Anyone take new drug Camzyos (mavacamten) for HCM?
Since FDA approval in April has anyone (non-clinical trial patient) actually obtained a prescription and had it filled? If so, when and where was the cardiologist located? Is the registration process for doctor/patient/Rx taking a long time for this much anticipated drug?
Thanks from a fellow patient!
Interested in more discussions like this? Go to the Hypertrophic Cardiomyopathy (HCM) Support Group.
Thank you Colleen!
I appreciate all your helpful questions! When I met with my cardiologist last week I asked very similar questions, he wants me to try the medicine first but said if with my age itās too much on me taking medicine and doing the echos and I donāt want to do it the rest of my life I can opt in to surgery still. He says the pros and cons are very similar, so itās whatever I prefer. Surgery is going to be safer at my age then if I wait and need it at 70, but still even later in life it seems to be pretty safe despite being open heart surgery. Itās all scary and I feel kind of at a loss, but I figured Iād try the medicine and then after giving it a proper go Iāll decide what I prefer long term.
Thatās the hard thing with such a new medicine, they donāt have long term studies available so they werenāt able to answer that for me
Yes they have, I was originally going to be seen in the pediatric dorm because most people are usually children or older that know they have it, so I feel like the odd one out with it. But it seems to supposedly be promising to have treatment done at my age so hopefully that holds true
Thank you! I will look over those discussions as well.
My doctor is specialized now with it, Iām being seen at OHSU on the HOCM floor I just transferred! Before my cardiologist knew almost nothing haha.
Thank you for the time youāve spent on here!
Yes you are absolutely correct..thatās why I drink the peach flavored.. but I have had a couple original Fresca.. but I didnāt think it had enough juice to matter.? ā¦. I should have been more specific;)
You have a lot to consider @mckenzie541! Colleen laid out some great questions for you to write down and take with you. I'm happy to hear that your new cardiologist is specialized in HOCM. That is so very important.
If you don't mind, I would add another question to your list, in addition to what Colleen already listed. I would ask if he/she would recommend genetic testing for your kids, siblings and other first degree relatives. From what I have learned, if you have HCM you have a 50/50% chance of passing it down to your children. That also means one of your parents passed it to you and potentially other siblings if you have them. Those are big percentages! The sooner you know, like you at such a young age, the better off you are. This way you will be aware of the big scary stuff, as they say knowledge is power.
Your plan so far sounds very reasonable. It's probably something that can give you time to think about things and decide later if it is something you want to do long term. I see you mentioned that you wish you could visit the Mayo Clinic in Rochester. If the plan you have chosen, Camzyos, doesn't pan out and surgery eventually becomes the option, I would encourage you once again to be sure whomever you are sent to for surgery is from a Center of Excellence (COE). This surgery is so precise, only the best of the best should be performing it. There are a handful of places in the Country that specialize in septal myectomy. You know now that Mayo Clinic is a COE, and they have amazing people working there in the patient service/ business office/insurance that can check to see if your insurance will cover the visit. I was shocked and thrilled at the same time when I found out that because Mayo was a COE, my insurance (BC/BS of Texas) approved me to be seen there. Same thing with Cedars-Saini in Beverly Hills, CA. I went to both places for opinions after being misdiagnosed for several years and once again, my local cardiologist diagnosed me with Sub aortic membrane not HCM. I chose the Mayo, even though it was a bit more difficult to travel to, because when I first met the HCM doctor (Dr. Evans) he did two things not one doctor had ever done. He ordered a chest x-ray and a pro BNP lab. Two simple routine tests that had never been done. The x-ray showed my heart was enlarged and the BNP showed I was developing heart failure. That was the moment I knew I was in the right place. I thanked God for that, even though it meant open heart surgery. Your life is worth a plane ticket to Rochester if it comes down it it!
It sounds like you have some good coping skills, and little ones to distract you from over thinking. Trust me...I know I was a huge over-thinker when I found out. I was afraid I was going to die! I know now I made the right choice once I got the right information. It just took a long time to get that information! Feel free to keep coming back for virtual support, virtual hand-holding, virtual venting! You are in the right place now. I hope you will keep the HCM group posted on your progress.
My apologies for the delayed response.
I do have some uncles with the same diagnosis. But, not everyone of my dadās siblings have it.
