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Clementine

Our daughter was born six weeks premature and spent 12 days in the NCCU after birth. While this experience was difficult enough, it was nothing compared to the medical journey ahead of us. Clementine quickly caught up in weight and development and was a typical, happy baby. Since we, the parents, work full time, she started at a local daycare.  

It was not surprising then when she started to catch the occasional cold or virus – except that when a bug came through a classroom, she would catch every single one. The coughs would go on for weeks. She caught hand, foot and mouth disease twice in three months. Her eardrums kept rupturing from simmering ear infections. And then at 13 months, we woke up one morning to her left cheek swollen to the size of a plum. We immediately took her to the pediatrician who diagnosed her with an inflamed salivary gland. Eleven days later it hadn’t improved, and a second pediatrician sent us to the ER for an ultrasound of the lump. It ended up being a large abscess and required surgical draining and several days in the children’s hospital. From then on, there wasn’t a month that didn’t include another virus, visits to the pediatrician, and more antibiotics. Laryngitis, roseola, bronchiolitis, severe mouth ulcers… Our poor baby’s happy spirit was crushed under the weight of constant illness and fevers and we were constantly rearranging our work schedules to manage backup childcare. 

Time and time again I asked the pediatrician, “Is all of this normal? It seems like she is sick a lot. I know I’m a first time parent, but this doesn’t seem typical.” Time and time again, she reassured me this was normal for a daycare baby. My gut said that something else had to be going on. It didn’t add up. Her peers were not this sick. We were suffering. Our baby would lose weight from being unable to eat from the mouth sores, her lips chapped from drool she couldn’t bear to swallow. Her bottom would bleed from the horrendous diaper rashes caused by back to back oral antibiotics. At our lowest point, she couldn’t gather the energy to play – lying on the ground in a ball, simply repeating “no, no, no” – not even letting us touch her or hold her.  

Finally the pediatrician called for more thorough bloodwork and a review of past bloodwork. I was on my way to do a radio interview when she called me with the results. She was vague but said we needed to make an immediate appointment with the pediatric hematology/oncology department. “Is it leukemia?” I asked her very directly. “We don’t know,” she replied. I made our first appointment from the recording studio lobby and tried to keep it together. 

It was not leukemia. A bone marrow biopsy revealed that our daughter’s body makes neutrophils and then immediately kills them. Her absolute neutrophil counts ranged from 200-700 over the course of the previous months, but this had been attributed to the fact that she was always in the middle of an illness when tested. Our hematologist explained that her neutropenia was likely auto-immune in nature as all evidence shows that her white blood cells were normal at birth. At some point, probably around 9 months, her body turned on itself in response to a virus that looked very similar to neutrophils. While serious, they sometimes refer to her type of neutropenia as Benign Neutropenia of Childhood – hers being less benign than most. We cling to the hope that she will outgrow this auto-immune response and experience a remission – a hope most people with neutropenia do not have.  

During a month of watch-and-wait to determine if our daughter’s diagnosis was severe enough to need Neupogen, a series of skin abscesses put us in the children’s hospital once more. She began taking Neupogen twice a week at 22 months and we have not had a major infection or illness since. And like most daycare kids, she only gets the occasional cold. 

Today, Clementine gets one small injected dose (0.2 mL) of Neupogen per week. Daddy and Clementine have a ritual of picking out the colorful bandaid she will use and which YouTube video she gets to watch during the quick poke. Most nights she will protest a bit and squirm away, but there are not usually tears. We had really hoped to avoid injections, but her counts were simply too low. With the medicine, her counts are in the almost low normal range. At the very beginning she had weekly blood draws as the doctors determined her optimal dosage. Then, it was draws once a month. And then, draws every three months.  

Basic sanitizing and hand washing is key. We have worked with her daycare to make sure that the other children are washing their hands too and not coming to school sick. We watch her wounds like a hawk for signs of infection or abscesses. Honestly, we are probably too lax now that she has been well for so many months. She’s a rough and tumble little kid, like most active toddlers. She has not needed any specialized care or accommodations at daycare or home.  

With a colicky new baby in the house, our neutropenic toddler is the easy one! If she is experiencing pain or fatigue from the neutropenia, she is unable to articulate it. Since she is 2.5 years old, we try to keep her on a typical toddler routine with healthy food eaten by the whole family and a mandatory afternoon naptime (or play semi-quietly in your room time). Neupogen changed everything for our family. It’s incredible how much healthier she is compared to this time last year. 

Last week I had to describe Clementine’s illness to a new Sunday school teacher. “Clementine has a very weak immune system. She has a rare blood disorder called neutropenia,” I usually begin. They look surprised since she is already bouncing around the room, going from toy to toy with enthusiasm. “Her body does not make enough white blood cells to fight infection. It will be important that everyone in the room washes their hands well.” We’ve never had anyone question the information or want to be anything but helpful. If anything, we have to assure others that it’s ok for Clementine to be around the kid with the runny nose or travel from home. 

We know that our child’s health outcome could be worse. Many families in that same hematology/oncology wing of the children’s hospital have it so much worse than us. That being said, there is no way to prepare yourself for having a child with a chronic illness. How is my baby anything other than perfect? The deep grief we have felt at not being able to protect her from pain, and that it took so long (although really just months) to get her the right help, cannot be understated. We have suffered from this illness, but at least we now know what to call it. We have learned to recognize the many faces of this enemy and are so grateful to have a medicine with which to face it.   

