Frontline
I saw an interesting, (albeit, somewhat depressing) documentary last night, entitled "Facing Death". You can view it by visiting www.pbs.org and clicking on the "Frontline" tab. I found the written interview with Dr. Groopman reassuring that as an individual patient , you never know whether you may be on the "tail end of the curve" and beat the odds. He also comments on the unpopular decision to not approve Vidaza in the United Kingdom.
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They called MDS a type of leukemia.
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I thought it was a good show but maybe they exaggerated the toxicity of the whole Stem Cell Transplant process. How each patient reacts depends on their initial health, the progress of disease before transplant, age, and probably a host of other factors. The show made it sound like every person who gets a stem cell transplant will be taken all the way to near death before getting the actual transplant, with all sorts of complications to follow. For me, so far coming up on Day +60, it has been going to plan. I hardly had any complications before the transplant and none since. But the show was about end of life health care, so you would expect them to use the worse case scenarios.
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Quote:
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SCT
Hello Jim, I am so glad that you and others have had such a good response to the SCT and I hope things continue to go well. As posted by Birgitta today, there have definitely been advances over the last decade in reducing complications from SCT. Your story and so many others on this forum are encouraging to those that may have to follow that path. The link for the abstract on SCT improvements is www.nejm.org or www.nejm.com., I think.
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