Tag Archives: survivor

When Breast Cancer Comes Back, Part 2

MaryBright-Darci 2

Mary Bright, right, shares her story with Darci Strickland of WLTX News 19.

In 2015, DHEC’s Mary Bright wrote a blog post about her fight against breast cancer, the most common cancer among women. In late 2017, Mary learned that almost two years to the day that she had rang the bell as cancer free, it had returned. She shares her latest story in a two-part blog series. Today: Part 2 of 2.

By Mary N. Bright 
Public Information Director 
DHEC’s Division of Emergency Response, Nuclear Response and Emergency Environmental Surveillance

If I’m Stage IV, what are my chances?

No one can say.  What I have now is considered a “chronic disease,” like diabetes.  I will be tracked and tested and treated every time my numbers increase or drop.  Unlike diabetes, this disease will eventually kill me.  It probably won’t happen in the next hour or day or week or month but one day it — or possibly a cause related to it — will claim my life.

I will be tracked for the rest of my life; every six weeks if things are going poorly and every three to six months if things are going well.

And I still have no idea how this happened and, sadly, modern medicine hasn’t entirely pinpointed how it happens either.  I told myself to get over the “Why?” question.  I didn’t see the point when facing the daunting gauntlet of the new treatment regimen.

‘I had become the bubble girl.’

Last time it had been eight five-hour infusions every other week for four long months; the first four were a drug called Adriamycin, also known as Doxorubicin, which isMaryBright nicknamed “the red Devil” for what it does to the body.  It kills everything; not just cancer cells but healthy cells and — in my case — white blood cells.  For me, it brought crushing exhaustion and debilitating pain that seemed to ooze out of my bones. But the worst part, the part that actually kept me out of work, was the consistent drop in my white cell count.  Every time I received chemo, my white cell count would drop to 100 or less.  A healthy human’s white cell count is anywhere between 5,000 and 10,000.

I had no immune system.  I couldn’t be around people at all.  My doctor ordered home confinement.  I had become the bubble girl. I even had to wear a mask around my husband in case he brought germs home.  For a self-admitted workaholic, it was torture to be stuck at home with no contact with anyone and no work to keep me occupied.  Daytime television is not what it’s cracked up to be.

‘This time around, the drugs are much more tolerable.’

The last four chemo sessions were a drug called Taxol, which my chemo nurse Jackie told me was usually better tolerated.  The pain began to lessen and the exhaustion eased up, but my white cells stayed low even with injections of Neulasta, meant to increase production of baby, germ-fighting white blood cells.  I quickly realized I wasn’t tolerating it as well as we hoped.  I woke up in the middle of the night and went to the bathroom. When I came back I felt something on the bottom of my left foot.  It felt like one of those little stickers that come off produce.  I grabbed the “sticker” and yanked. It wasn’t a

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sticker.  It was a chunk of skin from the bottom of my foot.

In just a few hours since I had gone to bed, the skin had begun peeling back from my palms and soles of my feet.  It looked like dozens of little curly Q strips that had separated and were already dry and stiff.  My fingernails that had already turned black from the Adriamycin where now separating from my nail beds; the tip of the nail extended halfway back into the nail bed.  I actually pulled out medical tape and put it around each finger until I could see Dr. Wells the next morning.  He told me to cut my nails down as far as I safely could and use the medical tape to help re-attach the nails to the nail beds.  Losing a nail would cause a wound that could lead to an infection.

This time around, the drugs are much more tolerable. One is called Carboplatin; the other is Gemzar.  I’m slated to have eight infusions spread out over almost six months. The first Wednesday I went in for an infusion that lasted about two hours; the next Wednesday another one for another few hours. The two sessions amounted to one infusion.  Then I had a week off while my medical team checked my numbers.

‘I’m aware that this will get worse this time’

As long as my numbers were within the desirable range, I’d be allowed to continue on with the next two sessions for my next infusion; then another week off for testing.  This is my routine until we complete eight full infusions.  I should be done sometime near the end of April; after that surgery and the six weeks it will take to recover.  We’ve decided to remove both breasts completely.  The chances of recurring breast cancer are pretty small if you remove as much breast tissue as possible.  We’ll be able to remove about 90-95 percent; you can’t remove every inch without cutting into the muscle below it.

