The Scotsman

Non-chemo blood cancer drug gets green light

- By ELSA MAISHMAN elsa.maishman@jpimedia.co.uk

A n e w n o n - c h e m o t h e r a p y blood cancer treatment has been approved for use in Scotland by the Scottish Medicines Consortium.

Ve n e t o c l a x ( Ve n c l y x t o ) , will be available on the NHS with obinutuzum­ab for some patients who have not previously been treated for their cancer.

John Greensmyth, 62, from Aberdeensh­ire, has lived with the most common f o r m o f blood cancer, Chronic lymphocyti­c leukaemia (CLL) for 30 years.

About 2,100 people in Scotland currently have the disease.

As Mr Greensmyth has been through treatment he is not eligible for the new drug, but he welcomed the news and hoped it will have a positive effect on the lives of others.

“Chemothera­py impacts on time, you've got to go into hospital. As you can imagine, despite all the drugs to counteract the side effects it's not a pleasant experience.

"I t impacts on your family life, it certainly impacts on your work life. And you would probably have to have chemothera­py several times when you relapse,” he said.

As he is i mmunocompr­o - mised, Mr Greensmyth was i mmed i a t e l y p l a c e d i n t h e shielding category from March 2020.

He managed to cope because of access to outside space in his garden, he said, but the lockdown was still “quite a challenge”.

Due to his condition he is in a priority group to receive the Covid-19 vaccine, but he said it will be more important for others around him to receive the vaccine, adding that it will be less effective for him.

"What's more important for me is that every other person that can possibly get the vacc i n e g e t s i t , b e c a u s e t h a t improves my risk of getting it, if they’re protected,” he said.

The pandemic has had a huge effect on Mr Greensmyth’s life.

“Even though I thankfully haven’t got it, Covid has had as big an impact on my life as my CLL diagnosis and subsequent treatments,” he said.

“One of the things that a CLL diagnosis causes is a lack of control. I haven’t got the freedom to do things that I would normally do if I didn't have this.

"And the fact that Covid is out with my control means that it's another complicati­on, on top of my immunosupp­ressed situation.”

Reacting to the approval of the new treatment, Dr Mike Leach, Consultant Haematolog­ist at the Beatson West of Scotland Cancer Centre in Glasgow, said: “Chemoimmun­otherapy is currently the first line treatment for most CLL patients, however, it may not be well tolerated in the elderly and in those who have other health issues.

"The availabili­ty of this nonchemoth­erapy fixed duration combinatio­n regimen means that clinicians in Scotland now

have another treatment option for these CLL patients, that can offer deeper clinical response and extended remission as well as fewer chemothera­py-related side effects.

"This has the potential to make

a real difference to the lives of our patients.”

Marc Auckland, CLL patient and Chair of the CLL Support Associatio­n, said: “The SMC’S decision to make the veneto - clax plus obinutuzum­ab combinatio­n treatment available within NHS S cotland to this group of patients is welcome news to the CLL patient community.”

 ??  ?? 0 John Greensmyth, who was diagnosed 30 years ago.
0 John Greensmyth, who was diagnosed 30 years ago.

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