|
A Story
of
Misdiagnosis
Not a week
goes by that someone doesn’t ask
me about the event that changed
my life, and started my advocacy
work. So here’s the expanded
version, probably much more than
you wanted to know!
I’m a 50+
year-old former teacher, turned
self-employed marketing
consultant and now patient
consumerism advocate, who enjoys
my family, golf, travel and a
host of other activities.
In late
June 2004, I found a golf-ball
sized lump on my torso. It
didn’t hurt — it was just there.
So I
contacted my family doctor, went
to see him the next day, and
because he had no idea what it
was, he sent me to a surgeon who
removed it that afternoon.
“We’ll let you know when we hear
back from the lab,” was the
surgeon’s departing comment as I
pulled my shirt back on and got
ready to go home.
A week
later — no word — so I contacted
the surgeon’s office and was
told they didn’t have the
results back yet. The 4th of
July holiday had caused the
delay …. so I waited.
Another week later, the surgeon finally called me with my lab results. “You have
a very rare cancer — a lymphoma — called Subcutaneous Panniculitis-like T-Cell
Lymphoma,” he told me.
And then
he dropped a second bomb. I was
told that the reason the lab
results took so long was because
the outcome was so rare, that a
second lab had been called for a
second opinion. “Two labs have
independently confirmed these
results,” I was told. “We’ll
make an oncology appointment for
you as soon as possible.”
“As soon
as possible” took more than two
weeks. I was so scared! In the
meantime, as anyone does these
days, I looked all over the
internet for information about
Subcuteneous Panniculitis-like
T-Cell Lymphoma (SPTCL.)
It was hard to find anything at
all because, as the surgeon had
told me, it’s very rare.
What I did
learn was that everyone died.
And died fast.
(*see
update below)
The longest
anyone with SPTCL seemed to live
was a couple of years,
regardless of whether they
received any treatment. And here
I was with that disease — and
scared to death.
When I
finally saw the oncologist, he
was very discouraging. Dr. S,
I’ll call him, sent me for blood
work and a CT scan, both of
which came back negative for any
abnormalities. No sign of
lymphoma. And I had no symptoms
to speak of — at least in my
estimation. OK, so I had night
sweats and hot flashes, but hey!
I was a 52 year old woman! Don’t
we all? But Dr. S insisted
that those were symptoms of
lymphoma and I needed to think
about chemotherapy — and soon.
Without
chemo, he told me, I would be
dead before Christmas.
I asked
about the possibility that the
lab results were wrong. No — not
a chance. Two labs had
independently confirmed the
results, I was told, and the
pressure began to mount to begin
chemotherapy.
Besides my
family and a few close friends,
I didn’t share the news with
anyone else. My business was
already suffering — being
self-employed and having lousy
health insurance meant that my
diagnosis had now become
expensive, too. I was spending
way too much time researching
and fretting and paying for
doctor visits and tests that
were only marginally covered by
my insurance. Life, what was
left of it, was going down the
tubes, fast.
By then it
was August, and I had a decision
to make. Chemo? or no chemo? I
learned that Dr. S had taken
sick, and his partner Dr. H. was
taking over my case. Dr. H asked
me why I was waiting to begin
chemo, and I told him I was
trying to find another
oncologist for a second opinion.
There were too many question
marks. His reply to me makes me
shudder to this day, “What you
have is so rare, no one will
know anymore about it than I
do!”
If
anything compelled me to begin
digging deeper, that was it. Now
I was “sick” AND angry!
A few days
later, I had dinner with some
business friends, none of whom
knew anything about my
diagnosis. A few glasses of wine
loosened my lips — I shared my
diagnosis with them and of
course, they were floored. But
one friend, Barb, was more than
floored. She contacted an
oncologist friend of hers and
called me the next day to tell
me her friend, Dr. Jeffrey
Kirchner, was
currently treating someone with SPTCL and would see me if I
wanted to make an appointment!
That small
tidbit of good news lit a fire
under me. I made an appointment
with Dr. K to see him a week
later, then contacted Dr. S, the
oncologist, for copies of my
records to take with me. Records
in hand, I began to google every
word I didn't understand to see
if I could learn more.
If I had
to pinpoint an exact moment when
this patient advocacy mission
began, that moment would be it.
The lab
results were NOT as advertised.
In fact, neither diagnosis was
for SPTCL, exactly. One of them
said “most suspicious for,” and
the other said, “most consistent
with.” Neither one of them was
sure! And yet another clue to
this mysterious malady which was
so far unsupported, was found.
Further,
the second lab report stated
that the lump biopsy was being
sent for still another test
called “clonality” — yet no
results of that test had been
included in the records faxed to
me. Hmmm…. what was clonality,
and where were those results? I
contacted the oncologist’s
office and lo and behold — they
didn’t know where that test
result was. So, while they
scrambled to find it, I looked
up the word “clonality.”