While early into these chemo infusions, I can already feel the difference.  There is less constant pain.  It’s more like spasms in my breasts, legs, hands and feet; even my fingers lock up unexpectedly.  I spend a lot of my off-time massaging my muscles to keep them from locking up.  I have patches of joint ache and neuropathy; pain, tingling and numbness in my hands and feet.

Towards the end of my last treatment I had to use a cane to get around safely; at age 40.  I’m aware that this will get worse this time, because chemo treatments are cumulative and get worse as you endure more of them.  I haven’t lost my hair yet; last time it started failing out after two weeks.  But that is a side-effect of both of these new drugs so I’m not holding out hope.  Hey, I’ll save money on haircuts, shampoo and conditioner, so that’s not so bad.  Like last time, I can smell better than most bloodhounds.  I swear, it’s ridiculous how keen that sense of smell has become.  My sense of taste comes and goes and I’ll probably lose it again.  No nausea yet and my nails and skin seem intact for now.

Once again some incredible good has come from even this horrible situation.  My white cell count this time is hanging tough so I can still work.  The sanity that brings is indescribable.

‘Blessed to be surrounded by the most loving, caring and amazing people’

I once again see how I have been blessed to be surrounded by the most loving, caring and amazing people.  They ask me everyday what they can do to help.  I actually feel bad when I only say prayers and make me laugh every chance you get.  I don’t have a lot I MaryBright-Darci (2)need just yet.  My husband has become my personal chef, making me my favorite meals to make sure I eat and keep my strength up.  The outpouring of support, prayers and well-wishes has brought me to tears.

Don’t get me wrong; I wouldn’t turn down a winning lottery ticket or as my husband says “a box of hundred dollar bills” because the treatment is far from cheap and every visit or treatment results in another co-pay or balance due.  I certainly understand what is meant when I hear that most American families are one major medical event from bankruptcy.  One of the things I was looking forward to with the two-year anniversary was the end to major medical payments and a chance to pay everything off and start saving for a house again.  But that’s not quite on my mind right now nor is the reconstruction I would need after the double mastectomy.

On the positive side again, I have had so many sweet wonderful people volunteer to come sit by my side as I receive the infusions.  As wonderful as their offers are, I have turned every one of them down, including my husband’s.  For me, to keep focused during this new fight, I need to just put the blinders on and “headphones in” and push through each one while I work through emails and work projects.  I worry that if I break my concentration I won’t regain the strength I need to make it through them all.

‘To all my fellow survivors, keep fighting’

I am convinced I will make it. As my Dad said when I told him about the diagnosis, “OK.  That’s not ideal.  Now what are we going to do about it?” I’m my Daddy’s girl.  When these things happen, take time to sort through the feelings and the devastation. When you’re ready, stand up and fight.

I’ll make sure to let you all know how it’s going and whether we win this round too.

To all my fellow survivors, keep fighting… as long and as hard as we can to squeeze every moment of joy, happiness and love out of this life.

It’s worth it.

 

When Breast Cancer Comes Back, Part 1

MaryBright-Darci

Mary Bright, right, shares her story with Darci Strickland of WLTX News 19.

In 2015, DHEC’s Mary Bright wrote a blog post about her fight against breast cancer, the most common cancer among women. In late 2017, Mary learned that almost two years to the day that she had rung the bell as cancer-free, it had returned. She shares her latest story in a two-part blog series. Today: Part 1 of 2.

By Mary N. Bright 
Public Information Director 
DHEC’s Division of Emergency Response, Nuclear Response and Emergency Environmental Surveillance

There are four words no cancer survivor ever wants to hear: Your cancer has returned.

It’s something all cancer patients know is a possibility, but after the first fight you try to be positive that you’ve kicked it and you’ll never have to face those four life-altering words.

For me it happened in November, almost exactly two years to the day after I rang the bell signifying that I’d completed my six-month grueling expedition into chemo, surgery andMaryBright Bell radiation treatment.  As I sat down in the familiar leather seats in the infusion room, I thought about how ironic it was that two years prior I had rung my bell on the day before Thanksgiving.  Now once again, on the day before Thanksgiving, I was settling in to begin chemo all over again.

