Typically on a day like Tuesday, Bianca would stop eating and drinking from midnight the night before to prepare for theatre. We went in early in the morning - We had to be on the ward by 08:00.
Here Bianca is arriving at CHOC - the Paediatric Oncology unit in Christchurch.


A nurse would access her port by putting in a line into the port. The port is sitting under the skin. Bianca likes helping to clean the skin, but the nurse usually does it too. Bianca doesn't always enjoy the experience of getting her wiggle put in and sometimes it makes her cry. Not so much that it is sore (we put Emla cream on and this numbs the skin), and she soon smiles again after this. In Wellington we have Kate (the play specialist) and she is absolutely brilliant at providing distraction and so the experience is more fun than traumatic. We really missed her when we went to Christchurch. Kate is definitely one of the favourites at Wellington Hospital.









After the 30 minutes, they then give 4 hours of hydration.
Then in the evening at the same time of supper Bianca got Co-trimoxazole and Fluconozle. If it is not a Tuesday, Wednesday or Thursday then just Fluconozole and sometimes there is also a steroid called Dexamethasone which we don't have at the moment.

It is not always like that and there are different medicines at different times - sometimes there are lots on a particular day and sometimes there are less.
The medicines we give at home are usually given in the morning with breakfast, then at supper time and then chemo drugs like Thioguanine and Mercaptopurine are given 2 hours after supper and cannot be given with citrus or dairy. Then usually there needs to be an hour after the chemo before she can eat or drink anything again.
The medicines we give at home are usually given in the morning with breakfast, then at supper time and then chemo drugs like Thioguanine and Mercaptopurine are given 2 hours after supper and cannot be given with citrus or dairy. Then usually there needs to be an hour after the chemo before she can eat or drink anything again.
There is another chemo drug we sometimes give at home called Methotrexate which she takes by mouth once a week and this is not given at the same time as the lumbar puncture procedure where Methotrexate is given in the spine. All other chemo treatments are usually given at the hospital. We don't have the oral Methotrexate in this phase.
For this phase I created a form that we keep in the kitchen so that we are able to tick off when we give medicines. Thank you Chris at Ward 18, I borrowed your idea.

The phases in Bianca's treatment plan are:
- Induction (aimed at getting children in remission by the end of the 5 weeks).
- Intensified Consolodation (56 days)
- Standard Interim Maintenance (56 days)
- Standard Delayed Intensification (42 days of giving chemo with allowance for blood counts to recover).
- Standard Maintenance (84 days repeated until the date on which the Standard Interim Maintenance was started and will run for 2 years, so as an estimate we will be in this phase until approximately 11 September 2009).
Starting dates and total time on each phase depends on blood count and sometimes there are delays if it takes the body longer to recover after some of the treatment or if there are infections.
Not all kids have the same treatment plan and we are on the IS Study Arm on a clinical trial (AALL0331). There are lots of factors taken into consideration when they choose a treatment plan, things such as age, type of leukemia, response to the treatment, the initial diagnosis and so on.
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