Dr. Mark A. Westcott - YES Beat Liver Tumors
Transcription
Dr. Mark A. Westcott - YES Beat Liver Tumors
2011 is quickly disappearing! From YES to you we are wishing you and yours a very HOPEful and Happy 2012! Resolutions for the New Year As the wonderful New Year begins we plan to keep you informed about upcoming events, news, and activities on the horizon. You will find awareness, support, motivation, inspiration, and FRIENDS for the Journey as we share our knowledge and understanding of cancers of the liver and make a road often hard to travel easier to navigate. YES welcomes you to join us in our efforts to make a difference. Your suggestions for stories, articles, and questions are greatly appreciated. If you are in need of brochures and information packets about YES, or a Survivor Bag, please let us know by email at [email protected] The dawn of a New Year often propels us to make resolutions for the coming year. This calendar change provides the perfect opportunity to make a fresh beginning but for those of us living with cancer, the New Year can evoke a number of feelings ranging from the relief of seeing another year to the anxiety of establishing goals. The following tips were given to me a few years ago and have helped me to keep my resolutions simple: DONATE DONATE Remember, your donations make deLIVERing Hope possible. Please consider making a recurring monthly donation. Just $10.00 will provide a Survivor Bag! Dr. Mark A. Westcott Dr. Mark A. Westcott is giving patients who have faced the hopelessness that comes with a diagnosis of liver tumors a reason to smile once again. Dr. Westcott is an interventional radiologist at Lenox Hill Hospital, which is part of the North Shore-Long Island Jewish Health System. He has been using an innovative procedure to attack cancers of the liver called radioembolization, a therapy that uses yttrium-90 microspheres to directly target liver tumors while sparing healthy liver tissue. Continued on page Focus on an enjoyable activity, not a specific outcome. Set goals that are comfortable and reasonable for you. Don’t overload yourself or your schedule. Make short term goals that will lead up to those that are long range. Tell others of your goals so that they can help with inspiration and motivation. Keep a daily log or diary. Practice your plan because practice makes perfect. Make your resolution a habit and begin each morning with the same resolve. Reward yourself when a goal is met! HAPPY NEW YEAR!!!! Page - 1 - of 8 Westcott continued from page 1 During the procedure, millions of microscopic radioactive spheres are sent directly to the site of the liver tumors. This targeted therapy allows doctors to treat the tumors with 40 times more radiation than the conventional radiation. Radioembolization, also known as SIRT, minimizes the harmful effects of radiation to healthy tissue surrounding the tumors. Dr. Westcott helped to organize The Liver Seminar for patients at Lenox Hill Hospital, bringing together a multidisciplinary team of experts, and shared with attendees this exciting procedure. He is bringing the treatment to the forefront. Dr. Westcott relays that he has seen the need for SIRT grow from one procedure per month to four per month. “You have to be careful with cancer patients because not every patient is a candidate for SIRT,” Westcott said. He explained that the liver must be working well and the patient must be performing well with their day to day living, adhering to a positive attitude and hopeful for a successful outcome. Ronald Anthony, a private nursing assistant and resident of New York was diagnosed with primary liver cancer in September, 2011. He says that since the beginning of his fight he has had an inspiring medical team, full of hope and options. He received Nexavar as first line treatment and then met Dr. Westcott and was told about Yttrium-90 Microspheres. Since Ron had multiple liver tumors, the combination of Nexavar and radioembolization offered a one-two punch!! Dr. Westcott performed Ronald’s first treatment October 21, 2011 and at Thanksgiving he received the good news that his tumors were shrinking! Ron says, “What can I say about Dr. Westcott? Other than being a gifted physician, he is a phenomenal human being. Going into treatment is like being in the hands of a trusted friend; not only one that is able to help but one who truly cares. God Bless him! I am thankful for his skills and knowledge!” Dr. Westcott graduated with honors from the University of Notre Dame. He attended Georgetown University Medical School and trained in diagnostic radiology at Northwestern Memorial Hospital in Chicago. He completed a fellowship in interventional radiology at Thomas Jefferson University Hospital in Philadelphia. He is board certified by the American College of Radiology in diagnostic radiology and interventional radiology. In 1996, Westcott earned a Certificate of Added Qualification in Diagnostic and Interventional Radiology. He has been in practice since 1994 and joined Lenox Hill Hospital in the spring of 2002. SAVE THE DATES: Watch for a Location Near You! January 19, 2012 Salt Lake City, UT March 19, 2012 Aurora, CO April 12, 2012 Cary, NC May 10, 2012 Lone Tree, CO REGISTRATION IS FREE 877-937-7478 Page - 2 - of 8 Jean DiCarlo Wagner Miriam and I became friends through Suzanne. Miriam 'knew' me because she told me that she 'listened to me every night before she went to bed'. Suzanne had given Miriam