A Triumph in the War Against Cancer
Oncologist Brian Druker developed a new treatment for a deadly cancer, leading to a breakthrough that has transformed medicine
- By Terence Monmaney
- Photographs by Robbie McClaran
- Smithsonian magazine, May 2011, Subscribe
There’s a photograph of LaDonna Lopossa that helps tell the story. She’s all smiles, lying on the grass in a vaguely Betty Grable manner atop her own cemetery plot. The portrait was her husband’s idea—in their decades together it seems George, a.k.a. Mr. No Serious, never saw a gag he didn’t like—but it was LaDonna who came up with the cheesecake pose.
“OK,” George had said, “now take off your shirt.”
“George!”
Click.
On the one hand it’s a silly snapshot of a 60-year-old woman in a cardigan and sensible sandals in Winlock, Washington, one sunny day in May 2000. On the other hand it’s a glimpse of a possible future in which science has solved a fearsome problem. For this is how LaDonna and George faced her lethal cancer, not just whistling past the graveyard but clowning around in the middle of it.
Three months before, LaDonna was lying in a hospital bed in Olympia about to draw the curtain. There was a lot to let go of: four grown children, several grandkids, friends at church, a good marriage. (Never mind that as she lay there George was loudly telling the nurses he was going to hit the bars to find another wife, which she understood as his oddball effort to ease her mind.) She was ready to leave everyone and all those things and more because of the pain.
Her spleen, normally tucked beneath the lowest left rib and no bigger than a peach, was so engorged with white blood cells it was the size of a cantaloupe. She could hardly walk. Her skin was ghostly, her blood dangerously short of red cells. To breathe was a chore. Regular vomiting. Stabbing aches deep in her bones, where the marrow was frantically cranking out white cells, or leukocytes. Recurring fevers. And cold, strangely, unnervingly cold: she was freezing under the hospital blankets.
She was too old and too sick to undergo a bone marrow transplant, a grueling, highly risky treatment for her blood cancer, chronic myeloid leukemia (CML). She had already tried the other standard CML treatment, regular doses of the powerful compound interferon. But it so intensified her nausea, fevers and bone pain she abandoned the medication, come what may. With nothing left in their leukemia-fighting arsenal, the doctors were down to Dilaudid, a derivative of morphine, the narcotic painkiller. It was calming, it was comforting and for a patient in her condition it was, of course, the end.
George had given away most of her belongings and had reserved a U-Haul truck to cart his stuff to Southern California, where he would move in with one of their sons. The music for her funeral was chosen, including “Because I Have Been Given Much,” to be sung by the grandkids. When the hospital recommended moving LaDonna to a hospice, George took her home instead and followed her doctor’s advice to summon the children; Terry, Darren and Stephen flew up from the Los Angeles area, and Kelly drove over from her place in Winlock. One by one they went into the bedroom, sat at LaDonna’s bedside and said goodbye.
CML is one of the four main types of adult leukemia, but it is not common, striking 5,000 people in the United States each year. As a rule, it is fatal, with most patients dying within five years of being diagnosed. The first phase, a stealthy explosion of otherwise normal white blood cells, can last months or years; patients are often alerted to the condition by a routine blood test. If the disease goes unchecked, the white cells become increasingly abnormal, issuing helter-skelter from particular stem cells in bone marrow called myeloid cells; such leukocytes burst capillaries, overwhelm organs and suffocate tissues by crowding out oxygen-carrying red blood cells. The disease’s course is exceptionally predictable, physicians say, but its clockwork nature has also provided scientists with an opportunity: prying into the molecular gears and springs that propel CML, they understand it better than any other cancer.
Once, in early December 1999, George was driving to see LaDonna at the hospital in Olympia and stopped at a Safeway to buy a newspaper. Mr. No Serious is an avid reader, had even briefly run a bookstore with LaDonna, and he devoured the paper in her hospital room. As it happened, an experimental leukemia treatment was then making headlines. “Leukemia Pill Holds Promise,” the Associated Press reported, saying CML patients “had normal blood counts within a month of beginning treatment.” The study was then underway at the Oregon Health & Science University (OHSU) in Portland.
George hurried out of the hospital room to find LaDonna’s oncologist.
Target for Intervention
A steep, winding, tree-lined road leads to the main campus, which is perched near the summit of 574-foot-high Marquam Hill and on foggy days appears to float above the city like a castle in a fairy tale. Another route up to OHSU is the Portland aerial tram: two Swiss-made gondola cars of gleaming steel soar on cables high over Interstate 5, whizzing people back and forth between the west bank of the Willamette River and a hospital platform perched closer to the edge of a cliff than disembarking heart patients might wish it to be.
Brian Druker arrived at OHSU in 1993, years before the tram would be built and the hall-of-fame mural in the adjacent passageway would include a picture of him. Tall, as lanky and lightfooted as a greyhound, soft-spoken, Druker was 38 and had just spent nine years at the Dana-Farber Cancer Institute, part of Harvard Medical School, in Boston. “I saw cancer as being a tractable problem,” he recalled of the research path he chose after finishing medical school at the University of California, San Diego. “People were beginning to get some hints and some clues and it just seemed to me that in my lifetime it was likely to yield to science and discovery.”
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Comments (54)
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Ponatinib is one of the medications currently under investigation for its ability to treat CML and ALL (via http://www.rxwiki.com/ponatinib). Is there any news on when this will hit the market?
