Irish Daily Mail

WHY BOTH DOCTORS AND PATIENTS NEED TO ACT FAST WITH LEUKAEMIA

Joel Atkinson waited two years for a blood cancer diagnosis. Here, he explains why more awareness may help save lives...

- By BARNEY CALMAN

SHe suffered night sweats and excruciati­ng pain

EPTEMBER is blood cancer awareness month, and the drive is on to ensure adequate awareness and early interventi­on to treat these rare but deadly diseases.

According to official health guidance, anyone visiting their GP with tell-tale symptoms such as persistent fatigue, fever, bruising or bleeding and recurrent infections should be referred for a ‘very urgent’ full blood count within 48 hours – a test that costs as little as €3.

A new campaign in Britain, Spot Leukaemia, has highlighte­d the need to spread awareness of these cancers, which can often present with vague symptoms. Without prompt action, the condition can worsen to the point that it’s untreatabl­e.

Joel Atkinson, a 31-year-old electricia­n went undiagnose­d for almost two years, and his health deteriorat­ed dangerousl­y as a result. The father-of-one Joel Atkinson was hit with severe shoulder and back discomfort in late 2019, which was initially put down to a stressful job and, later, arthritis.

As his health deteriorat­ed, he spoke to doctors and visited A&E ‘countless’ times, suffering crushing fatigue, night sweats and excruciati­ng pain. Yet it was only after collapsing at home and being rushed by ambulance to hospital and then into intensive care that he was finally diagnosed with leukaemia.

A full blood count is the first step on a leukaemia diagnosis and involves the number and appearance of the different blood cells in a sample being checked in a laboratory. If abnormalit­ies are seen, further investigat­ions can confirm a diagnosis.

And timing is of the essence, warns consultant haematolog­ist Professor Antonio Pagliuca, an expert in blood cancers at King’s College Hospital, London.

He says: ‘Leukaemia can develop rapidly. Patients can go from the early stages to advanced disease in a few months. A cure is more likely if it’s caught earlier, whereas later on people can be so ill they might not be able to cope with aggressive treatment.

‘As it is, people may be dying unnecessar­ily, when a full blood count given earlier could have saved their life. It’s a simple test – it’s cheap, any lab can do it, and the results can be available the same day.’

Although the test itself is quick to carry out, a doctor must be available to interpret the results.

Leukaemia UK chief Fiona Hazell said: ‘We know that early diagnosis can save lives. The sooner leukaemia patients are picked up through a full blood count, the sooner they can get treated. The longer the wait, the more poorly they become and the fewer options there are.’

More than 400 patients are diagnosed in Ireland each year. The disease affects the bone marrow and lymphatic system, part of the immune system, triggering production of large numbers of abnormal white blood cells.

Normally these fight infections, but cancerous white blood cells don’t function properly, leaving patients vulnerable to bugs most people would easily shrug off.

They can also ‘crowd out’ red blood cells, vital for carrying oxygen around the body, and platelets, which help the blood clot. As a result, anaemia – which causes breathless­ness and fatigue – and internal bleeding are common complicati­ons of the disease. There are a number of types of leukaemia, and they affect all ages, including babies and children. However, most cases are seen in middle-aged and older people. Only half of patients survive more than five years, making it among the deadliest of cancers.

Overall, a third of patients are diagnosed when they become extremely unwell and are admitted to hospital in a crisis. For certain

types of leukaemia, this figure rises to two-thirds. At this stage they are often too unwell to cope with treatments, which can be aggressive.

The age and health of patients is also key – older and more frail patients are less likely to bounce back. But overall, those diagnosed early have a 50 per cent chance of surviving the disease, while those who are picked up at later stages face a poor prognosis.

For example, only 34 per cent of people with acute myeloid leukaeamia, the most common form of the disease, who are diagnosed after an emergency admission survive for a year.

Prof Pagliuca says: ‘If leukaemia is picked up earlier, there’s a five to ten per cent greater chance of survival. But often the first time we see a patient is when they’ve suffered significan­t medical issues, such as catastroph­ic bleeding or a severe infection.

‘In these cases, we have to treat those problems before we can do anything about the cancer, and some patients don’t recover.

‘This may be due to some patients brushing off their symptoms and not going to the doctor. But we know others do see the GP and are not picked up, when it would have been simple to order a full blood count.’

This was certainly the case for Joel Atkinson. He recalls waking up one morning in September 2019 with pain in his shoulder: ‘It was excruciati­ng – a sharp but constant pain that was so bad I could barely move my arm. I went to the doctor, who said it was tendonitis and that it wouldn’t last long.’

Joel found the pain would go away then return. ‘Later it travelled to my lower back. I had to go to A&E more than once because it got so bad. It was so confusing, because I didn’t remember injuring myself. I was also constantly exhausted and had terrible night sweats.’

After a year, hoping to get another opinion, Joel decided to move to a different GP surgery.

At this stage he was referred to a rheumatolo­gist and given arthritis drugs.

His journalist wife Amy, 29, says: ‘Joel was booked in for an MRI scan to check the condition of his joints, but because of the pandemic this was delayed for five months.’ In July he had the scan. On the day he was due to go and collect the results, Amy went into their bedroom to find Joel in agony. ‘His lips had gone blue,’ she recalls, still clearly shaken.

He was rushed into intensive care where he was treated for sepsis – a life-threatenin­g immune system reaction to an infection. Only after this was he finally diagnosed with acute lymphoblas­tic leukaemia.

The MRI scan results showed there was no problem with Joel’s joints but there were lesions in the bone marrow inside his spine, which is a sign of leukaemia.

‘That’s why he had been suffering back pain,’ says Amy. ‘It was a shock, because up to that point everyone had been telling us he had arthritis. It was terrifying – and I was also angry. We felt so let down.’

Defying all odds, Joel recovered from the sepsis and was out of intensive care after two days. In September he started chemothera­py – and developed near-fatal sepsis again.

‘I was sedated, so I don’t really remember much of it,’ says Joel.

Amy, however, recalls it vividly: ‘It was the most traumatic thing ever, seeing the person you love the most go through that. But I had this stubborn belief that everything would be OK.’

Incredibly, Joel pulled through again – and it turned out that round

‘The longer the wait, the more poorly they are’

He was treated for sepsis and finally diagnosed

of chemo had been a success. It had cleared the cancer, and he is still in remission.

Now Joel and Amy, who have a daughter, Isla, five, are committed to raising awareness about the condition that nearly killed him. ‘I had all the symptoms,’ he says. ‘I’m fit and play football, but I was so exhausted I couldn’t walk up the stairs at times. I was having night sweats that drenched the bed and lost a lot of weight. I’d told my doctors all of this.’

Amy continues: ‘It’s important all GP get better support and training to help them spot the signs.’

Professor Martin Marshall, Chair of the Royal College of General Practition­ers, said a problem faced by GPs is that leukaemia symptoms can be similar to those of more common and less serious conditions: ‘An average full-time GP may see one new case of blood cancer a year and will make around 8,000 patient contacts,’ he says.

‘A full blood count is needed to rule out leukaemia and can also help explore what other causes there might be for the patient’s symptoms,’ says Leukaemia Care chief executive Zack Pemberton-Whiteley, emphasisin­g how both patients and GPs need to be aware of the symptoms.

 ?? ?? Fighting through: Joel Atkinson with Amy during his treatment
Fighting through: Joel Atkinson with Amy during his treatment
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