Tuesday, May 5, 2015

SIDNEY FARBER VS. LEUKEMIA pt. III

SIDNEY FARBER VS. LEUKEMIA pt. III



In the last installment we saw what a breakthrough the use of aminopterin was in battling what was, at the time, a childhood illness with a one-hundred-percent mortality rate – ALL, or acute lymphoblastic leukemia.  This time we look at some of the statistics about the disease and the effect Farber’s treatment had on his patient’s odds of survival.
ALL accounts for twenty five percent of all cancer in people under the age of 15, and affects 1 in 50,000 people in the US.  As mentioned, when Farber first began administering aminopterin, the mortality rate was one hundred percent.  According to the Journal of Clinical Oncology, the survival rate had increased to about ten percent by the 1960s (read the article here: http://bit.ly/1ckrT0p).  This is important to note for two reasons.  First, while ten percent may not seem like much, it is a dramatic improvement over zero.  Imagine the difference between being told that your child had a zero percent chance of survival compared to being told her odds are one in ten.  It may only be a slim hope, but it is hope nonetheless, and the difference between no hope and slim hope cannot be overstated.  Second, it is important to note that aminopterin was not the end of the story – new and improved drugs would soon step in to replace it.  The breakthrough was in Farber showing the medical community that these types of treatments were indeed effective.  Up to this point, it was considered cruel, perhaps even inhumane, to inject these children with substances known to be poisonous.  “Let them die in peace” was the motto of the day.  But these children were not dying in peace – they suffered terribly before their inevitable end.  The extreme suffering of these children is what drove Farber to such a radical treatment, as he felt each loss deeply and personally.

As I said, Aminopterin was not the end of the story.  The same Journal of Clinical Oncology cited above states that, by 1985, the survival rate had increased to seventy seven percent.  By 2005 the survival rate had increased to over ninety percent, and that number has increased steadily up to the present.  It is important to note that these are five to ten year survival rates.  ALL is still a deadly disease that affects many children, and also affects adults, albeit at a much lower rate.  But Sydney Farber paved the way for the increased survival rates that we enjoy today by proving that chemotherapy was effective.  His legacy as the Father of Modern Chemotherapy is well deserved – may his memory be for a blessing.

Cancer: The Emperor of All Maladies documentary: http://bit.ly/1EffZz7

1 comment:

  1. "The extreme suffering of these children is what drove Farber to such a radical treatment, as he felt each loss deeply and personally." This reminds me of conversations we had in class about how engaged we thought a physician should be, emotionally, with his patients. There's just no question, is there, that physicians and researchers who are in touch with their humane sensibilities are rightly driven to address the humanity of their patients with greater urgency? Those concerned with "just the facts" are lacking an important dimension. Might as well call it the psycho-social dimension, no?

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