On June 30th, we hosted a fascinating and informative webinar titled “Advocating for Rare Diseases“.
We had Katelyn Laws (Rare Disease Legislative Advocates Program Coordinator) give a great outline of what advocacy is, what types of advocacy there are, and how to do it. AnCan’s Sarcoidosis virtual support group moderator Cathleen Terrano moderated and sparked fascinating conversation with our panelists Ritchie Johnson (Renal Medullary Carcinoma), Charles Mickles (Young Onset Parkinson’s Disease), and Trina Massey Davis (Sarcoidosis).
I had the pleasure of jumping in for the Q&A segment, which was a wonderful (and real!) discussion many topics, such as discouragement when advocating, how to write out your story, and more.
Watch this phenomenal presentation here:
Special thanks to Myovant Sciences – Pfizer, and Foundation Medicine for sponsoring this webinar.
Ritchie Johnson is in the dictionary for “turning pain into purpose“. She founded the Chris “CJ” Johnson Foundation in honor of her son Chris, with the goal of ending Renal Medullary Carcinoma. We are so humbled to have her as lead moderator for the RMC virtual support group.
It’s no surprise that Ritchie is very popular in the Kidney Cancer community, and is only getting more popular! She was invited to be on Good Morning America’s GMA3 to share her story and how she is actively helping the RMC community.
We’re also pleased to have Ritchie as a panelist for our upcoming webinar “Advocating for Rare Diseases” on June 30th. She’ll discuss her own advocacy journey, and you’ll hear from other amazing members of the Rare Disease community as well. (click image for pdf)
For information on our peer-led video chat RENAL MEDULLARY CARCINOMA VIRTUAL SUPPORT GROUP, click here.
To SIGN UP for the Group or any other of our AnCan Virtual Support groups, visit our Contact Us page.
COMPLETELY FREE, you’ll find fun activities (trivia, dance party, scavenger hunts, prizes), meet new friends, and hear from top experts about topics relevant to you. Fertility, dating, mental health, and so much more.
You’ll also see AnCan’s own Wendy Garvin Mayo at the Practical Resources for Caregivers session on Sunday, and Alexa Jett(me) will be out and about representing any and everything AnCan. Don’t forget to say hi!
Our Advisory Board member Renata Louwers wrote an incredible, honest, and powerful piece for Intima: A Journal of Narrative Medicine titled “We Can Offer You Some Helpful Resources”. She shares her experience that sadly, many caregivers will find relatable.
Teetering on the cusp of widowhood at 45, I realized my intensity had sent the hospital social worker scurrying away. Ours had been a tense and circular conversation littered with euphemisms (by her) and rage (by me).
She had initiated the conversation by saying she understood how tough “the journey” had been. Then she continued on about the “discharge protocols.”
“I can’t take him home,” I protested. “I can’t care for him at home.”
As if to prove that I actually could care for him at home, she noted “the care team has already signed off” on his discharge, and she was just awaiting the paperwork. The team would, she assured me, do all they could to “support this transition.”
Have you checked out our page “All the Faces of AnCan” lately? We are always growing, and you might see some new faces! While we’ve discussed Dr. Herbert Geller (researcher and AnCan Advisory Board Member) previously on the blog, we have a special treat today. Dr. Geller was part of an esteemed panel explaining the science behind mRNA Covid-19 vaccines with CureTalks.
I find this description of what mRNA means and brief explanation from CureTalks to be extremely helpful.
Messenger RNA vaccines, also called mRNA vaccines, are some of the first COVID-19 vaccines authorized for use in the United States. mRNA vaccines are a new type of vaccine to protect against infectious diseases. They teach the cells of our body to make a protein that triggers an immune response. This immune response leads to the production of antibodies which protects us from getting infected if the real virus enters our body.
Be sure to check out this informative presentation, here!
To SIGN UP for any of our AnCan Virtual Support groups, visit our Contact Us page.
Here are some thoughts from our own Howard Wolinsky. He is a Chicago-based medical writer and author. His new book is “Contain and Eliminate: The American Medical Association’s Conspiracy to Destroy Chiropractic.” For more information, go to Containandeliminate.com. He also contributes a blog, “A Patient’s Journey,” to MedPageToday.com. He has been on active surveillance for 10 years.
Active surveillance for men with low-risk cancers has been the Rodney Dangerfield of urology. We men on AS — close monitoring of our cancers — get little to no respect from men being treated for prostate cancer who can experience a host of serious side effects.
AS has experienced gains over the past five years. The American Urological Association in 2017 stated in new guidelines that clinicians should recommend active surveillance as “the best available care option for very low-risk localized prostate cancer patients. (Strong Recommendation; Evidence Level: Grade A).”
This is a far cry from when I was diagnosed in December 2010, and my first urologist told me he could cure my cancer — a tiny Gleason 6 in a single core — “next Tuesday” when he had an opening in his OR. Back then, 6–10% of men like me opted for AS. Or, to put it another way, 90–94% sought “definitive” treatments, mostly radical prostatectomies.
A new generation of urologists, following the guidelines, is increasingly resisting the urge to perform surgery and rather recommends that men with low-risk Gleason scores of 3+3 and some men with favorable intermediate-risk Gleason scores of 3+4 go on AS.