Clonality,
it turns out, describes whether
cells are cloning themselves —
multiplying. And their tendency
to do so makes all the
difference in a cancer
diagnosis. Benign cells don’t
usually multiply — cancerous
cells do.
They
finally produced a copy of the
clonality results — And my cells
weren’t cloning themselves.
As I
waited to see Dr. Kirchner, I began
deciphering the lab results. I
looked up various stains
(remember gentian violet from
high school biology?) and
results, and greek letters and
medical terms. In tandem with
the clonality results, it became
very clear to me that I did not
have cancer, no matter what
those labs and oncologists
thought.
By the
time I saw Dr. Kirchner, I was
empowered, and fired up. I was
quite sure of my results, and
shared with him everything I
had. He examined me, and pulled
a few books off his shelves, and
helped me learn even more. From
learning that SPTCL had fewer
than 100 cases reported in the
previous decade (!) to being
told that even if I did have
SPTCL, it would be better
treated with radiation than
chemo, I was feeling even better
by the minute.
Then Dr. Kirchner
recommended my biopsy could be
sent to a specialist, Dr. Elaine
Jaffe, at the
National Institutes of Health,
part of the US government, for
review. Three weeks later, in
late September,
I was given the confirmation
that, in fact,
I had no cancer. The
corrected diagnosis was for
panniculitis which is an
inflammation of fat cells.
It has not caused a single
problem since then.
Relief?
Certainly. But my first reaction
was more like anger. At the end,
I accused Dr. H of insisting I
begin chemo because it was the
only way he could make money
from me. I stand by my
accusation. I also fault both
him and Dr. S for never
following up on the clonality
test which was so pivotal in
getting the right diagnosis. And
the labs — did they not realize
that they were, in effect,
sentencing me to death?
Afterall,
had I undergone chemo, and
survived, they would have told
me I had been cured of a disease
I never had. And just as
frightening, I found cases
online of people who had been
diagnosed and chemo treated for
SPTCL who had died during the
treatment — and autopsies had
shown they never had SPTCL to
begin with. Lawsuits had been
won.
Lest you
think I harbor only ill-will, I
do appreciate the doctors who
did what they should do. My
family doctor, the surgeon, Dr.
Jaffe from the NIH, and
most especially Dr. Kirchner who was
willing to partner with me —
they were very helpful.
To this
day, I don’t believe those
doctors who were involved in the
misdiagnosis aspects of my
treatment understand the
long-term ramifications of this
kind of misdiagnosis. Being told
you will die, when you won’t, is
cruel. I suffered, and so did my
loved ones. To this day, I react
with some sort of post-traumatic
distress (three melt-downs so
far) when I see certain movies,
or read or watch something
related to someone who has died
from cancer, especially around
Christmas. There but for the
grace of God….
In the
end, one of the lab pathologists
told me that he was taught in
med school that he should expect
there would be errors, and that
he would rather err on the side
of making sure someone got
treatment they didn’t need,
rather than not getting
life-saving treatment. Ok. I’ll
buy that. But it still doesn’t
make it better.
I’m a
spiritual person. I believe
everything happens for a reason.
And so I am here today
advocating for others — an
outcome from a horrible
experience that can result in
good for others. I sold my
marketing company in Fall 2006
to begin helping patients full
time. I built a website full of
tools — find it at:
www.diagKNOWsis.org. I write
newspaper columns, host a radio
show, teach workshops, respond
as an expert on a couple
websites. In late 2007, I
became the patient empowerment
expert at About.com, in 2008 I
began writing for
PatientAssistance.com, and my
first book,
You Bet Your Life! The 10
Mistakes Every Patient Makes
was published in late
2009. Find much of my work at my
blog:
www.EveryPatientsAdvocate.com/blog
I’m doing
my best to turn those
misdiagnosis lemons into
empowerment lemonade. Granted,
my anger still creeps into my
work on occasion. But I know I’m
helping patients empower
themselves, so that “edge” may
be somewhat helpful.
Mostly I
now know why I was put on this
earth. A pastor friend of mine
calls it “Trisha’s Calling.”
In any
case, I hope you benefit from
this work — and I’d love to
hear from you if you do.

Every
Patient's
Advocate
*
Update,
August
2007:
I was
contacted
by a
gentleman
who let
me know
there
have
been a
number
of
research
updates
on SPTCL.
There is
much
more
known
about
this
rare
disease
now, and
it seems
they
have
identified
some
less
aggressive
forms.
Learn
more
here:
http://www.moffitt.org/moffittapps/ccj/v14n2/pdf/112.pdf
*
*
Update,
Spring
2008:
I have
begun
tracking
updates
on SPTCL
at my
blog.
|