Every seven weeks or so, I go to the cancer center associated with St. Jude in Fullerton, CA for my IVIG (intravenous immune globulins) infusion to keep my platelets nice and normal following my years of ITP (an auto-immune destruction of my platelets). And to enjoy the side benefit of preventing some infections and the chance to monitor my labs.
I always have blood drawn before the infusion. The CBC is back almost instantly and was nearly normal. My absolute lymphs were 1.6 which is high for me, but very normal and my platelets were a bit high due to prior splenectomy. No anemia or other concerns. Basically all good news.
The next morning (now), I get my blood chemistries back. My LDH had been slowly climbing at Ohio State but was rock stable at my local lab. YEAH, as LDH can be a sign of cancer reviving up. Mu uric acid was normal but had climbed up a tad.
Bood sugar and kidneys tests were all good and my proteins were their usual minimally low due to my lack of making decent amounts of immunoglobulins, but the surprise was my markers of liver injury (AST and ALT) that have been reliably very low and healthy were unexpectedly slightly elevated. Two other liver tests that are raised when the liver ducts are obstructed were normal.
Liver tests show up at the bottom of the page of the comprehensive metabolic panel (CMP)print out, so I almost didn't scroll down to the bottom of my computer to see them as they have been my faithful and reassuring marker of normalcy for all my years with CLL. One touchstone of stability that I attribute in part to my healthy plant based lifestyle.
Ironically I rely on this very blog to jog my memory and it reminds of two forgotten times that my liver enzymes were high before: they were the worst when I first started on this trial almost 4 years ago and was getting the anti CD-20 antibody ofatuzumab, and again briefly after I returned from a cold and grueling trip to China in the winter of 2011. They soon normalized in both incidences.
This uptick today is vey slight. I don't drink alcohol and have no high risk behaviors. In the past, I have screened negative for hepatitis A, B, and C.
I did just started CoQ-10 from my dentist and that, in doses three times what I am taking, can cause this exact issue.
I have recently recovered from a violent vomiting and diarrhea episode that was likely norovirus. It was raging through the local elementary school and senior housing. That nasty bug (a common cruise ship spoiler) can rarely cause acute severe liver inflammation, but my GI issues were gone two weeks ago.
Of course my white knight, ibrutinib itself, could be the culprit, even after more than 3 years, but that too is unlikely. IMBRUVICA usually leaves the liver alone. And that too is good.
So no obvious villain to blame. And I feel just fine.
My plan is to advise Dr. Byrd, stop the CoQ-10 and not sip any champagne tonight. Easy stuff.
And recheck levels in 7 weeks when I next get my IVIG.
Because the trend is my friend, I refuse to worry about one lab blip. But that doesn't mean I won't do what I can to research and prevent the trend from moving in the wrong direction.
Take a look at our latest new letter on the CLL Society website, sign up for our alerts. They will be fast and furious in 2016 so you don't want to miss out.
2016 will be an amazing year for those of battling CLL.
Stay strong.
We are all in this together.
Happy New Year to all.If you want a personal response, or just want to stay in touch, please email me at bkoffmanMD@gmail.com. I have no other way of contacting. Thanks. Stay strong. After all, we are all in this together. And please visit our website: http://cllsociety.org for the latest news and information.