There has been a surge in the past five years in the proportion of American men opting for AS. Some experts estimate that as many as 50–60% of eligible men now choose AS. (Again, 40–50% still opt for prostatectomies or radiation, a contrast from 90% who opt for AS in Sweden and the Netherlands.)
In May 2017, I described in my MedPageToday blog the lack of support services for men on AS. The philosophy then was to combine men on the full range of diagnoses, from very low-risk to advanced cancers, and treatments.
However, the voices of men worried about their next biopsy or MRI could be drowned out by those of men with impotence or incontinence as collateral damage from radical surgery, to those with hot flashes from hormone therapy, or “brain fog” from chemotherapy.
Men with low-risk cancer attend these meetings and often don’t return.
Some think these side effects are their future. But they’re not. About 50% of men on AS eventually end up being treated, though frequently they switch to treatments because of anxiety rather than the disease progressing.
Some men experience anxious surveillance; they may have low-risk disease but they can’t co-exist any longer with a cancer that can be cut out or zapped with radiation or lasers.
I encountered outright hostility when I suggested in my blog four years ago that separate support groups be created for men on AS.
One group, known as the “warriors,” argued all men with prostate cancer are in this together in what they like to call the “reluctant brotherhood.” But these. men with aggressive treatments and diseases may not realize men with low-risk disease are being scared off and want to stay away from the brotherhood altogether.
It still isn’t widely acknowledged that there is a cultural divide between these groups of men with very different diseases and side effects, different views of their diseases, and different emotional needs.
Some of the support and advocacy organizations have been trying to meet this need for men on AS. Groups, including AnCan/Us Too, Active Surveillance Patients International, Cancer ABCs, Malecare, Inspire (a virtual group from Us TOO International), Prostate Cancer Research Institute, and ZERO — The End of Prostate Cancer have been making some strides with virtual, asynchronous and (until COVID-19) in-person support groups.
About a year and a half ago, I helped start a monthly virtual support group for AnCan and UsToo believed to be the first of its kind in the U.S. The group has grown to a weekly meeting. We hold webinars featuring leading experts on AS that draw hundreds of men virtually and hundreds more on video replay,
At last, AS seemed to be finding its place in the support sun. Then, I encountered negative attitudes on the part of people who ought to know better — support group leaders.
One impatient leader in effect asked me when men on AS would just grow up, “bite the bullet,” put on their big boy pants and stop whining about biopsies that could save their lives. But the man who said this had undergone hormonal treatment and didn’t quite understand that men on AS are not “whiners” or “crybabies” but rather are coping with their own problems.
I told him there is a cultural gap between men who were being treated and low-risk men like me. Men with more higher-grade cancers who are being treated may be fighting for their lives while those on AS are worrying about more fundamental issues such as “When should I have a confirmatory biopsy” or “Is gadolinium contrast dangerous?” that are just as real to them.
I was frustrated about another incident recently that demonstrates how little respect AS may be getting from some men with higher Gleason scores and collateral damage from treatment.
As an Us Too group leader, I got a note from HQ seeking group leaders willing to talk in pop-up support groups about such topics as surgery, radiation, hormone therapy, and helping the newly diagnosed and caregivers. Us Too made the request on behalf of ZERO, which wanted to include sessions at its annual Summit this year.
I read the list over. ZERO, a savvy organization I have worked with, omitted active surveillance as a topic. I pointed this out and ZERO graciously added a support “lounge” devoted to AS. An oversight, sure, but no slight intended. Three of us AS support group moderators volunteered to participate.
I was stunned at what happened at the session. We had about 25 attendees. Apparently, most had been treated or were considering treatment for more advanced cancers. We did what we could to help and refer the men to support groups more suited to them.
We suspected there were some men on AS lurking but not talking.
One very vocal group leader represented a prostate cancer support group for all-comers. He said he had undergone a radical prostatectomy decades ago. He said he knew about AS but admitted he wasn’t much of a fan.
I gather he thought that aggressive therapy was inevitable so why not get it over with. He insisted his group did what it could to support men on AS.
But he said he found these men to be scared rabbits (my term). I can understand why. They were attending a support group geared toward men coping with severe side effects and those fighting for their lives run by a leader who didn’t really believe in AS as an option.
Good intentions gone awry.
I suspect there is a lot of this going on in the support world. I wonder how many men with low-risk or favorable intermediate-risk prostate cancer attend these groups and are steered into undergoing prostatectomies or radiation therapy when none is needed — at least not immediately.
I contrast these AS skeptics with my friend Bob Allan, a support group leader from Prostate Cancer Support Canada/Burlington in suburban Toronto. Allan was treated with radiation years ago and has fared well. But he supports AS as an option and regularly attends our AnCan/UsToo virtual meetings to learn about the latest on AS to share with his members.
It’s time to end this undeclared culture war. I think many support group leaders need to be educated about AS especially since the proportion of men with prostate cancer opting for AS is on the rise. Or these support group leaders need to refer AS patients to support groups with expertise in active surveillance.
Men on AS will be better served by taking these approaches than suffering in silence in their groups.