Blood cancer currently makes up around 10% of all
cancers in America, which include conditions such as lymphoma, leukemia,
and multiple myeloma.
News 12’s own Kristie Reeter lost her father to this cancer
but is incredibly grateful of the advancements in treatment that have been
made.
“It is truly amazing in how far we have come in the fight of
blood cancers” says Reeter.
Dr. Matthew Matasar, a lymphoma specialist at
Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center for fifteen years, says that the amount
of change in treatments for blood cancers is astonishing – highlighting that
while the focus is on making treatments more effective, it’s also about making
them “less toxic” he says.
As Blood
Cancer Awareness Month comes to a close, Dr. Matasar urges people to listen
to their bodies, reach out for care, and donate.
“The
signs of blood cancer can be non-specific” says Dr. Matasar. “fevers
that have been otherwise unexplained or weight loss that you don’t really
understand why it is happening.”
Donations don’t only have to come in the form of money – stem cell donation, which is no more complex than it would be to get blood drawn, can be extremely helpful to those dealing with blood cancers.
“There is this old misconception that to be a bone marrow
donor or a stem cell donor would require a surgery, invasive procedures” says
Dr. Matasar “that really is a thing of the past.”
For those interested in signing up for stem cell donation, you can do so through
here.