Article from the CLLSA newsletter (On-line later this week)
It was genuinely inspiring to meet some of the people behind the research that is
changing our understanding of CLL, to get to see some of the kit behind the lab reports
and research papers, and to get a broad overview of the treatments and trials coming
on-line in the near future.
These guys are so committed, so engaged with their work, and so determined to make life
better for us CLLers, and people with blood cancers in general. It feels very good indeed
to know that people of this calibre, determination, warmth, and humanity are out there
working on our behalf...
It seems that our systemic, fluid, relatively slow-growing tumour type has suddenly
positioned us as the lab-rats of preference for the modern cancer researcher. As it
pointed out, we are an ideal source of continuous, progressive cell harvesting for
research, unlike solid tumours which tend to be excised or otherwise removed and provide
only a one-off harvest for the researcher. CLL is definitely emerging from its backroom
role as a dull, unsexy, and somewhat overlooked orphan disease.
I've been sceptical (as I'm sure many of us have) about some of the more celebratory
predictions of imminent cure currently floating around the CLL sphere. However, the 'C'
word was used with confidence by Professors Bunce and Fegan with potential 8-12 year time
parameters suggested...who knows how accurate this might be, but these are level-headed
clinicians and researchers who know their field inside out, and don't seem prone to
hyperbole. The potential cost of some of the new treatments coming on line was quite
shocking however, raising questions about how the health service will cope with the cost
of some of the newer therapies as their application across a broader range of cancers may
expand...a brave new world of cancer treatment options in a society where 1 in 3 of us
can expect a cancer diagnosis in our lifetime may demand a brave new health economy, and
that isn't going to be easy to fund in the current climate...
That issue aside, I think we have much to anticipate in terms of progress with CLL
treatment in the coming years...
Julia Kennedy
You can listen to the Audio recording and power point talks of the speakers at: youtube.com/watch?v=i8JegCa...
Professor Chris Fegan - What are the problems faced by CLL patients
youtube.com/watch?v=YB_TsSl...
Professor Chris Bunce - How we're beating CLL
youtube.com/watch?v=cvtrHys...
Dr Guy Pratt - The Leukaemia & Lymphoma Research Trials Acceleration Programme