Hi Jill,
Any doctor who is recommending a transplant to you when you are CCyR is guilty of malpractice. Find a new doctor.
Patients who achieve CCyR have the same progression free survival (> 95%) as those who are MMR or 'undetected'.
In fact, the single most important indicator of success is whether cells are observed via florescence under the microscope. This is CCyR (i.e. no cells observed).
Personally, I don't understand why you were not re-started on low dose dasatinib following your pregnancy. You may actually have achieved a deeper response than 0.2% PCR. I'll explain below.
Given that you successfully carried a pregnancy to term and quickly returned to PCR < 1.0% tells me you are close to crossing over and getting into deep remission which may set you up for drug discontinuation down the road. The residual cells you have are likely a different clone not susceptible completely to TKI's, but also not expansive either. By lowering your dasatinib dose to 20 mg, your immune system in conjunction with dasatinib might very well shrink the remaining population of cells. This happened to me when I went from 70 mg (never 100 mg by the way) to 20 mg. When my dose was lowered to 20 mg. my CML PCR collapsed - and then I became "undetected" a year or so later and now I am free of any drug (TKI) for the last six months still "undetected" in TFR (treatment free remission). I believe you can get there too.
Your strategy might include using nutrition to create an unfavorable environment for CML which helps augment the performance of the drug (dasatinib).
1. Increase vitamin D3 supplementation so your blood D level is at least 70 ng/ml. At this dose (+/-), CML blast cells differentiate into daughter cells and die off. CML blast cells are the real problem in CML and when reduced to zero or near zero, gives time to experiment with dose overall.
2. Take vitamin K2 (200 mcg) per day.
3. Take 400 mg magnesium per day (avoid oxide formulations). Half before bed time.
4. Take 200 mcg selenium (very important)
5. If you like mushrooms, eat Shiitake type - as much as you can tolerate (I take mine in soup and sauteed with broccoli)
6. Eliminate sugar from your diet. Low carb is best, but if you like carbs, (and who doesn't!), keep it natural (no bag of chips).
7. Curcumin - 2-8 grams per day (as C3 complex with pepper). Curcumin alone is likely to cause your remaining CML to collapse. It interferes with the very pathways involved in CML growth by down-regulating them (nf-kB for one).
Doing the above will help confuse CML stem cells so they go into apoptosis. CML clones will die off due to "non-support" and the low dose dasatinib will be vigilant in attacking new CML stem cell division and any other CML cells trying to re-establish disease. Over time, CML can die out. Selenium is proven to interfere with CML stem cell expansion. So by hitting CML from all sides, your normal system takes over.
An important point - the fact you were able to go off drug for the pregnancy and remain in chronic phase informs you have time to experiment with dasatinib dose (i.e. 20 mg) and see what happens. Worse case, nothing or a slight rise. Best case, CML collapses below 0.1% Risk in trying is near zero. The lower the dose of dasatinib which works is best. Dasatinib also suppresses our natural immune system. So by lowering dose (which works), you are also improving the odds your own immune system will take up the fight against CML as well.
And then there is fasting - but that is really tough to do.
Hope this is useful to you.