CANCER
CENTER
Diagnosed as an infant,
Acute lymphoid leukemia (ALL)
Cancer is the second
leading cause of death among children, but today’s aggressive
therapies and innovative support systems are greatly improving
their odds.
Looking at 11-year-old Haden today, you’d never guess he learned
to walk with an IV pole.
Haden was diagnosed as an infant
with the most common childhood cancer, acute lymphoid leukemia
(ALL), a form of leukemia that attacks the bone marrow. It is
treatable in older children, but often fatal for infants. Haden
had only a 20 percent chance of surviving to age 2.
“You just never think about your
baby having cancer,” recalls Leslie, Haden’s mother. “It was a
scary time for us.”
Back in 1995, leukemia patients
would often relapse within nine months after treatment.
According to Dr. ZoAnn Dreyer, medical director of the
long-term survivor program at Texas Children’s Cancer
Center®, the time had come for a revolutionary approach.
Dreyer began a 46-week pilot
program that called for intensified levels of chemotherapy never
used on infants before. Previously, treatment for babies with
ALL involved lower doses for an extended period of more than two
years.
“We had to try to match the
aggressiveness of the leukemia with a very intensive, aggressive
treatment protocol,” says Dreyer.
Haden was one of the first patients
to undergo this therapy. It has since become the national
standard for treating all infants with ALL, and current infant
survival rates are well above 50 percent.
The treatment has given kids like
Haden a second chance—kids who just a few years ago had little
hope. Today, he is full of energy and looks forward to starting
sixth grade this year. At home, he and his younger brother Ragan
have the makings of a rock band—Haden plays the drums and Ragan
plays the electric guitar.
“It’s as if he knows what a great
gift life is, because he almost lost it,” says Leslie.
Kids
Courageous home |
Cancer Center
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