About Me

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Bakersfield, CA, United States
Hans was a busy, happy, sweet and fearless three year old when he was diagnosed with Neuroblastoma. He fought his disease like a "gladiator" for nearly 6 years. Hans was an animal lover to his core. He was 'guarded' at home by his three cats, Black, Orange and Cotton. He also had his Golden Retriever, Honey, to keep him company. Hans enjoyed swimming, biking, gardening, grilling (he had his very own grill!), horseback riding, playing video games, building Legos, and flipping between Nickelodeon, Cartoon Network and Animal Planet. Hans loved all members of his family and he was a loyal friend. He had to go through a lot of treatment in his life. But Hans powered through it. His attitude was let's get this done! His motivation was always to get back home, to his family, pets, favorite foods and pool.

Tuesday, March 10, 2015

Treatment News!

Unituxin Approved for Deadly Pediatric Cancer


Today the FDA approved Unituxin from United Therapeutics to be used in front line therapy for Neuroblastoma.  The addition of immunotherapy to front line treatment for kids with neuroblastoma dramatically improves survival stats for these kids.  Now kids with Stage IV high risk NB have a 63% survival shot.  This drug has been in the pipeline for a long time, but not long enough for Hans to benefit from it.  A clinical trial in 2010 showed strong evidence for using immunotherapy in addition to standard therapy vs. just standard therapy alone - (chemotherapy, surgery, radiation and stem cell transplant - the most brutal cancer treatment protocol know to man, as it was).  It's amazing to see these changes in just the time since Hans was diagnosed, about 8.5 years ago.  We still have a long way to go, but it's good to celebrate the good news!!

Hans was diagnosed too early to enroll on this clinical trial for frontline therapy.  He did qualify for one round of immunotherapy, much, much later in treatment. We were grateful that our doctors were able to do that for him!!

1 comment:

Anonymous said...

God bless researchers and those who support it!!!!