So, I spoke to my Neph last night about my high antibodies. He said I have 3 options. 1. There is a couple of doctors that do desensitization protocols on people (one in California and one in Maryland). They would have me come out there and they would do the iv treatment and then I would come back home and hope to get a transplant with lower antibodies (mine is 99%). He said they might only bring them down to 80% or it could go as low as 50%. You never know.
2. There is a new drug out that is used on people that have already had transplants that if they are having rejection issues, it is used as an iv to remove antibodies to prevent failure. He said he could write up a study to do an experiment on me (to the new drug company) and ask them if he could try it on me before a transplant to see if it would lower my antibodies, so hopefully I could get a transplant then.
3. Stay on D and maybe switch to home d. He said he transplanted a patient last week that had 98% antibodies, but had been on home D for 18 years. He said he wished he never would have gotten a transplant. He said he and his wife were so used to life with D, that it was easier that life with a transplant.
Hmmm...OH YEAH, the first option, is over a million dollars. Better make sure my insurance company will cover the ENTIRE amount before we try it.
Which would you choose? I think NONE. I am on in center D 3 nights a week. I go, get it done and go home. I asked him if I could just stay on D and hope for the best and he said yes, but sometimes, it is cheaper to do the desensitization than to be on D for years and years. btw, I am waiting on a pancreas and a kidney which must come from a cadaver.
What do yall think? Thanks, Tracy