‘I was looking forward to getting it out’

It had only been five months since I had undergone a CT scan that cleared me to have my port removed.

That little titanium port had saved my veins from being blown out two years earlier, when I sat through eight torturous rounds of chemo.  The chemo that, at times, made me want to climb into a deep, dark hole and wish the world, one filled with unbearable pain and exhaustion, would go away.  While the port had been surgically placed to help save my life, I was looking forward to getting it out.  I told myself once my oncologist, Dr. Wells, gave the OK and we could take it out – that would be the signal that my life could begin to return to normal.  With a clean CT scan, and once we passed my two-year anniversary, that tiny piece of titanium could go bye-bye.MaryBright

Then, in early October, less than two months shy of my two-year anniversary, my bra began to pinch and hurt on my right side.  I was having pain spasms that were increasing in frequency and painfulness.  I swapped my normal bras for sports bras for a few days and it felt better; but only for a week or two.  Then one day, just before Halloween, the pain returned and the skin of my right breast felt “thick” to the touch.  The color was a light spotted pink like I had a mild, splotchy sunburn and, oddly, despite the previous lumpectomy, my right breast was looking fuller and sitting higher on my chest.

‘The next day, I got that call’

I had an appointment the next week for my fall follow-up so I mentioned it to my oncologist.  He immediately sent me downstairs for a mammogram.  A quick scan showed no changes in the density of the breast tissue so I went back upstairs to be re-evaluated.  At that point, I was presenting symptoms that resembled mastitis, a painful infection/inflammation of the breast tissue.  The other likely option was lymphedema; an overproduction of the lymphatic fluid from my arm that filled in the void areas in my breast after surgery.

Two rounds of antibiotics later, the color and swelling were down but not gone.  Dr. Wells wanted an MRI to ensure tiny diffused cancerous cells weren’t hiding in the voids.  So Nov. 6, about three weeks after the first symptoms, I went in for a chest/breast MRI.

The next day I got that call; Dr. Wells wanted me back in for a biopsy.

‘Yep, my cancer’s probably back.’

The MRI showed “spots of interest” on my right breast and inflamed lymph nodes on my left breast and in my lungs.  I knew that meant the cancer was probably back, but no one really wanted to confirm that guess until they had test results.  The Thursday before Veterans Day I went in and had six areas biopsied; three in the right breast and three in the left.  A member of the medical staff asked foreshadowing questions and made comments that I assumed meant they knew what they were looking at — questions like whether we had removed my port yet.  I said “No, I still have my port,” but brain said, “Yep, my cancer’s probably back.”

I was home the next day, Friday, for the state holiday when I got the results; all six samples were positive… déjà vu all over again.  That’s exactly what I had been told the first time.  Only this time my routine breast cancer had comeback with a vengeance.  Instead of forming a solid tumor it hid in voids between the layers of my breast tissue making it harder to detect.  My “routine” breast cancer, for reasons we may never know, was acting like a much more aggressive type of breast cancer known as triple negative.  Triple negative is the most aggressive, the fastest-growing and deadliest form of breast cancer.

Triple negative breast cancers make up about 10-20 percent of all breast cancers; in about 34 percent of patients cancer comes back.  On average, it reoccurs within about 2.6 years.  Mine came back just shy of two years.

‘My cancer had spread to other organs’

Just like before, everything went into fast forward again.  I had a PET Scan that Saturday to see if any other areas of my body contained cancerous cells; then a bronchoscopy the following Friday (to determine if the inflamed lymph node in my lungs was positive for cancer or just inflamed from a recent hacking cough).  The lung spot, about the size of a quarter and in my lower left lung, was cancerous.

My cancer had spread to other organs. I was diagnosed as Stage IV.

Before I could even comprehend what was going on, I was sitting down to the first portion of the first round of chemo on November 22, the day I had expected to celebrate my two-year anniversary of being cancer-free.

How had this happened?  Why had it come back?  My cancer was supposed to be curable, after all. I was reassured of that. I could be cured and, in essence, walk away with only this minor detour from my life.

What didn’t happen with me that would have helped me? There are a couple of things I can remember.

‘The sad truth of it is… there is no good answer.’ 

