zelboraf)?
6) What about clinical trials? For example one very promising drug class on trial is called anti-PD1. Two examples in clinical trials from different companies are a) MK-3475 and b) nivolumab aka BMS- 936558. Participating in most trials requires "measurable disease" and it sounds like (unfortunately) that he probably has both the right lung and spleen. Statistically the anti-PD1 trials look very promising, as much or perhaps even more so than Yervoy/ipilimumab). In a way, not removing the "measurable disease" via surgery may be a ticket into clinical trials.
I believe, from my experiences with 3 of my own melanoma specialist oncologists over the last 3 years, that all of these treatment options (4, 5 and 6) should have been the first treatments they talk about with you. If you're not satisfied with your care, and if your insurance allows you, have you considered changing doctors? From aimatmelanoma.org, a list of melanoma specialists in Maryland they know about is (including one from U of Md):
————————————————–
700 S Union Ave.
Havre-de-grace, MD 21078
410-398-4120
or
155 W High St
Elkton, MD 21921
410-398-4120
Promila Suri, MD
Cancer Center at GBMC
6569 N Charles St., Ste 205
Baltimore, MD 21204
443-849-3051
Gary Irvin Cohen, MD
Johns Hopkins at Greenspring Station
10753 Falls Rd., No 415
Lutherville, MD 21093
410-583-2970
http://www.hopkinsmedicine.org
William Howard Sharfman, MD
The Sidney Kimmel Comprehensive Cancer Center *
Johns Hopkins
Melanoma Program
OSLER 624
600 North Wolfe St.
Baltimore, MD 21287
http://www.hopkinsmelanoma.org/
Evan Lipson, MD 410-616-7660
Sinai Hospital of Baltimore
2401 W Belvedere Ave
Baltimore, MD 21215
410-601-4710
http://www.lifebridgehealth.org/sinaihospital
Pallavi Kumar, MD
University of Maryland – Greenebaum Cancer Center
22 S Green St.
Baltimore, MD 21201
410-328-7450
Petr Hausner, MD, PhD
——————————————————–
Best, Kyle
-
- May 6, 2013 at 4:16 pm
Hi,
I'm sorry your husband is going through this.
I have a few questions on what you're going through, based on my treatment experiences and interactions with my oncologists, and the experiences of others. This is a little long-winded, but probably so should your list of options from your doctors. As far as I know these are facts, and not medical advice.
1) At U of Md, is your husband seeing a melanoma specialist oncologist? Dr. Petr Hausner is listed (on aimatmelanoma.org) as one such specialist. Your experiences make me wonder if your husband is seeing non-melanoma specialists.
2) It seems unusual that when each of these spots pops up, their first reaction is that it's probably not melanoma. Do you think they're soft-pedaling you? I would want to hear things as they good or bad as they are. So far it sounds like each time they say "it's probably not stage IV melanoma" they've been proven wrong.
3) The suggestion of Leukine as a first-line systemic (drug) treatment sounds very unusual, is not FDA approved for melanoma, and is not standard of care for melanoma (as far as I know). No oncologist I've worked with has ever suggested Luekine.
4) Have they talked about Ipilimumab (aka Yervoy) or IL-2 (both of which are FDA approved melanoma treatments and standard of care for melanoma)? I was given a course of ipilimumab (Yervoy) as well as a course of IL-2.
5) What about Zelboraf? This is another part of the standard of care for melanoma. Has he been tested for the BRAF mutation (must test positive to use Zelboraf)?
6) What about clinical trials? For example one very promising drug class on trial is called anti-PD1. Two examples in clinical trials from different companies are a) MK-3475 and b) nivolumab aka BMS- 936558. Participating in most trials requires "measurable disease" and it sounds like (unfortunately) that he probably has both the right lung and spleen. Statistically the anti-PD1 trials look very promising, as much or perhaps even more so than Yervoy/ipilimumab). In a way, not removing the "measurable disease" via surgery may be a ticket into clinical trials.
I believe, from my experiences with 3 of my own melanoma specialist oncologists over the last 3 years, that all of these treatment options (4, 5 and 6) should have been the first treatments they talk about with you. If you're not satisfied with your care, and if your insurance allows you, have you considered changing doctors? From aimatmelanoma.org, a list of melanoma specialists in Maryland they know about is (including one from U of Md):
————————————————–
700 S Union Ave.
Havre-de-grace, MD 21078
410-398-4120
or
155 W High St
Elkton, MD 21921
410-398-4120
Promila Suri, MD
Cancer Center at GBMC
6569 N Charles St., Ste 205
Baltimore, MD 21204
443-849-3051
Gary Irvin Cohen, MD
Johns Hopkins at Greenspring Station
10753 Falls Rd., No 415
Lutherville, MD 21093
410-583-2970
http://www.hopkinsmedicine.org
William Howard Sharfman, MD
The Sidney Kimmel Comprehensive Cancer Center *
Johns Hopkins
Melanoma Program
OSLER 624
600 North Wolfe St.
Baltimore, MD 21287
http://www.hopkinsmelanoma.org/
Evan Lipson, MD 410-616-7660
Sinai Hospital of Baltimore
2401 W Belvedere Ave
Baltimore, MD 21215
410-601-4710
http://www.lifebridgehealth.org/sinaihospital
Pallavi Kumar, MD
University of Maryland – Greenebaum Cancer Center
22 S Green St.
Baltimore, MD 21201
410-328-7450
Petr Hausner, MD, PhD
——————————————————–
Best, Kyle
-
Tagged: cutaneous melanoma
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