Herald on Sunday

Stem cells change broken lives

MS sufferer unable to walk 100m now runs and bikes after treatment overseas.

- By Amy Wiggins

An autoimmune disorder left a Wellington man struggling to walk 100m, but two years after ground-breaking treatment he has completed a 10km run and regularly goes mountain biking.

Hamish Bockett-Smith, 42, lost feeling in his right arm and hand in 2001.

It was initially thought to be a pinched nerve but six months later he was diagnosed with multiple sclerosis.

The IT expert’s symptoms included temporary blindness and agonising pains in his feet. He never regained feeling in his arm.

“I wasn’t able to walk more than 100m. It was getting pretty close to wheelchair or walker material really.

“The fatigue was just debilitati­ng. I’d have 12 hours of sleep during the night and I’d get up and take the kids to school in the car and school was only five minutes down the road but I couldn’t even walk that far. By the time I got home I was just exhausted.”

With funded treatments no longer working, he and his family decided the best option was to spend $160,000 on haematopoi­etic stem cell transplant­ation (HSCT) at Raffles Hospital in Singapore.

Last week the Herald on Sunday told the story of Donna Agnew, who was struck down with MS months after giving birth to her first child last year and is fundraisin­g for the same treatment in Russia.

She has now raised almost $35,000 and is one of eight Kiwis on Givealittl­e fundraisin­g for HSCT.

In May 2015 Bockett-Smith flew out for the treatment, which is not available to MS sufferers in New Zealand.

First he had a day of chemothera­py, then for five days he injected himself with a drug to make his body over-produce bone-marrow stem cells.

Next he was hooked up to a machine for eight hours and had 40 million stem cells harvested.

For the last phase he was put in isolation and given five days of chemothera­py to “annihilate” his immune system to kill the body’s memory of the disease before the stem cells were pumped back in.

But the cost and the suffering were worth it. His condition has slowly improved over time. “I don’t have any pain, I’m off most of my medication. I’m out biking, I did a 10km run last year . . . it’s awesome to kind of get my life back.”

Bockett-Smith said the treatment

HWatch the video with Hamish at nzherald.co.nz had not restored the feeling in his right arm and he still had some fatigue but it was nowhere near as bad as it had been.

“We went into it with the view that we’ve got no other option, it’s worth a try otherwise it’s going to be life in a wheelchair.

“Even if the outcome only lasts for five or 10 years, that would be five or 10 years . . . we wouldn’t have had.”

His quality of life is hugely improved but on Thursday he received proof the treatment had not cured him. A recent MRI showed new lesions on his brain.

Despite that, he said the treatment had done more than he ever anticipate­d.

“Being a male and wanting to be the breadwinne­r . . . and look after my family, I was very depressed about life and now the outlook is totally different.” He would recommend the treatment to others although people needed to do their research and weigh up the risks.

Multiple Sclerosis NZ national manager Amanda Keefe said that although a lot of people were returning from overseas with good results, it was too early to tell how effective HSCT treatment was.

The organisati­on recommende­d people try Pharmac-funded treatments for multiple sclerosis in New Zealand first.

For many people HSCT was a “last resort”, she said.

Associate Professor Bronwen Connor of the University of Auckland said HSCT was essentiall­y a bone marrow transplant that had been used successful­ly in blood cancer treatments for many years.

Bone marrow stem cells were known to secrete anti-inflammato­ries that could help reduce the symptoms of MS.

“It looks like, for many patients, it is beneficial. It’s not going to cure MS so they are looking at it to alleviate or slow some of the symptoms.”

She said the long-term effects of the treatment were not known because trials only started in the late 1990s.

For Auckland woman Maureen Wood, 70, who had HSCT at Healthcare Global in Bangalore, India, a year ago, the treatment was helpful.

She was diagnosed with MS when she was 47 and lost the ability to walk 10 years ago. Since the treatment she has regained some movement in her right leg but, more importantl­y, she feels healthier.

“I’ll never give up the dream walking],” she said.

I wasn’t able to walk more than 100m. It was getting pretty close to wheelchair or walker material.

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 ?? Mark Mitchell ?? Hamish Bockett-Smith credits stem-cell transplant in Singapore for his transforma­tion.
Mark Mitchell Hamish Bockett-Smith credits stem-cell transplant in Singapore for his transforma­tion.

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