“I had lost two dress sizes for no reason”

The myeloma is a cancer which concerns each year 4,000 new patients in France. Little known, this disease of the bone marrow is due to the abnormal accumulation of a type of white blood cellsknown as plasma cells.

What kind of cancer you sang affects plasma cells which are cells of the immune system. These white blood cells are found in large numbers in the bone marrow.

Sue Bennett, a 68-year-old English patient, suffered from myeloma. Now in remission, she testifies in the British press and warns once morest symptoms who should have alerted him. She had notably observed an impressive weight loss several months before her diagnosis.

Myeloma: this blood cancer is incurable

“I had lost multiple dress sizes and a friend who hadn’t seen me for a few weeks was so shocked she told me I had to go to the doctor,” recalls Sue Bennett.

After several exams, the latter was diagnosed with blood cancer, supposedly incurable. The doctors explained to her that she was terminally ill.

“I might read on the caregiver’s face that this was not good news. When he said there was no cure, I thought I was doomed.”

Fortunately, if myeloma is incurable, treatments can control it and live with it. After one chemotherapy and an stem cell transplantSue Bennett has now been in remission for nearly nine years.

She underwent six rounds of chemotherapy, steroids and targeted therapies, as well as a stem cell transplant a year following her diagnosis.

If these symptoms did not seem obvious at first glance, the patient now believes that certain clues should have given him a hint. Medisite reviews them.

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