
By Pam McGaffin
Patricia
Elwood got the worst possible news after undergoing several
different tests to find out why she was feeling pain in her
upper abdomen.
Three of those tests failed to detect
the "silent killer" growing in her body, but the fourth, an
ultrasound, revealed a mass in her pancreas. She had cancer,
and the prognosis was poor: Pancreatic cancer has the lowest
survival rate of all cancers. Fewer than 5 percent of patients
in the U.S. live longer than five years, and many die within
the first six months.
At 57, Elwood wasn't ready to die.
"I'm not done," she said, upon getting that devastating diagnosis
just before Thanksgiving 2006.
The Salem woman and her
family, including pharmacist husband, Kyle, refused to give
up hope. Their research and questions led them to Dr. Ben Chue,
an oncologist at Seattle Cancer Treatment and Wellness Center.
Dr. Chue is testing a new treatment protocol for pancreatic
cancer that involves "metronomic dosing", or smaller, more frequent
doses of certain chemotherapy drugs. The treatment has been
shown to shrink tumors by cutting off their blood supply and
increasing the amount of drug getting to them. The smaller doses
also reduce chemotherapy's side effects, increasing the likelihood
that the patient will complete treatment.
Chue says
his pancreatic patients are living much longer than expected.
One, Aaron Barrett, had been close to death when he came to
the clinic on a stretcher and is now back home and working more
than three years later.
On Dec. 19, 2006, about a month
after she was diagnosed, Elwood had her first appointment with
Dr. Chue. She completed the clinical trial in June and is continuing
treatment, traveling weekly from Salem to Seattle.
In
addition to chemotherapy, she gets dietary guidance, acupuncture
and counseling at the Capitol Hill clinic, an affiliate of Cancer
Treatment Centers of America. The center's integrated approach
to cancer care has medical oncologists working side-by-side
with naturopathic doctors, practitioners of Chinese medicine
and acupuncture, and mind-body social workers.
"I just
felt like I wanted to fight in every direction I could," Elwood
said of her decision to combine several different therapies.
"Patricia is one of those patients who really does use every
tool possible," said her naturopathic oncologist, Dr. Heidi
Lucas. "She's really dedicated, has an incredible sense of humor
and encourages communication within her family and with all
her providers."
More than a year after her diagnosis,
Elwood's tumor has shrunk to a small fraction of its original
size and she feels well enough to take walks, do household chores
and put in a few hours on two part-time jobs.
"My primary
care doctor is absolutely amazed," she said.
Her advice
to others facing cancer, even usually fatal forms, is to persevere.
That's what she tells the other pancreatic cancer patients at
the clinic when they're feeling discouraged.
She and
her "peers" have become an informal support group as they receive
chemo together in a clinic treatment room they've dubbed the
"tiki bar". They cheer each other on and talk about"things that
other people wouldnt understand", said Elwood. It's like a hair
salon, except you have these chemotherapy poles instead of dryers."
The clinic's nurses and reception staff add to camaraderie,
she said. "When you walk off the elevator into the lobby, you
get a welcoming, like you've come home."
Elwood also
feels fortunate to have a strong network of support outside
the clinic, including a close friend who has been there for
her "day and night"; a sister in Seattle who gives her a place
to stay and comes along on appointments; and her 79-year-old
mother who traveled back and forth with her on the train during
the first six months of her treatment.
Now she's hopeful
that her cancer will shrink to a point where it's operable and
that she can one day call herself a survivor. She wants to do
her part to promote pancreatic cancer awareness and go back,
as much as possible, to her life before the disease took over.
That means working, exercising with friends and looking
ahead to the future. "I want to spend a long life watching my
family go through the normal phases," she said. "I want to go
to weddings, hold my grandchildren and grow old with my husband."
Seattle Cancer Treatment and Wellness Center is an affiliate
of Cancer Treatment Centers of America, a network of hospitals
that integrate oncology with complementary and natural therapies.
For more information and cancer-fighting tips, call (206) FOR
HOPE (367-4673) or visit
www.seattlecancerwellness.com.
Pam McGaffin of Moore Ink. PR, writes articles
about important health, family and community issues for non-profit
organizations.