Saturday, January 13, 2024

Jennifer's Obituary

Jennifer Marberger Brothers 

Jennifer Marberger Brothers eased into immortality on January 6, 2024, after 60 years of love, compassion, and grace. Born in Chicago, IL on the first of April 1963, she was nobody’s fool. Raised in Ogden, she was a beacon of mindfulness and creativity, known for her caring and thoughtful approach to life. She was a woman of many talents and accomplishments, including a Sterling Scholar at Ogden High School (class of 1981), a Spencer W Kimball Scholar at BYU (class of 1984), an empathetic therapist and social worker, and skilled artist and musician. Most importantly, she partnered with her husband, Ken, whom she married in 1983, as they raised four children as they lived in the Washington, DC area between 1985 and 2018. After she was diagnosed with frontotemporal dementia at the age of 54, her family moved back to Utah and Jennifer resided at memory care facilities in Layton, Utah.

In her professional life, Jennifer was a talented designer who worked in the creative side of advertising and commercial design in the 1980s. She helped establish supplemental art programs at five different schools in the Washington, DC area. In the 2000s, Jennifer began working with adolescents in crisis, which led to her earning a Master of Social Work from George Mason University in Fairfax, Virginia. Jennifer was an award-winning watercolor artist and a skilled musician on the silver and spirit flute; she led groups in art and music therapy, organized djembe drum circles, and taught clinics at schools and non-profit organizations in Maryland, Virginia, and West Virginia. She was a dedicated social worker who ceaselessly provided mindful service to others. Jennifer loved to share her creative spirit with others, making her an inspiration to hundreds of students, clients, friends and family.

Jennifer’s life was a testament to her compassion and thoughtfulness. She was a woman of faith and provided lifelong service to her neighbors and community as a member of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints. She loved to serve and worship in the temple. She believed in prayer and in her years of illness often asked those around her to pray with her. She had a deep and abiding respect for the Lakota culture and participated in sweat lodges, drum circles, and sun dances. What mattered most to her was raising her four children with her husband, Ken Brothers. She is survived by her husband Ken, who moved back to Huntsville when she entered memory care, her daughters Chelsea Slade (Josh; Huntsville, Utah) and Kirsten Brightman (Jason; Parker, Colorado), her sons Spencer Brothers (Layton, Utah) and Garrett Brothers (Salt Lake City, Utah), her father and stepmother, Douglas and Liz Marberger (Uintah, Utah), her sister, Jamie Campbell (Brad; Enoch, Utah), half-siblings Adam Marberger (Heidi; Salt Lake City, Utah), Jack Marberger (Kristen; South Ogden, Utah), Abby Cragun (Chet; Layton, Utah), and her 7 grandchildren. Jennifer was preceded in death by her mother, Narlene Baird.

Jennifer loved travel and adventure. After she and Ken graduated from college, they spent a summer backpacking through 14 European countries. She frequently returned to Europe with family and friends. She loved exploring the Mayan ruins in Yucatán and Peru, witnessing the wonders of God’s creations on safaris to South Africa and Botswana, and delighting in the diversity of the Galapagos. She and Ken were certified scuba divers and they enjoyed exploring reefs and wrecks in the Caribbean. She looked forward to basking on ocean beaches and collecting seashells from different states and countries. Years later, she could pick up one of her shells and identify the beach and date of its discovery.

Some of our best memories with Jennifer were days boating on Lake Anna in central Virginia with the family poodle, Nephi. She made a dynamite chicken broccoli casserole. She kept a paper planner her entire life and reveled in her analog methods. She earned a black belt in taekwondo in her 40s. She tolerated Ken’s awful puns to beyond a reasonable degree. She would laugh until she cried while watching “Whose Line is it Anyway?” We will forever miss our sweet wife and mother.

Jennifer’s life was a symphony of love, creativity, and service. Her legacy will live on in the hearts of those she touched with her art, her music, her service, and her kindness. Those who knew Jennifer are encouraged to share their memories and upload photos to her memorial page as a tribute to her vibrant life. Let’s keep the memory of Jennifer alive and celebrate the remarkable life she led.

Funeral services will be held at 11 am on Saturday, January 13, 2024, at Myers Mortuary, 845 Washington Blvd., Ogden, UT, a viewing will be held prior from 9:30 to 10:30 am. Interment, Ben Lomond Cemetery.

In lieu of flowers, the family encourages donations to the Chris Atwood Foundation (www.thecaf.org).