The testing was done by an independent lab that came recommended by Mayo. My brother had his transplant at the Mayo, so his was certainly seen by them, and they asked me to release my test results, so I absolutely agreed if it meant helping others.
I just had an ablation and stopped taking amiodarone. It will be substituted with Sotalol in a couple of weeks. I feel better, and have been working hard enough to sweat most of the day. All signs are pointing towards a successful procedure so far. If it doesnāt work, my ICD will defibrillate me, and there is nothing I hate more in this world than that. Iāve had it happen 5 times early on, and Iād be cool with it never happening again.
Thank you for sharing that @irishpeaks. I wonder if the odds are similar to HCM, 50/50 that it is passed to another relative.
It sounds like you are doing much better after the ablation. I know that amiodarone has a lot of side effects that are not pleasant. I am not familiar with Sotalol, is it a rhythm regulator?
I cringe for you, knowing you have a defibrillator š®
I can't imagine how frightening it must be to live with one of those. Like walking on eggshells, never knowing when it may go off. I've heard it described as feeling like a mule kicked you. I've been kicked by horses, maybe mule kicks are stronger. They talked about a defibrillator in my case too, but I dodged that thank goodness. I would not like living in fear of the thing firing off when you least expect it.
How long before you know the ablation/Sotalol worked for you?
Sounds like day 6 went well @starbuck41. Glad to hear you have more energy, are sleeping better, and breathing better.
Enough more energy in fact to make a late night pizza run. Stuffed crust Pepperoni pizza?
Does your doctor know about your late night pizza fest, or your double bacon cheese burger/onion rings? Just wondering š I had many occasions before my surgery, when my "dietary indiscretion" got the best of me. It would just knock me for a loop, and I slowly learned I could not eat like that if I didn't want to pay for it. I was a slow learner though š
Maybe Murphy needs to keep a closer eye on you, and steer you to the unprocessed, lean protein, fresh fruit and vegetable section of your local grocery store!
Seriously though, glad you are tolerating the Camzyos like a champ. Besides Murphy, do you have a support person in your life that you can share with?
From what I understand, Sotalol is a rhythm regulator. It is a safer alternative to Amiodarone from what I understand. I had my ablation on April 11th, and will spend 3 days in the hospital on May 30th to get āloadedā with Sotalol.
To me, this is going to be the indicator of how well things have worked. Along with that aspect, this will be the stage at which Iām most vulnerable to a defibrillation.
As far as the defibrillation itself, it is like getting kicked in the chest and head by a mule at the same time. I developed a case of PTSD after the second of five shocks. Itās been a year and a half since my last one and things have settled down. Iām just really hoping not to reawaken that demon.
OMGOSH! That's so awful @irishpeaks š®
I would probably have PTSD too!
No wonder you are freaking out about that happening during the upcoming hospital stay. Praying for the best, most awesome results, that the Sotalol works and your defibrillator doesn't fire off! Nobody likes being the the hospital. The food is awful, the pillows are like rocks, and you can't sleep a wink! I hope you will come back and share how you are doing afterwards.
I can only imagine how nervous you must be knowing what could happen. You have a great attitude, which is so helpful in dealing with stressful life stuff. Hang in there...your Mayo Clinic Connect buddies are here for you!
Debra
Itās day 7
5mg 0807am
Weight 265.3
Breakfast was just 10oz of coffee, my appetite was almost non existent, itās 1700 and Iām making oven fried chicken, with mashed potatoes for dinner.. I didnāt fall asleep last night till about 0300.. but I have insomnia.. my extra motivation to do stuff has made my back twinge..so with doing Iām gonna add 10/325 oxycodone with 500mg metforminā¦still no adverse side effects and I still feel good.
Of note at about 2100 last night I had a protein smoothie.. it has 100mg of caffeine but I wasnāt wired just not relaxed enough to fall out..
Itās raining so no higher elevation forays this week but Iām geared for it.. June 2nd is my first cardiologist appointment since starting Camzyos.. Iāll keep yāall posted
Till tomorrow yāall
Dave
I appreciate the kind words and well wishes. I will certainly check back in and share my outcome with you fine folks and hopefully itās not only encouraging news for me, but others in the future in the form of new knowledge for their treatment plans.
We canāt always control the outcome, but we can control how we react to it.