Winnipeg woman with brain cancer looks to U.S. to get Manitoba-developed surgery.
'I'm willing to fight,' says Anastasie Hacault, diagnosed with incurable brain cancer 5 years ago
By Bryce Hoye, CBC News Posted: Jul 19, 2017
Anastasie Hacault and Phil Kaehler are hoping to raise enough money to get Hacault brain surgery they believe will prolong her life.
Anastasie Hacault and Phil Kaehler are hoping to raise enough money to get Hacault brain surgery they believe will prolong her life. (Radio-Canada)
A laser-based brain surgery developed by Winnipeg researchers could help prolong Anastasie Hacault's life, but she says she'll have to spend thousands of dollars in the U.S. to get it.
"I'm willing to fight as long as it takes, I just need the tools," said 32-year-old Hacault. "I've been buying time."
She was diagnosed with brain cancer in 2012 and given three-to-five years to live. It happened just as she was getting to know Phil Kaehler, who would become her husband in 2016.
"On our second date, she told me that she did have a brain tumour," said Kaehler, 32. "That was her telling me if I wanted to run away, I could. But I wasn't going to because she's an amazing woman ... she's been so strong."
Hacault has undergone surgeries, radiation and chemotherapy in recent years that have enabled her to keep working at her job in agricultural services and maintain a relatively normal life.
But this May, things started to take a turn for the worse. The tumour on the right side of her brain began to swell, causing her to lose mobility on the left side of her body.
"I lost the ability to really walk, I can't type anymore," she said.
NeuroBlate system
Image from Monteris Medical Inc. shows how the NeuroBlate laser system works in treating brain tumours. (Monteris Medical Inc.)
Hacault and Kaehler, who learned the procedure could cost about $150,000, are banking on a GoFundMe campaign to cover the cost of a procedure south of the border.
The online fundraiser, launched July 10, had raised nearly $63,000 as of Tuesday night. Apart from raising enough money, Hacault's condition must stablize before they can take a plane south.
'Perfect candidate'
The NeuroBlate laser-based method was created by Mark Torchia and Richard Tyc of the University of Manitoba. It allows surgeons to target tumours in hard-to-reach areas of the brain with precision.
Kaehler said the nature of his wife's tumour makes her a "perfect candidate" for NeuroBlate, and that her doctors believe a traditional surgical method would almost certainly paralyze her.
The problem is it is no longer offered by any hospitals or clinics in Canada.
Manitoba brain laser inventors win Governor General's Innovation Award
New laser method could help neurosurgeons get at hard-to-reach tumours
Brain cancer laser surgery treatment a first in Canada
Neuroblate was used on 27 patients at the Vancouver General Hospital dating back to 2014, a spokesperson with Vancouver Coastal Health said in an emailed statement.
The couple spoke with B.C. neurosurgeon Dr. Brian Toyota at the end of June about receiving the surgery. Toyota has used NeuroBlate on patients in the past but said it's no longer available, Hacault said.
B.C. neurosurgeon Dr. Brian Toyota previously performed brain surgeries using NeuroBlate. Vancouver Coastal Health said he was unavailable for comment. (CBC)
"That's when he said it had actually gotten shut down a couple weeks before," Kaehler said. "It was heartbreaking for us."
Vancouver Coastal Health is currently exploring ways to keep using the laser treatment.
"It is our hope that the collection of more data in a clinical trial setting will provide a more definitive evaluation for the therapy and the benefits to patients," the spokesperson said, adding the health authority also needs to find a stable funding source.
'Pricey' procedure
Neil Berrington, a neurosurgeon with the Winnipeg Regional Health Authority and a U of M professor, said there are a couple reasons there isn't a NeuroBlate laser installed in any Winnipeg hospitals.
"There's relatively few patients who would have strong indications to have the procedure done, and secondly the device and the disposable is pricey," he said.
"So if you want to be responsible and practise cost-effective medicine, it's probably in your interest to have those patients treated elsewhere for the moment."
Berrington said Canadian patients tend to be referred to a clinic in Cleveland, Ohio, that is actively performing "a lot of these" surgeries.
"Our only other option is the U.S. and they have multiple sites there," Kaehler said, adding a spokesperson with Manitoba Health's out-of-province benefits program has asked for a referral letter from Hacault's doctors.
"We have to wait for the game plan here to take effect. Hopefully there's some coverage."
Bring it home
His wife's cancer, known as an anaplastic astrocytoma tumour, doesn't have a cure but the couple is confident the procedure could prolong and improve Hacault's quality of life.
If nothing else, the couple hopes their battle to access the procedure could pave the way to help someone else down the road. Hacault said she doesn't want anyone else to go through the uncertainty she is currently experiencing.
"I would really like this to be the only case of this happening in Canada," she said. "We need to get a program started in Canada."
Bryce Hoye is a journalist and science writer with a background in wildlife biology. Before joining CBC Manitoba, he worked for organizations like the Canadian Wildlife Service monitoring birds in Manitoba, the Northwest Territories, Nova Scotia and Alberta. Story idea?
CBC
Email bryce.hoye@cbc.ca.
Twitter: @brycehoye
With files from Radio-Canada and Janice Grant
No comments:
Post a Comment