Condolences may be sent to the family at https://www.myers-mortuary.com/obituary/Jennifer-Brothers-1#obituary.

Published on January 8, 2024 in the Ogden Standard Examiner

 

Sunday, January 7, 2024

No hard feelings

No Hard Feelings

When my body won't hold me anymore
And it finally lets me free
Will I be ready?
When my feet won't walk another mile
And my lips give their last kiss goodbye
Will my hands be steady when I lay down my fears, my hopes, and my doubts?
The rings on my fingers, and the keys to my house
With no hard feelings

When the sun hangs low in the west
And the light in my chest won't be kept held at bay any longer
When the jealousy fades away
And it's ash and dust for cash and lust
And it's just hallelujah
And love in thought, love in the words
Love in the songs they sing in the church
And no hard feelings

Lord knows, they haven't done much good for anyone
Kept me afraid and cold
With so much to have and hold
Mmm, hmm

When my body won't hold me anymore
And it finally lets me free
Where will I go?
Will the trade winds take me south through Georgia grain?
Or tropical rain?
Or snow from the heavens?

Will I join with the ocean blue?
Or run into a savior true?
And shake hands laughing
And walk through the night, straight to the light
Holding the love I've known in my life
And no hard feelings

Lord knows, they haven't done much good for anyone
Kept me afraid and cold
With so much to have and hold

Under the curving sky
I'm finally learning why
It matters for me and you
To say it and mean it too
For life and its loveliness
And all of its ugliness
Good as it's been to me
I have no enemies
 
by the Avett Brothers  (link)

Jennifer died yesterday

Tomorrow, and tomorrow, and tomorrow,

Creeps in this petty pace from day to day,

To the last syllable of recorded time;

And all our yesterdays have lighted fools

The way to dusty death. Out, out, brief candle!

Life's but a walking shadow, a poor player

That struts and frets his hour upon the stage

And then is heard no more. It is a tale

Told by an idiot, full of sound and fury

Signifying nothing.
 
(Macbeth Act 5, Scene 5, lines 17–28)

Tuesday, December 19, 2023

Howling at the moon

I've held off on any new posts because my focus has been on holding my shit together while my wife is dying. Jennifer has been in memory care for more than six years due to her disastrous diagnosis of early onset dementia (frontotemporal dementia). She has been slowly declining and a couple of months ago was placed on hospice. She's transitioning. No one knows how long she will live. We've had active dying, vigils, rallies, stable status, and all of the misery in between. People look to me to be the source of information and coordinator of everything and it's exhausting. I don't know how many times I've been told that it's hard, they're sorry, blah blah blah. Tell me something I don't know. Worse is when people ask me what can they do. There is no socially acceptable answer that is honest. How about you find a cure for FTD? I'm bone-weary of putting on a happy face and placating others who just want a pat on their head and go on with their lives. 

Earlier this year one of Jennifer's doctor's told me that the woman I married 40 years ago no longer existed: FTD took Jennifer from me in 2017, but her body kept going. When I visit her each day, I feel that I am performing a duty while honoring the memory of a relationship. The crush of the passage of years has weighed down on my soul. I've looked for alternative sources of joy with some success: travels, spending time with family, long motorcycle rides, reconnecting with old friends, skiing. But the trip or the visit ends, and I'm right back where I was before, wading through my cesspool of loneliness and pain, witnessing the savage silence of my wife whither into nothingness.

My six month scans showed no evidence of disease. I am doomed to continue on alone. 

And so it goes.

Tuesday, June 6, 2023

Three years of remission, fewer scans in my future

Last fall I reserved a place in a University of Utah-sponsored tour of the D-Day Beaches and battle sites in Normandy. It was an amazing trip, led by a retired Colonel and our group of 17. It was humbling to stand on Omaha beach at low tide and look at the 500+ yards those Americans had to walk under murderous crossfire before they could even fire any weapons. Our guide told us that we could draw a circle with a 10 foot radius anywhere on that beach and it would intersect with a spot where a GI died on June 6, 1944. Yet they persevered and within six hours had broken through the beach defenses, starting the liberation for France and Western Europe. My 10-year old mother was living with her family in occupied Holland and eagerly followed the news of the allied invasion, eagerly awaiting the arrival of the American soldiers. It would take another eleven months for Germany to surrender. Six years later, my mother and her family emigrated to America. She carries with her a profound gratitude for the soldiers who fought to give her and the rest of Europe her freedom. As I stood on that sacred sand and later at the American Cemetery, I uttered a prayer of gratitude for those GIs.

