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I’m getting more impressed with Kim all the time. She really seems to know her stuff (no great surprise, because she told me she used to work as a liaison between a medical insurer and stem-cell transplant centers). My initial reaction, when she showed up on the scene, was to suspect my insurance company was looking for a way to deny me benefits. I can see, now, that the situation is more multi-faceted. Sure, Kim’s going to represent the insurance company’s interests, but she’s also going to be a great help to me in navigating this increasingly complex maze of treatment decisions. I’d never replace her advice with that of a physician’s, of course, but she’s going to be of great assistance in helping me understand how the system works. I feel like I’ve just been promoted from the School of Cancer to the Graduate School of Cancer, with Kim as my newly-appointed academic advisor.
The procedure we’re discussing is called an allogeneic nonmyeloblative peripheral blood stem-cell transplant. When you’ve said that, you’ve said a mouthful. You can call it “allogeneic nonmyeloblative peripheral blood stem-cell” if you want, but all its friends call it “mini.”
“Mini-transplant” refers to the fact that it doesn’t rely on massive doses of chemotherapy to blow the patient’s immune system to smithereens (and the cancer with it), before building it back up again from the donor’s cells. What a mini-transplant does is more like a Trojan Horse than an A-bomb. Even so, there’s nothing “mini” about the actual experience: neither for me, nor for the lucky person who may get to be my stem-cell donor.
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(I should emphasize, too, that a stem-cell transplant is but one of a number of treatment options I’m considering – we’re still at the talking stage.)
I’m especially grateful to them because I’m learning more about what it takes to be a stem-cell donor. Mostly gone – thankfully – are the days when the donation was accomplished through an arduous bone-marrow transplant. The newer, peripheral blood stem-cell transplant technology is a lot easier on the donors. It’s kind of like being a platelet donor or kidney-dialysis patient for a day or two: IV lines in either arm, and 4-6 hours of waiting while your blood is cycled through a machine that filters out the stem cells. Added to that are several, pre-donation days of testing, monitoring and receiving daily Neupogen shots, to build up the ol’ blood-cell count.
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In the Graduate School of Cancer, one of my first lessons is learning how wonderfully accommodating people can be – Kim, Jim, Dave, those anonymous donors, and others – giving of themselves to help a fellow human being. Thank you!