Brandon’s Story

Site created on February 14, 2020

Welcome to Brandon’s Battle page. We are using this to keep family and friends updated in one place. We appreciate your support and words of hope and encouragement. 


On Monday morning February 10, 2020 Brandon went to his family physician with pretty bad headaches, a sore throat and dry mouth, fevers and bleeding gums. The headaches had been onset for a few weeks but he just assumed they were stress-related or something of that nature.  Dr. Bechtold did an awesome job diagnosing the symptoms for what they likely were and getting him sent up to the hospital right away. After the second blood draw of the day on Monday, his white blood cell counts had gone up to 124,000 (5,000 is normal).  As of Wednesday February 12th they had gotten up to about 160,000. The findings all eventually led to a diagnosis of Acute Myeloid Leukemia or AML for short. There are differing variations of  AML, and we are still waiting on biopsy findings from Mayo to nail down what exactly we're dealing with for a long term treatment plan. 


Due to the aggressiveness of Leukemia immediate treatment was needed. Chemo treatment began within 48 hours of admittance to the hospital on Wednesday February 12, 2020 . As of right now the short term treatment path is for 7 consecutive days of continuous chemo treatment, retest and repeat. He is also receiving platelets and blood transfusions to combat other side effects of AML. Although we are still awaiting additional information from Mayo we were told to expect Brandon to be in the hospital for the first 30-60 days. Future treatment plans could include additional chemotherapy, other drug therapy and potentially a stem cell transplant.


We want to thank everyone for their love and support during this trying time. We will try and keep you all informed. 



Newest Update

Journal entry by Jillian Treft

This last week marked 5 months since I got diagnosed, and things were progressing pretty well until we hit a bump in the road a few weeks ago.

When I was initially diagnosed, we had a catheter-like device (groshong) put into my chest to do blood draws and administer chemo, antibiotics and any other sort of liquid drugs. The device worked well until about 4 weeks ago when I noticed a lump that just kind of grew in size around it in my chest, spanning from the entry site up about 3-4 inches towards my collarbone. The initial theory was that the device had failed or somehow developed a leak, and the most likely explanation was that either some fluid or the chemo I had been getting the week prior had leaked out and killed the tissue off around the device inside my chest. I ended up having surgery to get the device out and dead tissue and chemo cut out while he was in there too. The surgeon sent it in for a biopsy and we ended up finding out a week or two later it was actually a Myeloid Sarcoma. Essentially the AML cells had invaded the tissue in that area and formed a tumor. It’s not a common occurrence, but it can happen when people have AML.

I had a spinal tap here in Sioux City on 7/2 and then we went down to Omaha Tuesday 7/7 and had a PET scan and bone marrow biopsy done. Fortunately, the spinal tap was clear and the PET scan showed that there was only the one sarcoma with just a small part remaining, and no others were found to have developed anywhere – That was a huge positive. The sarcoma doesn’t change the long-term plan, which is still to go get a stem cell transplant in Omaha, but it does change things in the short-term since any remaining parts of the sarcoma need to be treated with chemo. first before we can proceed. Originally, the transplant was supposed to be starting this week, but does need to be pushed off for probably another two months at this point. Luckily, the first couple treatments in this cycle seem to be doing their job, so we’ll just keep our fingers crossed that it continues that way and no other fun surprises pop up between now and September. Outside of that, I am still feeling well physically and mentally for the most part, and have had pretty minimal side effects all around from the chemotherapy. My wife/nurse continues to be awesome on the home front, taking care of me and the kids, and picking up my slack around the house.

We wanted to thank everyone for your continued thoughts, reaching out, cards, texts, and the shirts that a lot of people bought as a show of support; we really appreciate it!

-Brandon
Patients and caregivers love hearing from you; add a comment to show your support.
Help Brandon Stay Connected to Family and Friends

A $25 donation to CaringBridge powers a site like Brandon's for two weeks. Will you make a gift to help ensure that this site stays online for them and for you?

Comments Hide comments

Show Your Support

See the Ways to Help page to get even more involved.

SVG_Icons_Back_To_Top
Top