a "Yoga for Cancer Survivors" CD that I made after my own cancer experience in 2003. I wanted to give other warriors a tool for healing. It had taken me three years to make the music for the original CD, find a recording artist, and save the money to produce the first 1,000 Yoga for Cancer Survivors CD. Suzanne makes sure they get peppered around the world; she takes them on her travels. Suzanne also gives them out as part of her YES welcome package. Miriam and I became instant friends. We talked about my next goal, translating the YCS CD into Spanish. Miriam is a native Spanish speaker and she vowed to help in any way she could. In February 2011, while lobbying with YES on Capitol Hill, a plan was hatched. Marilyn Vicens, an angel, close friend of Miriam, and a professional translator, offered to translate the 80 minute English CD into Spanish! Miriam volunteered to record the Spanish version because she knew it inside out and, her voice is angelic. It was a labor of love for Miriam's family, who helped her find a recording artist who spent two days recording the Spanish Yoga for Cancer Survivors CD. Miriam's daughter, Marlina, helped coordinate her friends, support her mother and it became a family affair! I spoke with Miriam a week before she earned her wings. I assured her that her work would touch many people around the world. She had used some of her last physical energy to complete the CD. Miriam sent me the digital version, and I could listen to the CD, seeped in love and tenderness. You don't have to speak Spanish to know Miriam's intention. Those of us that got to know Miriam, carry her work and her message forward. She was a determined perfectionist, but wrapped in the most gentle and spiritual soul. A complete person - one who is balanced, knows themselves, gives to others from a depth of richness, and the brightest soul whose Light cast peace and healing. Through Miriam's friends, I have raised $1,055.00. The CD will need some recording balancing, and some redoing of the front and back cover to be 'user friendly' to Spanish speakers. The Spanish Yoga for Cancer Survivors CD's will need to travel from my home in San Diego, to Puerto Rico, where Marilyn will give them to the Cancer Center where she volunteers, and where Miriam spoke about the SIR SPHERES treatment which extended her life. Oh, YES, Miriam was quite an advocate! The YCS Spanish CD's will travel to Brazil, Mexico, NYC, and any place where we have a contact that will distribute them to survivors. It's going to cost more than the English CD's to produce, duplicate and ship. If you can skip a latte' and donate, we will move more quickly to fulfill Miriam WIsh. Yoga for Cancer Survivors Page - 3 - of 8 YES Exhibits at The Liver Meeting in San Francisco, California For the second year in a row, YES exhibited at The Liver Meeting®, organized by the American Association for Liver Diseases. The meeting was held November 4-8, 2011 in San Francisco, California. We deLIVERed Hope and information to the attendees about the support services that YES offers. 5000 “bee bands” were distributed along with 1000 information packets. YES members in attendance were Ronnie and Suzanne Lindley, Bryan MacLeod and Clinton MacLeod, and Baylah David. Especially important for YES was the debut of our new display and signage. “Hope in the Sand” was shared with the hepatology specialists and autographed by experts from the field attending from every corner of the world! Some even wanted pictures in front of the display and others offered to help us translate our website and message into different languages including Spanish, German, French, and Japanese!! We’ll see where our fabulous connections lead. More than 7,000 hepatologists and hepatology health professionals came to the meeting and were able to exchange the latest liver disease research, treatment outcomes, and surveillance methods with their international colleagues. Attendees shared groundbreaking basic, translational and clinical research in diseases – including cancer - of the liver and biliary tract, and in liver transplantation. This meeting created a forum for the presentation and interchange of o pinions on state-of-the-art care and management of the full spectrum of patients with liver disease. Overall goals and objectives included understanding new evidence and articulating how it might improve clinical care goals; understanding how new advances might advance and broaden research discoveries; voicing how the new knowledge impacts post-transplant. Kudos to The Liver Meeting in it’s 63rd year! Page - 4 - of 8 By Tami Thennis A misty morning does not signify a cloudy day. -Ancient Proverb Dreams are necessary to life. - Anais Nin And in the end, it’s not the years in your life that count. It’s the life in your years. -Abraham Lincoln Be present – it is the only moment that matters. -Peaceful Warrior Never let your memories be greater than your dreams. -Doug Ivester What a new face courage puts on everything! Ralph Waldo Emerson At first dreams seem impossible, then improbable, then inevitable. -Christopher Reeve If you have built castles in the air, your work need not be lost; that is where they should be. Now put foundations under them. -Henry David Thoreau Remembering you are going to die is the best way I know to avoid the trap of thinking you have something to lose. You are already naked. There is no reason not to follow your heart. -Steve Jobs Your goals are the