I got in for the first appointment, that is. I still needed to have the T790M mutation, which was a coin toss. I won that coin toss and got it into the trial for Tagrisso, a drug that works without progression for an average of thirteen months. I was on it six and a half years without progression.
When it grew again I found myself another clinical trial, this time for BLU-945. Unfortunately, by the time I got in, the cancer had gone wild. It progressed to my brain, my liver, and then my spine. The pain was severe and uncontrolled, which led to Walgreens treating me like a drug addict. Fluid filled my lungs and I had to sleep in a chair for four months because I couldn’t breathe lying down. I flamed out of the trial in weeks. The timing was bad; I was in the early part of the dose-escalation phase and was given one-tenth of what turned out to be the therapeutic dose.
I was back to using a wheelchair, this time because I couldn’t breathe enough to walk around the hospital. I fired my general oncologist and switched to a lung cancer specialist. At my first appointment she referred me for radiation to two-thirds of my spine, arranged to have the fluid in my lungs drained, referred me to palliative care, and put me on oxygen. My pain was under control within a day of seeing the palliative care doc. I was scheduled to start chemo, but my platelet count was too low so they sent me home for a week. When I returned, my platelet count was even lower. My oncologist offered me the choice between no treatment except end-of-life care, and “threading the needle,” as she called it. That meant having a reduced dose of chemo and hoping it didn’t kill me. I had the chemo (of course!) and within a week I started feeling a little better. I had PleurX drains implanted in both lungs, and Genevieve drained the fluid for me every other day for months. I remained on chemo plus Tagrisso for another year and a half.