The D-Day tour was a week long. I decided that I didn't want to just spend a week in Europe and considered my options, finally settling on Croatia. After briefly considering renting a motorcycle and exploring the country on two wheels, I realized it would be better to be joined by family. I offered to pay for the flights and lodging, and three of my four kids accepted (My oldest, Chelsea, is expecting and was unable to join us.) Each of the kids selected a different destination for the first week in Europe (Amsterdam and Prague for Spencer; Switzerland and Northern Italy for Kirsten and Jason; Paris and Milan for Garrett), then we all met in Dubrovnik. We explored the Adriatic Coast, going from Dubrovnik to Korcula to Hvar to Split. Everyone seemed to have a good time. It was also a bit poignant, as I realized that it might be the last time that all of us would be able to visit Europe as a family.

Last Thursday, I had another scan (number 56 for those keeping score). It was routine. Dr. Maughan got the quick readout and told me that there was no sign of any metastatic disease. This remission started in June 2020, with the elimination of my last persistent tumor through radiation. Dr. Maughan was pleased to mark my three-year anniversary of being disease-free. We discussed the big question: how durable was this remission. Dr. Maughan drew upon the studies of metastatic melanoma and renal carcinoma -- two cancers where nivolumab had been tested on patients prior to my first enrolling in the clinical trial in January 2015. He said that, for a small subset of each cohort (14% for melanoma, 7% for renal), patients had a complete and durable response. If those patients made it to 24 months without a relapse, then the likelihood of relapse dramatically decreased. Put another way, the Kaplan-Meier curve of the cohort flattened after 24 months. Dr. Maughan was cautiously optimistic that, because I was disease-free after 36 months, the odds of my relapsing were very low. He proposed, and I agreed, that we wait six months for the next scan, and stay on that schedule for two years. If I make it to five years without a relapse, then we'll discuss extending the period between scans to a year. 

This is a dramatic shift from the past eleven years. Wen I was first diagnosed with metastatic disease in April/May 2012, my odds of dying within 2 years was 80%, and 95% odds that I'd die within 5 years. Of course, that data was accumulated before immunotherapy revolutionized cancer therapy. Plus I have had the very good fortune to have received a complete response. I had one post-immunotherapy relapse in early 2018, and it took another two years and four months before I was once more NED (no evidence of disease). 

In the past few months, as this emerging promise of a durable remission became more clear, I have shifted my life view from waiting for death to looking forward to life. I have been given a new lease on life, and I am still adjusting my mindset on how to live it. Stay turned for future developments.

This is not to say that everything is peachy-keen. Two of my three scans had some troubling non-cancer findings: my neck scan confirmed that my left vocal cord was still paralyzed, and I had "moderate left spinal canal and neural foraminal narrowing at C3-C4. And my chest scan noted a hiatal hernia, and my lungs showed "moderate multiregional mosaic attenuation pattern in the lungs, suggesting a small airways or small vessel disease."
 
I emailed Dr. Maughan and Dr. Slade (my daughter) about those findings. Dr. Maughan said that he was focused on looking for metastatic disease and apologized for not discussing the non-mets findings. He explained that I had increasing arthritis in my neck, that I might be having some acid reflux from the tiny hiatal hernia, and the lung inflammation could either be secondary to that, or more likely the residue of a cold. I could follow up with a GI doc or pulmonologist if the problems persisted. Chelsea was more definitive: I'm getting old and had a cold. Don't sweat it.

Tuesday, March 7, 2023

Scan 55: NED for me, but breast cancer for my dog

Last Thursday, March 2nd, I had another set of CT scans. For some reason, readings by the radiologists were not completed until today. Dr. Maughan had looked at the images and told me he didn't see anything that concerned him, so I wasn't too worried. But I waited on posting an update until all three readings were posted. Last Friday the abdomen/pelvis scan confirmed no new mets. On Saturday, the neck scan was likewise negative for mets, while observing that my left vocal cord was still frozen (and noting that my nose had been broken at some point in the past 60 years). This evening (Tuesday March 7) the chest reading was posted with the observation:

Similar 0.8 x 1.2 cm subcutaneous soft tissue nodule along the right upper anterior chest wall (series 4, image 16) with central hypoattenuation. This may be postprocedural represent a lymph node. No axillary lymphadenopathy....No thoracic metastases identified.

I'm pretty sure that's referring to the persistent tumor that was irradiated in 2020, but I've emailed Dr. Maughan to confirm. The big takeaway, however, is that none of the scans found any new evidence of disease.

