On Monday I went with Brian to the hospital to get some answers to the questions that plague my mind. In the last few weeks I've done more and more research (Have I mentioned that I'm a research buff?) into his condition and I'm not finding much in the way of help. But I HAVE found out a few interesting things (at the hospital, and before I even went)
- Brian's diagnosis is now an even longer title. Familial atypical hemolytic uremic syndrome. If you look it up, you won't find it. The most important part is the "atypical hemolytic uremic syndrome" part. The rest of it just signifies what TYPE of atypical HUS he has. Familial is in the title because his disease is hereditary, and it can either be a recessive or a dominant gene passed down. Recessive ALWAYS shows up in infancy or childhood, which naturally means that Brian's case is dominant.
- There has been a treatment plan introduced for such a rare case of HUS. It's been tried on a few patients with outstanding results. It's a drug called "Soliris". You may have heard the name before. Apparently it recently made the Forbes list of the most expensive drugs in the world. And, you guessed it, Soliris topped the list. It can only treat two different kinds of blood disorders so, naturally, it is not a widely used drug. That means the drug company can charge whatever they want for it. And they charge $20,000 per unit. If Brian were to receive this treatment, he would start off having a few units of Soliris a day until the doctors start to see results. In one week, Brian's treatment could easily top a million! And, um... yeah. We don't have that kind of money.
- Soliris was approved for use in the US in 2009. That means there could possibly be clinical trials elsewhere in the world. Maybe even Canada. We have to find out where clinical trials could be taking place and see if we can get Brian on "the list".
- The doctor I spoke with at the hospital said that, from his standpoint, the disease is "managed". He didn't say it was managed WELL, he just said he was satisfied with where numbers are. This was explained to me as a response to my concerned questions about Brian's well-being here at home. There has been a noticeable decline in his health. Last week was hard. He spent so much time either being nauseated to the point that it affected his daily life, or throwing up. He is fatigued much of the time and I am so glad he doesn't have to go to work every morning right now. He is losing weight, pale, and generally feels unwell the majority of the time. I tried explaining that to his doctor, but he said the only concern the hematology team has with Brians numbers is his consistently high blood pressure. He's on a handful of drugs to try to bring his blood pressure down, but they don't seem to be doing their job. Next on my "research agenda": finding some way to lower his blood pressure!!
Well, this is just a snippet of information I've received recently and I'm overwhelmed just typing it out! More to come as I continue searching out answers!
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