Hi all,
I'm sad to report that my mother finally lost her battle with the GBM on Tuesday 29th April, after a long and torturous 16 month battle with the disease.
Although luckier than some on this board (she was 65 at time of death), I still feel she had 20 years of life stolen from her by this disease. Other than this illness she was in perfect physical and mental health, low cholesterol, low blood pressure, no serious illnesses ever, didn't drink, didn't smoke - you get the picture !
She did however suffer migraines throughout her life in pretty much the same place the GBM eventually struck. We wonder now if the migraines were indicating a general weakness in this area - could we have detected it earlier, possibly pre-malignancy ?? We'll never know I guess.
She collapsed on christmas night 2006, diagnosed a day later and debulked on the 29th December. She was given the standard 9 - 12 months to live prognosis, the family were all devastated.
She underwent radiotherapy, but couldn't take temodar concurrently as she went down with pneumonia during the radiotherapy. Despite this infection she managed to complete radiotherapy without missing a session. The radiotherapy seemed to help - delaying recurrence till early October 2007. The tumour regrew very aggressively 2nd time round, catchiing everyone by surprise. She was operated on for a 2nd time, all visible tumour removed. Gliadel wafers were also used this time.
We were delighted when she came home after the 2nd op, she seemed fine and the tumour operation was so successful it was barely visible on the MRI scan. Sadly it was all downhill from there. A week or so later she started sufferring agonising headaches and a large fluid filled cyst developed near the site of operation. The Gliadel wafers were blamed. Gradually she improved over the next couple of months, but mentally she had gone downhill and the cyst remained. She finally starting temodar but only completed 3 full rounds. The tumour remained fairly stable and insignificant throughout.
6 weeks ago the doctors finally decided to operate, to seal the gap which was apparently to blame for causing the cyst. They carried out the operation but it failed - the cyst quickly refilled and the valve they had inserted failed to stop it. They operated again this time putting in a shunt to drain the liquid away. This failed also.
My mum never recovered from these operations. She went further downhill mentally and now could no longer walk or talk properly. She was bedbound. She developed pneumonia and we thought at this stage she was going to die, but she recovered and fought off the infection. She was still bedbound and largely unconscious though.
We transferrred to a hospice 10 days ago, which was a wonderfully peaceful place. The staff were fantastic and looked after mum in a way the hospital were unable to.
Although mum opened her eyes (they remained open right up to the end), her breathing gradually became shallower. Finally on Tuesday, the breathing slowed and eventually stopped. She had died. It was such a peaceful end, she sufferred no pain or physical distress, just drifted off to sleep.
Its ironic that the treatment we were counting on to beat the GBM, actually hastened her death in the end. A timely reminder I guess of the toxicity of the treatment for this condition and the sensitivity of the area its treating. I would strongly urge relatives of patients with this condition to stop and think about the benefits of further treatment, if the patient is showing signs of signficant mental decline.
My mum was a truly wonderful person. Not once during the 16 months did she whinge or complain about her condition. She lost the ability to make decisions about herself and became almost childlike at times - especially after the radiotherapy. She remained wonderful company throughout though and maintained a great sense of humour. She will be greatly missed by the whole family.
Best wishes and luck to everyone affected by and fighting this disease.
Dan