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Managing CML: Dealing With Drug Resistance
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Learning The Language of CML Lab Tests
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CML After Age 65: What are the Treatment Options?
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What problems with bone and joint pain do CML patients sometimes experence with Gleevec?
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CML Treatment: Medication or Transplantation?
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What types of responses can people with CML have to therapy?
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When might doctors combine drugs in the treatment of CML?
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Facts to Know While Undergoing Therapy for CML
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What happens to blood cells when a person has CML?
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Side Effects of CML Therapy: What Can Be Done?
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What problems with fluid retention to CML patients sometimes have with Gleevec?
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What are the Phases of CML?
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What gastrointestinal problems do CML patients sometimes experience with Gleevec?
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Tracking Treatment Progress: Lab Tests For CML
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Learn to Read Your Lab Results: CML Tests
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The Faulty Gene Behind Chronic Myeloid Leukemia
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How have patient's experiences with CML changed in recent years?
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, George Darr , Stephen O'Brien MBChB, PhD, Judy Orem , David Savage MD, Richard Stone MD
For patients with chronic myeloid leukemia, establishing a close relationship with their doctor is very important. With new treatment options available patients and doctors need to be able to communicate freely and be aware of the latest research developments. Find out how CML patients and the doctors who treat them, can work together to treat this disease.
ANNOUNCER: Chronic myeloid leukemia or CML is a form of cancer that many patients initially don't even know they have. Often found during a routine blood test, CML is a disease in which too many white blood cells are made in the bone marrow. For a patient with CML, establishing a close relationship with their doctor is very important. Right from the start, a patient should make sure they understand all they can about the disease.
RICHARD STONE, MD: There are three major phases of CML. There is the chronic phase, which is the way most people present. There is the accelerated phase, which occurs when patients get a bit sicker. There is the blast crisis phase which is a fairly advanced phase. They need to know what phase they're in. They should know their blood counts, their chromosome status. They should be able to communicate to the doctor everything about how they feel.
JUDY OREM: I think patients and doctors would work better together if the patients understand what they have, they know what questions to ask, if they form a relationship with their doctor that is such that says I want to know these things when I ask them. I would like these answers.
ANNOUNCER: The first answer many patients want, concerns their treatment options. It's a decision they should discuss thoroughly with their doctor. The choices for CML range from using drugs or radiation to kill cancerous cells, to bone marrow transplants, currently the only known cure.
RICHARD STONE, MD: Patients and physicians should decide upon a course of treatment after careful discussion of all the treatment options. Every patient has a different style for decision-making. Some patients like to leave everything in the hands of their physician. Others want to take control and want to read the literature themselves and be an equal partner with their physician. Every single style is acceptable and has to be done. The exact means of deciding on the treatment options really depend on the patient him or herself.
STEPHEN O'BRIEN, MD, PhD: I think doctors should be aware of the latest data. They should trawl the Internet as their patients will do. Keep up to date with meetings and literature so that they have really very accurate and up-to-date information, particularly on drug therapy, and also on newer forms of bone marrow transplantation because it's a constantly shifting field.
ANNOUNCER: Some patients with CML feel they must take the lead in treating their own disease.
JUDY OREM: When you go to see your doctor you really have to be your own advocate. Make sure that the questions, the things you think are important get covered by your doctor. I hear patients say "well whatever my doctor wants I'll do" and I'm going, you need to know what you need.
GEORGE DARR: I also think that a patient needs to do his or her homework so you come to these visits with some informed ideas about what you need to know and can make the best use of the medical professional's time.
ANNOUNCER: Once treatment starts, patients play a key role in monitoring their condition.
STEPHEN O'BRIEN, MD, PhD: They should report back any side effects that may or may not be of major significance. But they should report things back to their physician.
RICHARD STONE, MD: If they know exactly what their symptoms are, if they keep a diary of when they take their medicine. If they write down their symptoms when they have them so they can remember them, that would be great. But if they can't do that, that's okay too because we can ask them those questions and find out.