Dont sweat it, if youre not having MCAS issues anymore than its not really that important to do.
I know that my MCAS doctor or main doctor will eventually test my IgE again as part of regular monitoring.
I am now curious, did you ever have elevated IgM? Mine was elevated for several years and we kept monitoring it and then my main doctor decided that we needed to make sure it was not due to cancer in light of my total picture. So he ordered some special testing (blood & urine) to rule out MGUS and cancer and it was all negative which was a relief! He now assumes that the elevated IgM was due to autoimmunity (and at my last test, for the first time, my IgM was in the normal range)! Not sure if this is related to my overall remission from IVIG and Ritux or unrelated.
I can totally empathize. There were so many moments where I was how the heck can I continue and every time I would try a new drug or something that allowed me to keep going at the last minute, moments before I was going to submit an official medical leave to my school. Luckily so far I can keep going.
That is great news that you were able to continue with school and I hope that this will only improve.
Really do hope youll be back doing what you want again. Are you in the medical field? Also what makes you think you may not be able to return to work, is motor function not recovered enough yet?
Thank you so much! I am an LCSW (licensed clinical social worker) and I did work in the medical field for many years but worked in many other areas of social work as well. This illness ended my career in 2014 and I had thought it was forever but now I believe that I might be able to work again in the future which is unbelievable!
The reason I have doubts if I am physically ready to return to work is that I have only been walking without a wheelchair and driving my car since May of this year (after 3.5 years of being completely disabled, for lack of a better word). My main doctor does not know what happens to me when I stop Rituximab and B-cells return. If I had an absolute guarantee (which is impossible) that this remission was permanent, I would feel confident to give up my disability/insurance and attempt to work full-time.
But there is no guarantee that this remission will not end and I need a (financial) back-up plan. At present, I am able to do all of my self-care, all of my shopping & errands, take care of my dog, take care of my step-daughter and cook her dinner and drive her to school on the nights/mornings that she is with me, go to weekly PT & Rehab Pilates to continue to build all of the muscle strength that I lost, go to doctor appts, etc. But this is
without working and I could not do any of this by myself prior to May (and had a caregiver twice a week)! If I had to do all of this on my own
and work at the same time, I do not know if my illness would start to return.
I do not know how far to push it but I feel the best way is to proceed in a graduated fashion (and I do NOT mean like "GET" and am not talking about exercise)! I mean re: work, to start with volunteer work 1-2x a week and starting to take the classes to get the 2 years worth of CEU's to put my license back on active status. If I can physically maintain my current level of activity, plus doing volunteer work and CEU classes, then I can take it up a notch, etc. I'm completely in unknown territory and each thing I thought was solid and permanent in the past turned out not to be.
Six years ago, I had thought my health, career and marriage were forever but none of them were. Then I finally accepted that this illness was progressive and being in a wheelchair was permanent (until I finally found the right treatments w/IVIG and Rituximab and it started to reverse). Now I am in this remission, and I'd like to believe it is permanent, but I am so uncertain b/c it may solely be maintained by Rituximab and having my B cells at zero. The ideal scenario is that my body has healed and it is now maintaining itself on it's own but I don't know that for sure, and neither does my doctor who is a brilliant physician (even though I am biased)!
Wow, sorry I did not mean to type a novel here! I started answering this thread about 4 hours ago and am now back while my daughter is doing some homework and am typing this in between quizzing her for an exam tomorrow.
Sorry I was using chemo jargon.
No worries and the chemo jargon works! My infusion center is actually a cancer center (but they treat autoimmune patients, MCAS patients, and many other illnesses, too).
Yep, as of today 34 days past the loading/induction phase. They havent said anything about any schedule yet. But it seems like it will be a monitor then decide situation. I'll likely have it every 4-6 months.
That is interesting that it is being decided as you go. My doctor decided that I would do a series of six Ritux infusions (the two induction doses, and then four more at a 3-month interval). If I was allergic, or did not tolerate the initial doses, we would have stopped. Also, if I did not have any response whatsoever after the 3rd or 4th infusion, we also probably would have stopped. But since it was crystal clear that I was a responder, we continued with the original plan. And now with the maintenance doses, we are monitoring (both B-cells and any return of symptoms) to figure out the ideal interval.
I think it just means that with the level of B cells the Rituxan brought me to there wasnt enough memory B cells around for the CD27+ test to pick up on. I imagine as my B cells start to repopulate the CD27+ test will pick up on it.
That makes sense.
Theyre probably right, but I think its safer for me (and more comforting) if I'm watching everything like a hawk so nothing catches me by surprise. And also I'm monitoring a bunch of other things so bunching with LSP is just a little more blood out of me, no big deal.
I agree. I can't remember if I already told you this but my doctor said that it is better to do the LSP at Quest b/c it tells you if the CD19 is actually zero vs. at LabCorp it tells you if it is <1 (which means it might truly be zero or it might be starting to grow back). I didn't know this until after my last test which was at LabCorp. It said both Abs and % of CD19 were <1 so I thought they were growing back but my doctor said this was not necessarily true and to do the next one at Quest. Hope that made sense!