Hi everyone
This is just a posting that I would like to make to provide some hope for people who have sub-optimal / slow responses to the TKIs and who miss the milestones. I am writing this for no other reason than that I personally experienced slow progress on dasatinib, and I searched myself to a standstill online to find some good news. Sadly, most of the scholarly articles I found were all doom and gloom and caused me a great deal of unnecessary anxiety. My doctor was also concerned - briefly, my history is as follows:
Diagnosis - 72% BCR-Abl on the international scale
3 months - 2.7%. I was delighted to reach the "magic" 10% level.
6 months - 1.4%. Suddenly a slowing down from a good start, and not yet reached the 1% milestone recommended by 6 months.
9 months - 0.57%. Finally a CCyR was confirmed, but the doctor was worried that I would not reach MMR by 12 months.
12 months - 0.36%. No MMR, outside the ELNet guidelines and concerning because dasatinib is supposed to work faster than imatinib. Because I was very ill when diagnosed, the doctor decided to hit hard and fast with dasatinib. She was concerned that I was still three times above MMR.
15 months - 0.24%. A drop of a third, but still double the level required for MMR and already 3 months late. The doctor was visibly concerned and said that I might need a second BMB as well as a drug switch if the level still had not reached below 0.1% by the next appointment. I was also worried because I felt that, at this rate, I would not hit it by 18 months.
18 months - 0.16%. This was still significantly above MMR and now I had missed the NCCN guidelines (MMR at 18 months) as well. My doctor decided to leave me on the dasatinib because the numbers were moving in the right direction. I also managed to avoid the dreaded BMB for a second time.
21 months - 0.12%. Still sluggish progress but at least in the right direction.
24 months - 0.05%. Somehow there was a significant drop this time and I finally hit MMR more than two years after diagnosis.
So it IS possible to eventually get there, and I hope that my figures will provide some hope to others who are having difficulties with slow responses. I have been fully adherent in taking the drug and have never missed a dose - the doctor said that this is crucial in eventually attaining MMR, and my advice to others is to just keep taking the medication, hoping and trusting that you will eventually reach MMR.
One more interesting thing: due to side effects that arose late into treatment, my haematologist is now switching me BACKWARDS to imatinib, after some consultations with Prof Tim Hughes, a leading CML expert in Australia. To my knowledge, few people actually switch from a second generation drug back to a first generation one, and it is hoped that my MMR is now stable enough for the imatinib to maintain it at this low level. I will start the imatinib on 1 May and keep posting about my experience, as I believe that I am quite a rare case.
Good luck to everyone and all the best for a speedy recovery.
Martin