Why are there no discussions about cancer of the blood?

Posted by mkt24 @mkt24, May 20 12:01pm

Are we just “ step children” because doctors can’t just cut our cancer out? Or maybe doctors don’t want to delve into a cure? No high dollars for simple treatments? Or are there really simple treatments just drugs?
85 year old widow in up hill battle of Hope since 2014.

Interested in more discussions like this? Go to the Blood Cancers & Disorders Support Group.

@1995victoria

If you go to LLS.org (Leukemia Lymphoma Society) website, there is a lot of info on the website and they will also mail you a ton of information......best of everything

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Thanks

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@loribmt

Hi @mkt24 There are several discussions about cancer of the blood in this Blood Cancer and Disorders group. That’s the goal of this group, to offer support for people with leukemia, lymphomas, MM, MDS, blood conditions like PV, ET…we discuss them all.
Or are you asking about why the medical community isn’t talking about blood cancers? I assure you they are. It’s a huge area of discussion, research and development. I’m a bi-product of such research.

I’m a mentor in the blood cancer group because I had a very aggressive form of blood cancer, Acute Myeloid Leukemia. I am now 5 years post treatment~which included a bone marrow transplant, and cured. So I don’t feel that we are orphans because there are no tumors to cut out. There are a plethora of new drugs that have been developed to treat many of these conditions that weren’t available in the past. Unfortunately there are no simple treatments to cure blood cancers.

If I remember correctly, you were diagnosed with MDS which has several treatments in order to slow the progression of this disease. At this time the only potential cure is a bone marrow transplant. But it isn’t always a good fit for some patients because can be quite taxing. Years ago meds for MDS or AML didn’t exist and patients weren’t around very long after diagnosis. Now, life expectancy has grown appreciably. Blood cancers are incredibly complicated. There are no drug cures yet…but I’m optimistic that they are on the horizon.

I’m sensing some frustration in you today. What can I do to help you?

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Lori,
You offer such encouragement to me and others. I have AML that is not curable and can not have a Bone Marrow Transplant. My Acute Myloid Leukemia is a P53 strain and Mayo did not expect ME to have between 2 and 5 weeks in January 2024. Our precious Lord has seen it fit for me to still be here and I am so thankful. Today is May 25, 2024 and I have had 3 rounds of Chemo that were not fun at alll…who can say they love Chemo only it has kept me alive along with support, love and prayers of my humans! May each day be a choice to live it to the fullest.

Thanks for being our Mentor.

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@reedabcdv

Lori,
You offer such encouragement to me and others. I have AML that is not curable and can not have a Bone Marrow Transplant. My Acute Myloid Leukemia is a P53 strain and Mayo did not expect ME to have between 2 and 5 weeks in January 2024. Our precious Lord has seen it fit for me to still be here and I am so thankful. Today is May 25, 2024 and I have had 3 rounds of Chemo that were not fun at alll…who can say they love Chemo only it has kept me alive along with support, love and prayers of my humans! May each day be a choice to live it to the fullest.

Thanks for being our Mentor.

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Hi @reedabcdv. Oh golly, I’d say Welcome to the elite club of AML members but it’s a dubious club to be sure…
I hope I can give you some more encouragement. While a bone marrow transplant is the only potential cure for AML at this time, there are many newer drugs on the market that can really help slow the progression or even have patients reach a good point of remission. Often this is done in conjunction with rounds of chemo such as you had.

You already beat the odds back in January! Sounds like my initial diagnosis. I was less than 50/50 and it wasn’t pretty. Just shows we don’t have to be statistics, right? One of the great memes my chemo team at the hospital put on my wall was this: The devil whispered in my ear, “You’re not strong enough to weather the storm. I whispered right back and said, I AM the storm!” I still think of that to this day and it’s 5 years later. So, Be the Storm!!
Chemo is not easy but you’ve weathered it this far! Are you on any maintenance meds after your initial rounds of chemo? Are there more chemo rounds in the offing?

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I imagine that there are fashions in medical research, as in other fields. It also seems likely that there are ebbs and flows in research that mirror the ebbs and flows of money for research. Sometimes, however, the problem is also just hard.

My oncologist used to work at the National Institutes of Health (NIH) doing cancer research. He told me of a co-worker who could cure liver cancer - in a petri dish. The cure did not work in humans, and they eventually found out exactly why it did not work in people.

I showed an article about what I thought was promising AML research to my oncologist. He saw what it was about and he then told me that we could cure leukemia 25 years ago - in mice. I am gradually learning that there is a difference between research in a lab and clinical practice in humans.

Sometimes a treatment will almost work. I spoke with a man whose sister was cured of metastatic breast cancer by a bone marrow transplant. It worked (for her), but the treatment was discontinued because more women died from the new treatment than would have died from the best conventional treatment.

NIH and the National Cancer Institute (NCI) are national treasures, and I can only hope that I can hang on long enough for something new to become available.

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@mkt24

Aransep for MDS not anemia. Since beginning of diagnosis. Keeps HGB up to 10 if possible. Another drug was used for anemia control. Too old for bone marrow transplant. Did have two blood transfusions done by quack in a killing clinic the first year. Now new (doctor 2 years) listens at Texas Oncology.
Yep can be frustrating to read where research is being done for other cancers.
A good friend has leukemia for 20 years, but is treated with care and compassion. Her symptoms are were never same as this MDS and was told it is not same. More can be done for leukemia as more research has been done on it.
One can only Hope and Pray.

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Hi @mkt24, I hope you have seen all the blood cancer-related discussions, in particular those related to MDS.

See all MDS discussions: https://connect.mayoclinic.org/group/blood-cancers-disorders/?search=MDS&index=discussions

Here is a list of clinical trials currently underway for MDS at Mayo Clinic https://www.mayo.edu/research/clinical-trials/diseases-conditions/myelodysplastic-syndromes

Let me know if you would like me to change to the title of this discussion to reflect the topic of your concern.

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@colleenyoung

Hi @mkt24, I hope you have seen all the blood cancer-related discussions, in particular those related to MDS.

See all MDS discussions: https://connect.mayoclinic.org/group/blood-cancers-disorders/?search=MDS&index=discussions

Here is a list of clinical trials currently underway for MDS at Mayo Clinic https://www.mayo.edu/research/clinical-trials/diseases-conditions/myelodysplastic-syndromes

Let me know if you would like me to change to the title of this discussion to reflect the topic of your concern.

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Yes have continued my reading of resources for blood cancer. And will continue to do so . No reason to change title unless others want to.
Other sites give some help but not all. Cancer.com, Mayo Clinic, md Anderson and many others. Just takes time and energy to dig into sites. Thanks for your help.

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@ahuser0

Thank you for your reply.

I fully agree with your comments.

Hopefully AI will increase the knowledge of the various blood diseases.

Thanks again for your reply.

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@ahuser0, welcome. What type of cancer are you dealing with?

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