Recently Diagnosed or Relapsed? Stop Looking For a Miracle Cure, and Use Evidence-Based Therapies To Enhance Your Treatment and Prolong Your Remission

Multiple Myeloma an incurable disease, but I have spent the last 25 years in remission using a blend of conventional oncology and evidence-based nutrition, supplementation, and lifestyle therapies from peer-reviewed studies that your oncologist probably hasn't told you about.

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What’s the Best Treatment for Myeloma?

Multiple Myeloma Stem Cell Transplant
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What’s the best treatment for myeloma? That depends on many of the patient’s particulars upon diagnosis. I posted the video below because I felt the chemo nurse offered a great answer.

The main thing to remember about both the video and the article linked below is that both sources of information are conventional meaning, these centers will primarily promote FDA approved therapies.

Diet, exercise, supplementation, etc. etc. are non-conventional therapies. My experience as a long-term MM survivor is that MM patients must combine the best of both conventional and non-conventional therapies to live the highest quality of life and longest quantity of life.


What’s the best treatment for myeloma?


I believe that MM patients must walk a fine line between damage done by the myeloma itself and damage done by conventional therapies. According to research, over half of all MM patients die from infection. Both therapies as well as myeloma can cause immunodeficiency which can then cause infection.

Email me at David.PeopleBeatngCancer@gmail.com with questions about managing your myeloma.

Good luck,

David Emerson

  • MM Survivor
  • MM Cancer Coach
  • Director PeopleBeatingCancer

Multiple Myeloma Treatment

If you are diagnosed with multiple myeloma, your doctor will discuss the best options to treat it. This depends on several factors, including the type and stage of the cancer and your general health.

Your treatment for multiple myeloma will be customized to your particular needs. One or more of the following therapies may be recommended to treat multiple myeloma or help relieve symptoms.

Watchful waiting

For patients with asymptomatic (smoldering) myeloma or monoclonal gammopathy of undetermined significance (MGUS), a watchful waiting approach may be appropriate. The watchful waiting approach involves closely monitoring multiple myeloma without active treatment.

Chemotherapy

Chemotherapy is the usual starting point in treating multiple myeloma. It uses special drugs that kill fast-growing cells, like multiple myeloma cells. MD Anderson offers the most up-to-date and advanced chemotherapy options.

Targeted therapy

MD Anderson is among just a few cancer centers in the nation that are able to offer targeted therapies for some types of multiple myeloma. Targeted therapy is a broad term used to describe drugs that specifically target weaknesses of the cancer cells. This can mean targeting the blood vessels that feed tumors or attacking specific genetic and proteins of cancer. Ultimately, by targeting the weaknesses of cancer, these treatments help stop its growth and spread.

Immunotherapy

Immunotherapy is one of several innovative targeted therapies performed by MDAnderson. It uses your own immune cells to fight off cancer cells. Usually, the immune system does not attack cancer cells because they produce special proteins that help them blend in with other cells. Immunotherapy drugs interfere with the production of these proteins, triggering an immune response to fight off your cancer. There are a few different methods used for immunotherapy, including:

  • Monoclonal antibodies, including Darzalex (daratumumab) and Empliciti (elotuzumab)
  • Chimeric antigen receptor (CAR) T cells, which are genetically modified T cells that fight the myeloma directly
  • Bispecific t cell engagers, which help activate and get your own immune cells next to myeloma cells in your body to kill them
  • Cytokine therapies
  • Vaccine therapy

Radiation therapy

Radiation therapy often plays a valuable role in providing quick pain relief and decreasing the risk of fractured bones. It involves using a high-energy beam to quickly kill cancer cells in a specific area. Radiation therapy can help prevent nerve compressions by attacking soft tissue collections of myeloma cells (plasmacytomas). It is also useful for targeting plasma cell tumors present in one location (solitary plasmacytoma). In these situations, radiation therapy alone is often used as the primary treatment.

A typical radiation treatment plan for a patient with multiple myeloma includes five sessions a week for approximately two weeks. We use computed tomography (CT) scan based radiation planning, immobilization devices to minimize patient movement during treatment, and modern radiation planning techniques that permit focused radiation delivery. Our Radiation Oncology Center treats more than 100 multiple myeloma and plasmacytoma patients each year, with a team of four skilled radiation oncologists who specialize in the management of patients with hematologic malignancies. Our ultimate goal is to administer effective, safe, modern radiation therapy while limiting toxicity…

Plasma exchange

High levels of abnormal proteins can lead to thickening of the blood. The liquid component of your blood, called the plasma, can be removed and replaced with normal plasma from a healthy donor. This can quickly relieve symptoms of increased blood thickness (hyperviscosity) until chemotherapy/immunotherapy has a chance to destroy the multiple myeloma cells that produce the abnormal protein.”

 

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