By contrast, my six year old goldendoodle, Cocoa, had a cancerous tumor the size of a golf ball removed from her mammary. She's doing ok recovering from surgery. The doctor thought he got clear margins, so we'll be doing watchful waiting. 

I've been continuing to deal with the consequences of my frozen vocal cord, which was caused by my radiation therapy in 2020. Skiing in deep powder leaves me sucking for air. Last Monday Spencer and I were skiing the Olympic downhill at Snowbasin with 12+ inches of fresh powder, and I simply could not breathe. I stopped halfway down, wheezing, and after I finally caught my breath I blew my nose and was stunned to see bright red mucus from both nostrils. I just can't exchange sufficient oxygen at altitude when making powder jump turns. Three days later I returned and skied the now-groomed downhills with no problems.I'm wondering if I'm going to need a type 1 thyroplasty and arytenoid adduction. I'll closely evaluate the pros and cons before I make a decision. 

My motorcycle group has been planning a trip to southern California this weekend. They are planning on trailering their bikes to St. George and ride from there; however, my trailer is buried under 3 feet of snow at the back of my property. I'd need a helicopter to get that out. So instead, I'm going to Sun Valley and continue to celebrate this awesome snow year.

 

 

Friday, December 9, 2022

Get busy living or get busy dying

The past few months have been more eventful than usual.

 

Vocal cord issues

In the past few months, I have been bothered by a frozen left vocal cord, which was caused by scar tissue created by radiation therapy in 2020 targeting a persistent tumor at the base of my neck. The frozen vocal cord makes it impossible for me to loudly call out to my grandkids behind the boat, or to sing, or to speak for more than 15-20 minutes. Having one vocal cord stuck in the closed position also restricts the airflow to and from my lungs, and causes me to become quickly winded. In August, I had a severe laryngeal spasm in the middle of the night, which was terrifying. September and October, I had several meetings with a speech pathologist to help determine what could be done. At the first meeting, I had a laryngoscopy – a long scope threated up through my nose and down to the top of my voice box – and for 45 minutes made all sorts of awkward noises while a speech pathologist and medical resident stared at a large screen, occasionally oohing and aahing as my throat flexed and right vocal cord vibrated. Twice in 45 minutes, they detected slight movement of my left vocal cord, which triggered orgasmic-like squeals from the medical professionals. I live to serve. 

 

My primary medical diagnosis was paradoxical vocal fold motion, laryngospasm, muscle tension dysphonia, and dysphagia. The goal of the therapy, according to the speech pathologist, was for me to learn a new way to breathe and a new way to talk. According to the provider notes:

A management program for laryngeal control and rescue breathing exercises was introduced/reviewed today.

- Breathing techniques were practiced: Nasal inhalation + pursed lip/puffed cheek exhale

-Continuous breathing cycle techniques instructed were: sniff inhalation + pursed lip exhalation (practiced first with a straw for controlled exhalation to maintain back pressure in the pharynx), 3 sniff inhalations + pursed lip exhalation, sniff inhalation + flattened lip exhalation, sniff inhalation + "Sh" sound exhalation, sniff inhalation + "s" sound exhalation.

-Relaxed laryngeal postures instructed were: yawn, chewing, low laryngeal inhalation, alleviating neck/back tension

 

Resonant voice therapy (RVT):

Facilitating Phoneme(s): "twang" (nya")

Approximate accuracy: 60% accuracy

Level of Cues and Type: moderate

Cues: midfacial vibrations and reduce physical effort/strain

Level(s) Practiced: sustained phoneme, syllable repetitions, word repetitions and phrase repetitions

Comment: Pt acknowledged that his speaking voice was more in his "throat", and yelling from his throat felt more constricted than twang

 

My takeaway of this therapy was that I learned new breathing techniques to help overcome my frozen vocal cord. When I have a laryngeal spasm, I can gently inhale through my nose, then puff my cheeks and slowly blow out. After three puffed cheeks exhales, I can put my upper teeth over my lower lip, forming an “f”, then quickly inhale from that throat position. It feels strange, but it works. The efforts to change how I speak were less effective, however, both because they felt forced and unnatural, and because I really don’t need it: I’m no longer practicing law or teaching.

 

In the past few weeks, I’ve gone skiing a couple of times. I’m been surprised at how easily winded I became. I think that part of it is the lack of cardio over the summer due to my paradoxical vocal fold motion, and the other part is the ongoing occlusion in my larynx, combined with my throat reshaping to help overcome my stuck vocal cord. I’m still figuring out how best to address this. The short-term consequence is that I’m not skiing as much, which is a bummer.