I remembered being told that given my age on the first diagnosis – 40 years old –chemo might push me into early menopause.  I remember thinking, “OK, one less thing to worry about.” I wasn’t planning on kids after 40. My periods did stop about six weeks into chemo, but about five months after I stopped chemo, I woke up and it was back.  I told my oncologist and he seemed

BreatCancerGraphic

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a tad surprised but told me that occurs for some women, usually those with excess estrogen production.  He recommended I start a drug called Tamoxifen (to reduce estrogen production) and seriously consider having an Oopherectomy (removing my ovaries) within the next year, since that’s another place where estrogen is produced.  I couldn’t tolerate the drug so we tried a different one, Letrozole, which wasn’t any better.

That’s when we decided to go ahead with a full Hysterectomy and Oopherectomy.  Since we were “going in” it would be better to take out the uterus, fallopian tubes, cervix and anything else that could cause any of the “silent” feminine cancers in the future.

‘What was this new diagnosis going to mean for me?’

But was there anything else we missed?  No.  So what had happened?

The sad truth of it is… there is no good answer.  Sometimes, as my oncologist said, people with no family history and no genetic mutations simply develop cancer.  It’s an unlucky roll of the dice.

What was this new diagnosis going to mean for me?  For my future?  For my family?

Mary’s Story – DHEC Employee, Breast Cancer Survivor

By Mary N. Bright, Public Information Director, DHEC’s Division of Emergency Response, Nuclear Response and Emergency Environmental Surveillance

In honor of National Breast Cancer Awareness Month, DHEC’s Mary Bright is sharing her story about her fight against the disease.  

I’m sure some people would scoff when I say I’m one of the lucky ones but you’d probably have to know my story to understand why.

I have cancer; specifically, Stage II Invasive Ductal Metastatic Breast Cancer.

I know.  When I first heard that I had no idea what it meant either.

When I first found out, I couldn’t breathe.  When the doctor called me with the results of the biopsy, I was still telling myself the lump I had found was nothing.  Before that phone call, I had almost convinced myself that the second lump my Primary Care Physician found was a mistake too.  I told myself that we were both being overly cautious after a relative had been diagnosed with multiple cancers six months prior.

The next day, I checked myself for lumps in my breast.  I found nothing and told myself, “I’m only 40 years old.  I’m okay.”  I used to consider myself a careful person.  I usually checked myself every month but once in a while I would miss a month.  When I did, I would tell myself that I was fine because I was too young to worry.  This wasn’t something women my age needed to worry about yet.

I checked again in December and found nothing… then, life got in the way.  Three months went by while I helped my husband through major shoulder surgery.  I came home from work one day last March and settled onto the couch to relax after work.

We have three small dogs and usually the moment we sit down, they are in our laps.  Our smallest is a mini-dachshund named Shae.  That day Shae wouldn’t hop up.  She sat in the floor staring.  I called to her again and patted my lap.  Again, nothing… She just stared at me.  After a moment, Shae leapt off the floor and landed on the right side of my chest.  Immediately, pain shot up and down my body.  My first thought was that she had a broken nail and had gouged my skin when she jumped.  I scooped her up and handed her to my husband.  I began feeling around for what I expected to be a scratch and there it was… the lump… and it was big.

My heart stopped.

I thought, “There’s no way.”  It couldn’t be.  I was way too young for this, right?  It had to be something else.  How long had it been since I last checked?  Only three months.  It couldn’t be a tumor, right?  I turned to my husband and I said something to the effect of, “Sweetie, can you feel this?”  I remember his smile disappearing the moment he pressed down.  He said, “Honey, you need to go to the doctor… now.”

Two days later, I was in with Dr. Brian Cline, my primary care physician, explaining what happened.  He told me we would check everything out.  He said, hopefully, he’d be able to tell me that the lump was nothing.  The moment Dr. Cline pressed down, his whole demeanor changed.  He got very serious and said, “I can’t tell you this is nothing.”  He checked the right side and there it was; another lump, about the side of a marble, just below my armpit.

A quick and nearly painless mammogram and ultrasound pointed to the worst case scenario so the doctor ordered a biopsy while I was still on the table.  Dr. Tommy Cupples called with the results the next day; positive for carcinoma… every sample.

