On July 3rd I attended a meeting jointly organised by a number of PD support organisations which was a truly memorable experience! It focussed on clinical trials from the perspectives of PwP (especially those with experience of trials), carers/ their families & medical professionals. The event was brilliant & for me a breath of fresh air as it delivered ‘what it said on the tin’. I have attended many meetings & functions, especially about patient involvement /empowerment, which have raised expectations but failed to meet their objectives.
There was time planned to circulate which enabled me to talk to most of the people who stayed for lunch & to make brief contact with others over coffee.
I felt privileged listening to fellow PwPs who have been diagnosed for over 20 years sharing their unique experiences of the condition: changes in treatments, therapies, procedures & other clinical aspects but especially changes in perception & attitudes from others with PD, professionals & the public.
I was there as a PwP who has experience of medical & clinical trials.
I am currently involved in the Transeuro Stem Cell Transplant trial which involves a number of European countries. As each country has its own code of medical ethics this has delayed the schedule. The final hold-up was a UK bill re the use of human tissue in research which went before parliament in February but which had not been formally passed in May. When this happens the first transplants will take place in Sweden, hopefully before Christmas.
On the good news front: similar transplants were successfully completed in Scotland in January on patients who had suffered strokes.
I found out about the Scottish trial by Googling PD clinical trials or something like ‘stemcell transplant clinical trials- results/ news of/ etc’.
If you do this & find something in which you are interested why not find out more? You will get the latest information, be able to talk to people at the cutting edge & to judge for yourself the pros & cons of taking part.