road maps that guide you and show you what is possible for your life. -Les Brown All great changes are preceded by chaos. -Deepak Chopra A person can grow only as much as his horizon allows. -John Powell Yttrium-90 Studies Show Promising Results in the Treatment of Liver Cancer Dr. Daniel Sze professor of interventional radiology at Stanford University Medical Center, Stanford, California, USA states, “Results of these two new studies may be beneficial to patients with liver tumors that cannot be surgically removed. These studies address methods to modify the blood vessels of the liver in order to maximize delivery of tumor-killing material to the targets and to make treatment simpler and safer,” he added. One study showed promising results in a group of 35 patients in whom the “thirsty tumors” had recruited blood vessels from outside the liver, a situation that interferes with complete delivery of Y-90 microspheres to the tumors, explained Sze. “These ‘parasitised’ blood vessels were successfully closed off before administration of Y-90 microspheres, reestablishing the blood supply from within the liver to enable the successful delivery of the microspheres to the targeted tumors,” said Sze. “While large, multicentre studies will be necessary to further confirm the proof of the concept, it is notable because the Stanford University researchers investigated the idea of simplifying blood supply in order to permit a direct injection of microspheres into the tumor,” said Salem. “Blood supply to tumors can be complex and can present challenges for interventional radiologists,” said Riad Salem, who wrote an accompanying commentary in JVIR. “This research advances the field and provides information that is immediately applicable to all interventional radiologists when treating their cancer patients,” said Salem, professor of radiology, medicine and surgery and director of Interventional Oncology, Division of Interventional Radiology, in the Department of Radiology at Northwestern University in Chicago, Illinois, USA. “Such research allows interventional radiologists to tailor treatments to help even the sickest patients achieve a better quality of life,” he explained. In “Toxicities following radioembolization with yttrium90 sir-spheres: incidence and contributing risk factors at a single center,” Thomas Jefferson University researchers examined the results of liver function tests from 29-571 days following treatment in 81 patients who received 122 Y-90 infusions to treat primary or metastatic liver tumors. Continued on page 7 Page - 5 - of 8 Liver Seminars Series Continues!! Since September, “The Liver Seminar” has traveled to three more states. In collaboration with YES! Beat Liver Tumors nurses, physicians, and hospitals have helped to continue the inspiring and educational liver seminar series being held around the country. Each informational session combines the expertise of a multidisciplinary team that discusses surveillance methods, clinical trials, chemotherapeutic and biologic options available for cancers of the liver and how those treatments can be accentuated by surgical approaches or through liver-directed therapies such as Radio Frequency Ablation, TACE, and Radioembolization or Selective Internal Radiation Therapy. Suzanne Lindley shares her journey with cancer and the importance of self-advocacy as well as the many patient support options and resources that YES! Beat Liver Tumors provides. Local survivors are also there to discuss their treatments and experiences and the medical team interacts in an open forum of discussion. The first of these stops was Lenox Hill Hospital on October 19, 2011. With Dr. Mark Westcott at the helm, an elite team of physicians was assembled. Dr. Lynn Ratner, Oncology Education coordinator at Lenox Hill Hospital, started the discussion on emerging biologics and chemotherapy. Dr. Paresh Shah, Program Director for the Department of Surgery at Lenox Hill Hospital took the floor next. He presented an inspiring talk about the surgical options and techniques that are available to patients and how these approaches may be augmented both by chemotherapy and liver directed therapies. Dr. Westcott closed the meeting with a hopeful discussion about interventional radiology and the various liver directed treatments, such as TACE and SIRT, which can be used in a multidisciplinary setting. In an unusual turn of events, four ocular melanoma survivors were in attendance and Elaine Levine, who was one of the four, shared her experience with radioembolization and triumph over liver tumors. Ronald Anthony, hepatocellular cancer survivor, was also in attendance with his wife Carmen. He received treatment the next day and was inspired by the discussion and hope that emanated throughout the room. October 24, 2011 the ever fabulous Bonita Jones, RN, organized and pulled together “the dream team” of experts at Banner Good Samaritan Medical Center in Phoenix, Arizona. This marked the second annual seminar at this location and was again a robust and exciting meeting. The seminar explored cutting edge treatments for cancers of the liver and gave hope to those diagnosed with liver tumors. Attendees were able to learn more about available treatment options and resources. The dream team included dialogue from Dr. David Wood, Chief of Interventional Oncology at Banner Good Samaritan Medical Center; Dr. Jeffrey Brink, Transplant Surgeon at Arizona Transplant Associates; Dr. Sucai