Need to Improve Quality of Life!

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MJGJackson
MJGJackson Member Posts: 3

I am new to the forum and looking for anyone willing to share their journey with both allopathic and homeopathic modailities.  I was first diagnosed in 2006 with BC.  Had lumpectomy, low dose chemo, and an array of herbal supplements.  I was cancer free and very active for nine years.  The it reared its head again and a bit more advanced/mets in lymphs.  Think that qualifies me for metastatic DX.   DR's concerned about bones  At that moment in time, I opt for regular chemo regimen but stopped after the 3rd of 4 rounds.  Decline radiation again.  As a newly single mom with a disheveled life, I went with Femara for hormones, Affinitor (similar to chemo pill)  the side effects of these two drugs indicated the need to go on Metformin to lower blood sugar, and Prolia and then Xgeva to strengthen bones.  Ack. 

The side effects have been devasting to my quality of life.  I am so tired and in so much pain I can not enjoy even the simplest things in life and do not want to live this way.  I spoke with my Dr. a week ago and we agreed to stop affinitor and metformin, to take the next shot of exgeva and stay on Letrozole.  Well I took the shot and it has been so horrible this past week, scary even the way I feel.  So I have decided I am done with Big Pharma and uping my food game and detoxifying all this crap out of me.  I eat mainly homecooked organics, Juice, and am tying to stay away from my daughters home baked treats.  I also have a med mari card which is a life saver.  I am going rub some cbd cream on my sore areas now. Need to schedule next acupuncture and stick with Chiropractor, hike, yoga...I want to change this around and get back to living.   Look forward to having a "conversation" around others experiences.  I am meet with my med team, including their natural path to come up with a plan on Wed. and I am trying to prepare. 

Comments

  • Longtermsurvivor
    Longtermsurvivor Member Posts: 1,438
    edited July 2016

    As usual, very long - sorry! Read on or don't as you wish!

    HI Marge,

    I'm glad I took the time to click on your photo and read both your bio and posts to other topics.

    We are so much alike - though the circumstances of our lives are vastly different - I'm single, don't have any offspring and am not overly stressed by financial and other worries.

    Like you, I integrate holistic treatments, including homeopathic approaches to conventional cancer treatments.

    Marge, I would like to encourage you to stay on the Femara, try different brands of the generic (they often have different side effect profiles), and find CAM and integrative methods for dealing with unwanted effects.

    Here's a long and fascinating bco topic on Femara:

    https://community.breastcancer.org/forum/78/topics/726592

    Afinitor is considered generally nasty by most patients and oncologists seldom prescribe it as a first line treatment for newly diagnosed metastatic breast cancer (MBC). These days they more typically prescribe Ibrance with the Femara at first, then maybe later with Faslodex or Aromasin.

    Why are doctors concerned about your bones? Did mets show up in imaging exams? If so, most patients are usually prescribed a bisphosphonate like Zometa or similar Xgeva. If you have osteoporosis, then different treatments would be prescribed.

    Metformin is sometimes added to the advanced cancer mix, but isn't typical. It is used for diabetes - is that something you're experiencing too?

    Why do I encourage you to stay on the Femara?

    aside: Maybe Tamoxifen would be a better next choice for you. It used to be the drug of choice for MBC, but has been replaced by the aromatase inhibitors (Femara, Arimedix,Aaromasin)...for some with MBC, it's remarkably effective with very few unwanted effects.

    Back to Femara - If your cancer is hormone positive, it will use any bit of estrogen it can find as its food stuffs of choice. The AIs and Tamoxifen befuddle or block this cycle.

    I've now engaged Femara thrice. The first time I experienced many unwanted effects, but it stalled my MBC for 3 years. The second time, I was drowning in mets, it didn't save me and made me feel miserable, so I stopped after a short time. The third time around, it's slowed down the breathing difficulties associated with lung and pleural mets without touching the liver mets. But, it doesn't cause extreme unwanted effects that can't be met with a variety of integrative and CAM approaches, so I continue it.

    Many of my approaches detailed here: https://community.breastcancer.org/forum/79/topics...

    Marge, I too have relied on nutrition, lifestyle modifications, homeopathy (and anthroposophical medicine), energy medicine (Reiki and Jin Shin Jyutsu), mind-body medicine and most of the key factors in Kelly Turner's book Radical Remission:

    https://community.breastcancer.org/forum/79/topics...

    But, I think that if I (we? you too?) can find a balanced way to make peace with powerful conventional healing allies like Femara, then it makes sense to engage them. We must treat them and our bodies with great respect...it sounds like your doctor just threw the prescription pad at you and that's thrown you off balance and off center. There are many ways to approach MBC and you deserve to engage those that work best for you.

    It's up to you to regain your life and well being again. Marge, I hope you find many healing allies, but don't throw out the baby with the bathwater of conventional medical approaches to MBC.

    Please feel free to argue, disagree, ask for explanation, complain, agree, expand or illuminate...I'm not trying to control your actions or reactions, just want to urge you to work with all the healing allies at your disposal.

    You're facing a huge challenge.

    warmest healing wishes, Stephanie in blistering Sonoma County, CA.

  • car2tenn
    car2tenn Member Posts: 515
    edited July 2016

    While I have chosen to do the Big Pharma thing I am not confident in Western medicine either. It is just that cancer is a multi headed monster. If there was proof that a certain holistic course would improve my outcome then I would have a whole fridge full of anything recommended. Alas we are all pilgrims trying to find our way. And at a time when the medical field is disintegrating. I send you my best wishes for utter success. Keep reporting in as you find good answers to these difficult question. Carolyn

  • zarovka
    zarovka Member Posts: 3,607
    edited July 2016

    MJG - It sounds like you are well on your way to living Anti Cancer a New Way of Life, but I thought I would share the link as it aligns so well with your thinking.

    I have chosen to embrace functional medicine AND standard therapies.

    When standard therapies and treatments undermine your basic health they are not supporting healing, IMO. However, not all of them are hard for all women. It's just a matter of where you draw the line and reject a treatment because of the side effects you experience. I would probably draw it sooner than some doctors would, but I don't reject all standard treatments out of hand.

    Many doctors have been vocal about Affinitor, arguing that it does more harm than good. So much so that many argue that FDA approval should be withdraw. I would not write off all standard treatments based on your experience with a particularly hard drug.

    I hope that you find a doctor or two who will work with you to achieve a balanced and gentle strategy that supports your healing. I work with both medical oncologists and integrative oncologists. Among many things, the integrative oncologists can help you navigate safely through the "standard of care" while adding complementary therapies that support the body and treat the cancer.

    >Z<

  • HLB
    HLB Member Posts: 1,760
    edited July 2016

    I agree with dropping the afinitor and trying the letrozole without it. Some do have a lot of joint pain with it but some have no se at all with femara, and it does work really well. I refused afinitor based on the bco threads about it and the paper that comes with it listing the side effects. Just sounded downright dangerous to me.

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