 

A rash of issues

In the past month, I’ve noticed a return of a rash around my calves. As well as on my lower back. Since I started immunotherapy in early 2015, I’ve had episodic rashes that my doctors have described as immunotherapy-induced dermal toxicity: My T cells ramp up and become hyper-aggressive and a see the results in my largest organ – my skin. In the past, the most common location of these rashes has been on my calves and face. This time, it’s my calves and lower back. I’ve been applying a heavy lotion (triamcinolone acetonide 0.1%), which helps a bit. I’ve wondered if the return of the rash is evidence that my immune system is ramping up because it’s detected new metastatic activity. This afternoon’s CT scans may shed some light on that.

 

Get busy living or get busy dying

Last month marked 11 years since I was diagnosed with bladder cancer at age 49. Its been 10½ years since my disease went metastatic and I was given a diagnosis of death: 80% chance of dying in 2 years, 95% chance of dying in 5 years. As documented in this blog, I reconciled myself to the fact that imminent death, arranged my affairs, retired from my legal practice, and focused on spending time with my family. I went through two different chemotherapy regimens with the goal to extend my life until I get into one of the new immunotherapy clinical trials. In late 2014 I had extensive pulmonary embolisms and rapid tumor growth on the left side of my neck. In early 2015 I was one of the first metastatic bladder cancer patients to enroll in a clinical trial with nivolumab (Opdivo), and was one of seven patients to have a complete response.

 

This remarkable result was tempered by the fact that there was no data to help me understand how durable my remission might be. As my doctors liked to tell me, I was the data. Having accepted the inevitability of my early death, I had no basis to adjust that expectation. I led life by focusing on the present, finding joy in each day, and releasing any hope of living to anywhere close to my actuarial age. I focused on my immediate footsteps, not lifting my eyes up to look at the horizon.

 

On October 10, 2017, while running errands in Northern Virginia, Jennifer felt lightheaded, pulled over, then went catatonic. It took several hours for first responders and doctors to revive her. That event marked my wife’s plunge into what eventually was diagnosed as early onset frontotemporal dementia, leading to her eventual placement in a memory care facility. I visit her daily, and willingly cover all her expenses. October 10, 2022 was a bad day for me, marking a perverse five year anniversary of the end of my relationship with my wife as I knew it.

 

Recent conversations with my family and friends have helped me understand that, for the past 11 years, my life has been focused upon the likelihood of my imminent death. I’ve been thinking of The Shawshank Redemption, and what Andy Dufresne said to Red: “I guess it comes down to a simple choice, really. Get busy living, or get busy dying.” I’ve spent eleven years busy dying. I’m now wondering if I should get busy living. But I believe to do so it requires some hope, some basis, to hope. And as Red told Andy, “Hope is a dangerous thing. Hope can drive a man insane.” I’ve spent eleven years avoiding insanity by refusing to hope that I’ll be cured of my metastatic bladder cancer. But should I? Was Andy lying when he told Red, “hope is a good thing, maybe the best of things, and no good thing ever dies”? I think so. All things die. Everything is vanity.

 

But still I live. And I am weary of keeping my eyes on my immediate footsteps. I am tempted to hope. I want to feel like Red as he was riding the bus to Mexico: “I find I'm so excited, I can barely sit still or hold a thought in my head. I think it's the excitement only a free man can feel, a free man at the start of a long journey whose conclusion is uncertain. I hope I can make it across the border. I hope to see my friend and shake his hand. I hope the Pacific is as blue as it has been in my dreams. I hope.”

 

I don’t yet know how this will play out. I want to give myself permission to hope. But I am reluctant to allow my viewpoint to change. I see the rash on my body and wonder if it’s a warning that my metastatic cancer has returned. Every 12 weeks I have my CT scans and I expect fate to give me snap kick in the balls. And every time my scans are clean, I am tempted to hope that my next scans will be clean. But I’m in my fourth remission, which means that I’ve had four different cancer-mediated nut shots. How do I give myself permission to my life in any way other than one day at a time given the high likelihood that my metastatic cancer will come back?

 

Last week I was talking about this with a close family friend. She said something that made me realize that for more than a decade I had not been allowing myself to focus on living instead of dying. Tears came to my eyes as I realized that I had been foreclosing myself from the joy of living. I had an epiphany that deciding to live was a choice, regardless of my current diagnosis. I’m still pondering what this means, and how I might reorder the filters of my existence. 