Bi, Medical Oncologist at Internists Oncologists, LTD; and Dr. John Kresl, Radiation Oncologist at Phoenix Cyberknife. In addition to organizing the meeting, Bonita shared her personal story with cancer. Two survivor speakers returned this year. Marilyn, a carcinoid survivor, and Gordon, a liver cancer survivor, shared their inspirational and incredible stories of survival and were joined by other survivors in a candid and empowering forum. “The Liver Seminar” made a final stop of the year in Fairfax, VA at Life with Cancer in collaboration with Inova Health System on November 15, 2011. Dr. Alain Drooz spearheaded this phenomenal group of physicians who included medical oncologist, Dr. Raymond S. Wadlow, from Virginia Cancer Specialists, PC, surgical oncologist Dr. James B. Piper, from Inova Transplant Center, and interventional radiologist Dr. Alain T. Drooz, from Fairfax Radiology Consultants. This multidisciplinary team of professionals shared how important it is to work as a team to accentuate treatments, extend longevity, increase options, and improve quality of life. Carcinoid survivor Ranjana Sagar, having just returned from an overseas vacation, underwent two SIRT procedures in 2011 after her carcinoid cancer spread to her liver. The treatment shrunk her liver tumors and the Fairfax resident is currently receiving monthly chemotherapy treatments to control her tumor growth. Ben Basloe from Fight Colorectal Cancer (fightcolorectalcancer.org) attended and left information for attendees. After the meeting, physicians and survivors answered questions, shared journeys, and mingled. Page - 6 - of 8 YES! Beat Liver Tumors took advantage of a fabulous opportunity to raise awareness on Friday and Saturday, Sept. 16 - 17, 2011 at the 5th Annual ECO Emmy’s Celebrity Chateau. “We have had such an exciting year with events from Washington, D.C., to Los Angeles educating audiences on the treatment options and support available for patients with liver tumors,” said Suzanne Lindley, co-founder and executive director of YES! who herself is living with terminal cancer. “We are excited to have had the opportunity to share our message with such an influential audience at the 63rd Primetime Emmy Awards.” Lindley and YES! members Pam and Jerry Schmid, Bryan MacLeod, Ruth and Paul Caudle, and Roger Slagle attended Debbie Durkin’s ECO Emmy exclusive pre-event celebrity chateau and provided awareness materials to each guest in the highly anticipated gift bags. “Hope in the Sand” photos from patients around the globe were available for viewing and celebrity signing. Celebrity greats that signed the ECO Emmys “Hope in the Sand” photo included Debbie Durkin, Penny Marshall, Caroline Hennessey, and The Glee Club as well as many others. Hope was also written in rose petals at the historic Beverly Hills mansion. It was soon discovered that everyone who came through had either been touched by cancer personally or knew someone that had. Awareness efforts touched all those who came to the prestigious ECO Emmy gifting suite and far beyond through media outreach – reaching millions. LA Splash, Hollywood Life, EC Plaza, Causecast, Cure Today, and LIFE are just a few of the publications that shared articles about the mission to ensure that cancer patients receive information, resources, and support to help them say YES to hope! Studies continued from page 5 “Radioembolization with resin microspheres is a safe treatment for patients with unresectable, or inoperable, hepatic malignancies,” concluded Daniel B Brown, an interventional radiologist and chief of interventional radiology and interventional oncology at Thomas Jefferson University Hospital in Philadelphia, USA. “More than 90% of the individuals in our study who received infusions showed no, or few, changes in liver function. And, generally speaking, almost all patients receiving Y-90 infusions to treat primary or metastatic liver tumors were asymptomatic after treatment,” he added. “Studies such as these allow interventional radiologists, whose hallmark is minimally invasive, targeted treatment of disease, to tailor treatments to help even those who are not candidates for surgery live longer and achieve a better quality of life,” commented, Ziv J Haskal, JVIR editor-in-chief, professor of radiology and surgery at the University of Maryland School of Medicine and vice chair of strategic development and chief of vascular and interventional radiology, image-guided therapy and interventional oncology at the University of Maryland Medical Center, Baltimore. Page - 7 - of 8 NEWS TO USE Toll Free SURVIVOR Line: Our toll free Survivor Line provides an outlet for patients and concerned others. It is a place to access resources, advocacy, and support regarding treatment options for cancers of the liver. You can also receive information on how to become a part of our survivor support program, "FRIENDS for the Journey." Call 1-877-937-7478 Survivor Support Program: We offer a unique survivor mentoring program called "FRIENDS for the Journey" that matches survivors, caregivers, family and friends who are going through a similar experience. Comparing options is a vital way to maintain a positive outlook. FRIENDS can communicate via phone, email, snail mail, or in person. YES! Beat Liver Tumors 791 Arnold Paul * Canton, Texas 75103 877-937-7478 [email protected] www.beatlivertumors.org Page - 8 - of 8
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