So, Judycares and husband had our first Telcon with the case manager assigned us by the pharmaceutical mfg of Opattro, the drug we will use to treat husband's hATTR. The initial news regarding insurance coverage is wonderful. With Medicare and our supplemental insurance, drug costs and infusions should be totally covered. We don't yet have a start date. Treatment with this drug is so new, and the disease is so rare, there are not many places that have staff trained to administer. So, our journey begins. I will post updates along the way. Maybe our story will help someone else along the way. Blessings to all.
Thanks for the update and here's hoping that this course of treatment is successful!
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7041433/
Husband will receive his first Onpattro infusion today.
We also were referred to a cardiologist to determine if husband's heart is involved. We met with cardiologist last week. We found that in Colorado where we live, there are not many doctors with experience diagnosing or treating amyloidosis. This cardiologist, referred by our primary care physician, has some training both from his residency and a short internship with an amyloidosis specialist. Because husband already had the genetic confirmation of the Val30Met gene mutation, the cardiologist limited his initial visit to an EKG and vitals. He advised the test that would reveal cardiac amyloid deposition is a PYP scan. A radioactive injection that when exposed to another scan, causes amyloid deposits to glow, thus confirming presence in the heart. This test is scheduled for early January.
mMeanwhile, my husband's symptoms have worsened. His weakness and fatigue keep him chair-bound and napping throughout the day. If he does something like taking out the trash, his breathing is labored and he must rest afterward..When he eats, he feels full very quickly. He is eating barely half of what he was two months ago And continues to lose weight. In the past two days, he has noticed considerable loss of strength in his left leg from his knee to his foot. He fell the day before yesterday after trying to bend forward to pick up something. He was not injured. But he did reveal that this was not the first time he has fallen. (News to me.) The falls, the weakness, the reduction in eating, all tell me that disease is progressing rapidly. The infusion can't come soon enough.
I will share how the infusion goes and how he tolerates the treatment. Keep us in your thoughts.