 

NCI GUSC BCTF CTPM

As I’ve been writing this post, I’ve been listening to and participating in an federally-sponsored conference on planning clinical trials for bladder cancer (formal title: "National Cancer Institute  Genitourinary Steering Committee Bladder Cancer Task Force Clinical Trial Planning Meeting: Defining the next generation of clinical trials with combination therapies in non-muscle invasive bladder cancer"). I just delivered a philosophical snap kick to some of the top bladder cancer researchers in the country by pushing back hard on the idea scheduled TURBT's for prophylactic purposes, regardless of patient need. I thought of my brother-in-law's recent difficulty in recovering from the anesthesia after a "maintenance" TURBT, and thought about the elderly patients who were being dragged back into surgery simply for curiosity. I called those kinds of TURBT's “antithetical to patient-centered care.” Several heads rocked back, and the comment board lit up with a number of messages supporting my view. Even the best doctors sometimes get more interested in the data than the patient. That's my job as a patient advocate:  remind the professionals that there's a human on the pointy end of a needle.

 

Scan #54

I left the CTPM meeting a few minutes early to make my way down to the Huntsman Cancer Center's Farmington campus for my scheduled 12 week CT scans of my neck, chest, abdomen and pelvis. I think this is scan number 54. I dutifully drank my barium contrast as scheduled, laid down on the table while the tech quickly placed an IV in my arm. When the iodinated contrast was pushed into my vein, I felt the vasodialator effect in my chest, abdomen, and pelvis, and surprisingly my lower back where my rash was flaring up. I reminded the tech to leave the IV in, then walked over to the lab for my blood draws. I knew there would be a long wait before I'd see Dr. Maughan, so I pulled up the New York Times on my iPad and and caught up on all the misery that's fit to print.

 

After an hour or so, I was called into the exam room for vitals and a meeting with Lindsay, the PA, where I reviewed my recent history (rash, frozen vocal cord issues). She checked my rash, wrote a scrip for a steroid cream, and told me Ben would some in soon. A few minutes later Dr. Maughan came in and we caught up. I had not seen him on my last two visit since he was busy and from my perspective there was nothing to talk about. He said that my scans had not been read by a radiologist but that he had taken a quick look and didn't see any visible issues. I told him (and showed him) about the rash, and wondered why my immune system might be revving up again. He speculated that there was a possibility that my immune system had sensed some microscopic metastatic cancer and was reacting to it. I also noted my vocal cord issues, which had impacted my breathing and talking. He smiled and pulled out a letter from Unum, one of the insurers that has been paying my disability, where the insurer was asking if there were issues with my returning to work, specifically asking about talking and breathing issues. I assured him that Unum had waived its rights to try to halt its insurance payments, but that he could easily answer the question as indicated by my medical history.

 

I told Ben that, with permission, I had forwarded him some slides from a recent bladder cancer task force meeting where we had discussed a proposed clinical trial to deescalate Enfortumab Vedotin (EV) with pembrolizumab in front-line metastatic urothelial carcinoma. I've been watching the development of EV, both with and without immunotherapy, as the next potential therapy if and when my mets return. The overall response rate of EV is very good, but the side effects can be horrible. Ben said that he had not been able to have any patients adhere to to the complete schedule for EV+pembro due to patient toxicities. I told him that I thought that the proposed trial was outstanding, since it could set forth a new dosage schedule for a very promising but highly toxic therapy. I asked if he'd discuss the proposed with his colleagues and see if Huntsman could possible join the trial.

 

I also told him about a new NCI clinical trial award program (PAR-21-306) for young researchers and suggested that he share it with the residents and fellows at HCI. The federal government is offering to distribute our tax dollars, and I'd strongly prefer that we keep whatever portion we can for bladder cancer research.

 

We ended our conversation by my telling him that I'd review my CT scan results once they were posted in Epic's MyChart. He told me he'd call if there was anything concerning. I stopped off at Five Guys to wash the barium and iodine out of my system with 4 liters of Diet Coke, chased by a cheeseburger and fries. I visited Jennifer at Apple Village then went home and worked on this post. I decided I'd wait on the CT results before posting.

 

(Friday Dec. 9): This morning I've been listening to day 2 of the NCI GUSC BCTF CTPM, including an hour or so sitting in the hot tub. My CT results were finally posted: no new mets. One more reason I can get busy living.