The Post

Help for blood cancer patients

- Andre Chumko andre.chumko@stuff.co.nz

Emma Holden was devastated when she learned she had multiple myeloma.

The 31-year-old, who lives in South Canterbury, was diagnosed with the form of blood cancer in June last year.

Multiple myeloma causes cancer cells to accumulate in bone marrow, where they typically crowd out healthy blood cells. It’s incurable.

For Holden, who is normally quite an active person, it started with muscle pains in her leg. Eventually it got to the point she wasn’t able to walk on it. Then came the pain in her arm. Lumps started appearing over her body – one, the size of a golf ball on her collarbone, another on her skull. An X-ray and scans revealed cancerous lesions on her spine, hips, skull, clavicle and sternum. ‘‘I was prepared for the worst.’’

Her diagnosis meant a move back to New Zealand from Melbourne to have family support. Her plan was a combinatio­n of chemothera­py and other traditiona­l treatments. In January, she finished a stem cell transplant in Christchur­ch.

She had heard about the drug lenalidomi­de, used to treat multiple myeloma, from internatio­nal cases but she knew it wasn’t funded here. Access would mean forking out about $100,000 a year.

But yesterday, that all changed. The Government’s drug-funding agency, Pharmac, announced it would subsidise Revlimid – also known as lenalidomi­de – for maintenanc­e treatment for multiple myeloma patients. It represents New Zealand’s first and only maintenanc­e treatment for those with newly diagnosed multiple myeloma who have undergone a stem cell transplant.

For Holden, who was told she would be eligible for the drug by her haematolog­ist, it represents a brand new chapter in her life.

Without the drug, she would still be going through a variation of her chemothera­py regime. Access means a better quality of life, suppressio­n of cancer and, hopefully, a long-lasting remission.

Dr Ken Romeril, founder of Myeloma New Zealand, said the organisati­on was pleased with the funding, as it had been pushing for it for some time.

About 120 Kiwis each year would benefit from the funding, Romeril said.

There were up to 400 new cases each year. Currently, about 2500 people have been diagnosed with it – and there are higher rates among Ma¯ ori and Pasifika people.

Holden was hopeful access to lenalidomi­de would be widened to not just those who had undergone a recent stem cell transplant.

‘‘I don’t believe campaignin­g has stopped.

‘‘For me, it’s really exciting . . . there’s been far and few between [moments of those] for the last 12 months. Since I started getting the pain it’s been pretty horrific,’’ she said.

‘‘I’m really grateful. It’s crazy to think I’m not going to feel like this any more ... I’ve always been a glass-half-full person. I have an incredible partner of nine years.

‘‘We have so many more adventures. We want to travel, build a house, start a family one day hopefully – having access [to lenalidomi­de] has improved all that.’’

It represents a brand new chapter in her life.

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