May 28, 2013

Sit Down for This One, Cuz' It Might Make Ya Faint...



I have been very, very lucky so far. Because my white cell counts have been normal, I have not required any supportive care, but just mention the words "supportive care" to an experienced cancer patient and she is likely to cringe. This is because "supportive care" is just a fancy way of saying, "you need to get Neupogen or Neulasta." No, we don't cringe because it is given in syringe form, nor because it hurts, nor because it has any particular side effects; rather, we cringe because Neupogen costs $3,000.00 PER INJECTION! It gets worse: Neulasta costs more than twice that. The decision between the two is a consideration of your particular progress and exactly how compromised your counts might be. Chemo wreaks havoc on your immune system and if your counts get too low, you might require the more costly injection, which involves a larger molecule of the main active ingredient, filgrastim, thus allowing the body to process it over a longer period of time. Either way, you're stuck up the proverbial estuary, without means of locomotion. And don't think insurance gets you off. Mine and many other plans are not exactly crazy about the cost of this, so don't be surprised if you get a bill anyway. There is hope, however. If you qualify, at least, a group known as The Safety Net Foundation offers assistance to people who are prescribed medications from the Amgen pharmaceutical company (yes, they have a bit of reputation for way overpricing their drugs). Aside from this, you just have to hope and pray that your counts stay good, and I'd recommend consuming lots of orange juice or other Vitamin C-rich products to give your immune system a hand where you can. For now, this issue remains highly controversial, and I consider myself very lucky to have avoided it so far. Nonetheless, I may have to receive this medication at some point, and I am sympathetic to those who receive it on a regular basis. Consider this: 6 round of chemo X $3,000.00/injection = $18,000 alone! By comparison, adriamycin (a common and powerful anti-cancer drug) costs between $25 and $75 per cycle. Something is majorly wrong here.

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