SIDNEY FARBER VS. LEUKEMIA pt. II
In this
second installment we will take a closer look at just how revolutionary
Farber’s treatment was and how quickly it offered relief to the children in his
care. One case, as outlined by the New
England Journal of Medicine (click here to read the article: http://bit.ly/1DIjw5x)
of a boy referred to simply as W.G., is particularly instructive. The boy was seven and a half years old when
he was admitted to the hospital in 1947.
He presented with complaints of joint pain and fever, and subsequent bone
marrow biopsy confirmed that the child had leukemia. Within weeks the boy was started on a
regiment of pteroylaspartic acid administered daily. This continued for about a month, in which
time the child was active, but tests continued to show high white blood cell
counts. A short while later he was
started on a treatment consisting of daily doses of diopterin. Over the month-long course of this treatment
the child’s condition gradually declined.
His liver and spleen, which had been only mildly enlarged at the time of
his admission, had become quite enlarged, and he became very anemic. Other medications and blood transfusions were
administered, but eight months after his initial admission into the hospital,
the child’s condition had seriously deteriorated.
It was
at this point, in late 1947, that aminopterin began to be administered on a
daily basis. After only two weeks the
boy’s white-cell count had fallen from 60,000 to an astonishing 19,000. His condition again worsened as a result of
his leaving the hospital and not receiving the same regiment of aminopterin,
but after returning to the hospital the treatment again proved efficacious,
reducing a white-cell count now at 78,000 all the way down to 5,000 after only
ten days. While the child took some time
to fully recover, he did again regain his strength and appetite, and the report
concludes by saying that the boy – now man – is still alive today.
In the
third and final installment we will delve back into the life of Sydney Farber,
and see that his work for the fight against cancer continued in different ways
throughout his life. If you haven’t
watched the Ken Burn’s doc Cancer: Emperor of all Maladies yet, here’s the link
again: http://bit.ly/1EffZz7.
Let me add my endorsement, again, of this documentary/book. Everyone in the health professions should see/read it, it so humanizes both the malady of cancer and the quest to conquer it. Medical science must never forget its personal human dimension.
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