Less than a week later, my new oncologist, Dr. James Wells, gave me the verdict:

Stage II Invasive Ductal Metastatic Breast Cancer… two lumps, one in my right breast and one in a right lymph node.

But what did it mean?  Thankfully, Dr. Wells cut to the chase.  It was curable and he already had a plan: eight sessions of chemo, surgery and seven weeks of radiation.  It sounded like a lot.  It sounded like too much.  Dr. Wells said the lumps were big; the one in my breast measured three cm high and five cm long.  It was nearly the size of a grapefruit wedge.  The one in my lymph node was like a small marble.  He wanted to attack the cancer aggressively because of my age.  I was pretty young for that kind of diagnosis.  He also needed to make sure it wasn’t anywhere else.

Mary hoodieSuddenly, my life was in fast forward.

The next day, Friday, was a full body MRI; the day after was a PET scan.  Two days later was more than 10 hours in various doctor’s offices; a root canal I was avoiding, a surgical consult and another oncology visit.  I had to have the root canal to close off any open pathways for infection.  Chemo would require that I minimize any chance of allowing bacteria to make its way into my body.  Two days after all that, I had surgery to place a quarter-sized port in my chest so the chemotherapy drugs wouldn’t destroy my veins.  It was an unimaginably difficult week and we had barely begun.

Sixteen painful weeks followed; weeks where my white blood cell count dropped down to 100, causing me to be admitted to the oncology ward, weeks where the pain and exhaustion were too much for me to even get out of bed, weeks where the skin on my hands and feet came off in sheets.  But I made it through that and then through surgery and now radiation.

Through all of that, I am still one of the lucky ones.  I went through the worst period of my life; it was a painful and exhausting struggle to even feel human.  But if you remember what I said at the beginning, you’ll see the parts of my story that make me feel lucky:

ShaeThanks to little Shae, we found the lumps while I was still curable.

I met so many people along the way who were so much worse off; those in constant pain suffering from terminal cases, those in wheel chairs and using walkers and canes to get around.  A week before I began chemo, while still upset and stressed about what chemo would mean to me; I met a stranger who told that she’d “been going through chemo for two years and was still here.”  It was right then that I realized – with only eight sessions of chemo, I had nothing to complain about.

I had the best doctors and nurses I could have hoped for.

From my primary care physician, Dr. Brian Cline, to my oncologist, Dr. James Wells, to my radiological oncologist, Dr. Quillin Davis, and all the other doctors, nurses and techs in between, I was treated like family.  They got to know me on a personal level; I was not just my symptoms or my disease.  I was a person they cared for as if I were family.  They kept me smiling and hopeful at every step.

I was granted time off when I needed it.

My co-workers and friends who worked for state agencies and even perfect strangers allowed me to take time off to heal and get stronger.  Because DHEC and other state government agencies participate in the Leave Pool program, leave donated from other state employees allowed me to go through the treatments, to heal and to stay strong.

I was blessed enough to have insurance.

Cancer treatment isn’t cheap; multiple surgeries, chemo drugs, medication, radiation therapy and I’m still facing five years of a daily medication called Tamoxifen that will help prevent my cancer from returning.  But I have insurance and we’ve managed to pay off most of our bills.  I’ve met so many women who told me they put off getting mammograms because they can’t afford it.  They don’t have insurance or they don’t have enough to cover a mammogram.  I’ve told every one of them… Don’t wait!  There are resources like DHEC’s Best Chance Network that can provide services for men and women who qualify for free screenings.

I have felt so much love and support from so many.

My husband, my family, my friends… I know they would all be there for me through this terrible, terrible disease and treatment.  What I didn’t know is how many people, complete strangers, who stop me in the street and offer me their prayers and well wishes.

mary hug two

I am lucky.  I am.

I am lucky to still be here to tell each of you that you don’t have to go through what I did.  Be careful.  Check yourselves and check your loved ones.  Do it early and often.  It’s treatable and best to find it early.

If you are diagnosed, don’t lose hope.  Breast cancer isn’t an automatic death sentence.  We can beat it… and if you’re diagnosed, remember that you are not alone.

Mary and Darci

Mary Bright and WLTX 19 Anchor Darci Strickland who recently covered Mary’s story. Watch Mary’s story on WLTX here.