SundaySun (KC) 18-May-08

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Move to North could help cancer patient live

By Sarah Robertson, Sunday Sun

Ian Walker, who could be forced to move to the North in order to get cancer treatment

A CANCER patient may be forced to sell his home and move to the North if a last-ditch appeal to his NHS trust for a life-prolonging drug fails.

Image:(KC) WALKER, Ian 02.jpg

Ian Walker, 69, has been refused the drug Sutent by health bosses in West Berkshire as the trust doesn’t now fund Sutent following a change in policy.

Mr Walker, an electrical engineer, suffers from kidney cancer and has been offered a less effective drug which has significant side effects.

Sarah Anderson

His daughter, Sarah Anderson, 40, an eye specialist who works at a York Hospital, is furious at yet another example of the NHS postcode lottery for treatment.

She said: "York doesn’t fund it either, but Newcastle and some of the surrounding PCTs in the North East do, so we are considering whether he should move.

"It is such a big thing moving house and we don’t want his quality of life ruined with the stress and disruption of moving.

"I’ve been a doctor since 1991 and you just expect that this big organisation we work for will look after you.

"As a medic, I feel angry towards the NHS because it is supposed to act according to a socialist principle to provide healthcare for all.

"I want this drug to be available to everyone no matter where they live.

"Kidney cancer is very difficult to treat and the only other drug that can help keep the illness at bay is Alpha Interferon which makes you feel very ill so that your quality of life is horrible.

"If Dad should lose his life to cancer, it would be devastating, but to lose his life to bureaucracy would be far, far worse."

Mr Walker’s symptoms began in the summer last year and tests revealed he had a large tumour on his kidneys.

Sarah said: "My father then underwent major surgery to remove his kidney and made a brilliant recovery, but it was found that there was still some cancer left and that it may have spread to his lungs.

"His consultant told him they would apply for @@Sutent.

"Imagine his surprise when he was told that West Berkshire PCT would no longer fund that treatment because of a change in policy."

Although Sutent has been licensed in Europe since 2006, NICE — The National Institute of Clinical Excellence — has yet to decide whether it is effective enough to warrant the cost to the NHS.

It is not due to pass judgment until next year so individual PCTs are allowed to make their own policy regarding usage.

Sarah has already written to Health Minister Alan Johnson but received a reply back from his office which said there is not an "infinite amount of money" to pay for all treatments.

They’ve been told by the NHS if they fund the drug themselves the NHS will no longer pay for any of his healthcare. Now she’s pinning her hopes on an appeal to West Berkshire PCT on Wednesday.

She added: "The PCT has decreed that the consultant has to show the patient has exceptional circumstances before it will allow funding for Sutent. Well, my dad is exceptional to me."


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See also Daily Mail (KC) 10-May-08

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