Posted by dailyrx on December 13,2012 | 03:36 PM
Dr. Druker well deserves Nobel Prize! His work ushered the era of effective treatment of metastatic stage IV melanoma, for example. For 40 years no one knew how to effectively combat this disease. It killed a lot of young people, including Bob Marley. PLX4032 (aka vemurafenib, trade name Zelboraf) is now FDA-approved. GSK prepares even better stuff- dabrafenib+tamatenib (BRAF+MEK inhibitor combo). Now the research in targeted therapy is exploding, and Dr. Druker ushered this watershed!
Posted by Gregory Pribush on October 24,2012 | 07:40 AM
this was very well writen. it's very thourgh amd keep writing stuff like this i enjoy reading it.
Posted by bryan wines on May 22,2012 | 02:16 PM
lovely
Posted by jneppz on May 2,2012 | 01:06 PM
Dude you a boss thanks man you awsomes
Posted by Munoz on May 2,2012 | 01:05 PM
Dr,
My mother was diagnosed with lukemia 11 years ago. she had from what i can understand two types, of the blood and of the bone marrow. they doctors here in spain managed to cure her of the blood but she has been on gleevec to treet the bone marrow for the past 11 years. in the past year she has been suffering from problems, fatuige, water retention, and she has been told after blood tests that she is very aneemic. they started giving her injections and pills to balkance her iron deficiency out but in the end they have found out that it is the gleevec that is causing the problem. in the last week they have taken her off gleevec and she has started taking another medication. as a result it has knocked her for 6 and she can barley walk around . they had to give her an emergency blood transfusion two days ago and it has made her worse. she is suffering from vomiting and nausea, and is constantly sleeping or out of breath. she has no apitite at all and no energy. I was suprised that they did not keep her in at the hospital to monitor her after the transfusion but i suppose due to all the doctors and nursing cuts here in spain, she would just be filling up another bed. i am truly conserned about her. do you have any suggestions as to how she sould prosceed and is what she is going through normal after a medication change and transfusion ? i would very much apreciate your advice.
many many many thanks,
Frank from spain, mallorca
Posted by frank on January 21,2012 | 01:40 PM
It is truely amazing how Gleevec came to be. Thank You Dr. Drunker and all the other doctors who put forth the effort to bring this to us. My husband was dx Sept 17 2003 intially statred gleevec for two years then he became resisant. He actually particapted in first phase trials for sprycel which actually just concluded a couple months ago. What a blessing for us to have this drug and several more if needed.
Posted by Tammy on October 13,2011 | 01:30 PM
I was so excited to read this article a friend told me about it. It was nice to see the person who came up with this drug. Praise the Lord Dr. Druker found this and he wanted to help others. So glad he he didn't give up. I was just diagnosed with CML August 15, 2011. Praise the Lord I don't have to go through the agony so many others have endured. What a mighty God we serve!! :)
Posted by Angie Burns on September 24,2011 | 10:42 AM
I have Hemochromatosis for over 20 yrs & was recently found to be in early stage of CLL which was confirmed by 2 blood tests. I also am slightly Anemic. I am 81 yrs young and in general good health. If there are any test programs I would be interested.I am presently being monitored at Sloan Kettering
ThANK YOU.
Posted by susan miller on August 6,2011 | 03:12 PM
I was diagnosed with a very rare form of CML after a routine blood test in August 2005. The difference versus regular CML is that my mutated gene is 5;12 and not 9;22. I was blessed to have been offered Gleevec through M D Anderson, Dr. Susan O'Brien and Lizzy Pavel PA and I'm in a testing protocol for my rare form of CML like disease. To make a long story short, I've been in complete remission for 6 years since taking Gleevec in November 2005. I thank God first, and al the researchers and MD's that made this targeted cancer drug successful and available. I hopeful that by being in a testing protocol that the drug will be available to anyone who needs it. Gleevec is still not FDA approved for my disease, therefore not available through Medicare D. The only way I got the Gleevec in 2006 was through a company retirement secondary benefit drug program. I got the Gleevec to in November 2005 and then our wonderful government took it away me in early 2006 when Medicare D stared. I have only contempt for our wonderful Medicare D program. After all, the only reason to have medical insurance like all insurance, is to cover the very serious situation. After paying into system at max. Level for 40 plus years, the medicare drug wasn't,t there when I needed it!!!
Gleevec worked for me and I continue to monitor blood and bone marrow once a year at M D Anderson in Houston.
When I hear about previous treatments for this blood disorder, I, so blessed to have Gleevec. Thanks be to God, I'm truly grateful!
Posted by Charles Hannah on July 14,2011 | 05:00 PM
After reading this wonderful article, Dr Brian Druker is my hero! Last month my dear brother, William E. Barnett of Williamsburg, VA was diagnosed with CML! Thank goodness for Dr Druker's research to discover the "miracle drug" Gleevac! In 1 1/2 months he is back to work and doing great! There are no words but to say "Thank You, Thank you!" over and over again.....
Bud's sister in California
Posted by Cindy R. Jagger on July 5,2011 | 09:01 PM
Would this drug help ALL patients?
Posted by Tina McAninch on July 5,2011 | 10:09 AM
Cancer is one of the most typical diseases in the Western countries. Its seriousness is seen in many countries where as many as every third person dies of it, and it is the second most common cause of death immediately after the cardiovascular diseases. Especially cancer of the lungs has become very common, and for example in the United States, it takes more victims than any other type of cancer.
Posted by telson on June 27,2011 | 12:47 AM
My Dad is 72 and is currently going thru chemo for AML..can this drug help him?
Scott
Posted by Scott on June 22,2011 | 01:35 PM
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