Guest guest Posted December 11, 2006 Report Share Posted December 11, 2006 BlankTHE RIGHT TO A TRIAL by JEROME GROOPMAN Should dying patients have access to experimental drugs? Issue of 2006-12-18 Posted 2006-12-11 In 2002, Kianna Karnes, a forty-one-year-old nurse and mother of four in Brownsburg, Indiana, was given a diagnosis of kidney cancer. She had surgery to remove the tumor, but a year later the cancer spread to her bones. Karnes’s doctors treated her with interleukin-2, a protein that stimulates the immune system and, in its synthetic form, was the only medication approved by the Food and Drug Administration for use against kidney cancer. The drug causes high fevers and the accumulation of fluid in the lungs, and it shrinks tumors in only fifteen per cent of cases. “High-dose interleukin-2 damn near killed her,” Karnes’s father, Rowe, recalled recently. “It’s a brutal treatment, but her husband pushed her pretty hard, because he didn’t want to lose her.” Karnes did not improve on interleukin-2, and Rowe began to look into experimental therapies. Four years earlier, he, too, had received a diagnosis of a life-threatening cancer, chronic myelogenous leukemia, for which there were few effective treatments. He had found the Web site of a man from South Carolina with leukemia, who had enrolled in a clinical trial of an experimental drug, now called Gleevec, and had experienced a remarkable remission. Rowe learned about a trial comparing Gleevec with interferon, then the standard therapy for his illness, and asked his doctor to help him apply. He was the last patient to be admitted. “Luckily, I got the good stuff,” he told me, referring to Gleevec. His cancer has been in remission for five years. Full story (very long) http://www.newyorker.com/printables/fact/061218fa_fact Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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