To the family or person with neutropenia, it is ok to grieve and to be angry. I am angry that I know where the best toys are in the children’s hospital. I am angry we had to cancel our annual Thanksgiving trip because we were too afraid to fly with our daughter on an airplane. I am angry my daughter looks at me with big blue eyes every Wednesday and Sunday and says, “Mama, I get my shot now. I get a boo boo (bandaid). I cry maybe?” But after you are done crying, you must look toward hope. One of the best things I did in the early days was reach out (through the Neutropenia Network) to a family in New York whose 18-year-old son has chronic severe neutropenia, diagnosed at age 2. Here was a family, many years into their neutropenia journey, providing evidence of a child who was thriving and happy. 

Our daughter Clementine is smart, curious and confident. She reads dozens of books a day and loves to explore outside. She lives for special treats and surprises and loves her baby brother. We don’t know if she really will outgrow her neutropenia. I do know that with proper management and support, it will not define her future. 

Filed Under: More Personal Stories

Ramona

My name is Ramona. I was born in Romania in 1986. I had a twin for 19 days, but unfortunately, my brother died quickly after birth. Throughout my childhood, I noticed that I went through far more illnesses and infections than any of my peers. I was often sick with colds, influenza, sinusitis, ear infections, cystitis, and many others, but fortunately I never suffered from septicemia, nor did I have any ”near-death” experiences. I spent much of my early life not knowing that I had neutropenia. It wasn’t until I was in my twenties when I moved to Italy that I got diagnosed. In Italy, I got tested for antineutrophil cytoplasmic antibodies (ANCA). The test was positive. This allowed me to finally get a diagnosis for my symptoms: autoimmune neutropenia.

My hematologist thought it could be a Behcet-like syndrome apart from neutropenia. However, my ANA, ENA, C1, and C3 complements have all tested negative. I also don’t have uveitis, which is a primary symptom of Behcet’s.

As part of my neutropenia, I get mouth and genital ulcers. I sometimes have problems digesting foods, which makes it a condition similar to colitis. Recently, I suffered from a really trying fatigue and shortness of breath. I had attributed it to anemia, but a renal biopsy proved I had reactive AA amyloidosis involving my kidneys and bone marrow (platelets). I have also had to undergo various bone marrow biopsies because of my severe neutropenia – my absolute neutrophil count (ANC) was below 500. 

What I hate the most about neutropenia is the fact that it keeps me under constant pressure with all the blood tests required and all anxiety they bring. I haven’t been through G-CSF therapy very often because I haven’t had very severe infections – doctors tend to give it only when I have a fever. I used it only a couple of times during hospitalization because I had a fever. I usually took plenty of antibiotics when influenza came or when going to the dentist’s.

I wanted to share my story with neutropenia so that everyone else who is diagnosed with neutropenia would understand that long term inflammation and repeated infections can, in some cases, after many years, lead to renal failure. In order to prevent this, neutropenics and those with inflammatory conditions must control their serum amyloid A (SAA) protein by running a simple blood test.

I really hope other neutropenics have it a little better than me as I have had little social life and have been fighting anxiety for as long as I can remember. Besides kindergarten, I did attend a regular school, but I missed many classes when I was little because I constantly had influenza.

My hope is that one day, researchers will discover a treatment other than G-CSF – or even better, a cure – for neutropenia.

Filed Under: More Personal Stories

Sheryl & Debbie

Written by Amanda LaClaire

I’m her brain, haha. Sheryl’s more creative-minded and I’m more numbers oriented. I have a PhD in mathematics and do medical researching, uh, kind of everywhere. She’s a full-time teacher and understands things like art. That stuff just goes completely over my head. Numbers make sense to me.

(We just have two different kinds of minds is all; I don’t actually mean that I’m smarter than her.)

This is our first time coming to the Conference. Sheryl has idiopathic neutropenia and I’m her sister. We’re both from Pennsylvania, respectively, but like I said, my work requires me to travel. It was a last-minute decision to come here. We heard about the Conference two weeks ago and here we are. Our goal is to see about getting Sheryl’s dose lowered. She’s not as young as she used to be, so we’ve got to take osteoporosis into consideration. I mean, she already has all the markers that suggest she’s likely to get osteoporosis: female, over fifty, white, and the medication at this dosage isn’t doing her any favors.

The start of our journey began in 2009. Sheryl had gone in for a routine colonoscopy, but they noticed in her pre-procedure blood tests that her counts were low. Unfortunately, the doctors dismissed her low blood count believing that she was just fighting off an infection. We immediately set up an appointment with the hematologist. I was not about to let this go. What can I say? She’s my sister and I get protective. Sure, there was a point when we considered she might in fact be fighting off an infection. After all, Sheryl’s a full-time teacher at an alternative school. She’s constantly around children and kids. It would have been entirely possible that she picked something up from one of these students, except that she kept getting sick. She’d go weeks without teaching due to illness. You can’t be a “sometimes teacher,” so it was better to be safe than sorry. Sadly, this hematologist didn’t work out as well as we hoped.

So, began our doctor hopping adventure. We saw a naturalist doctor who had Sheryl on some different cleanses, but that didn’t work. There were other doctors we saw, too. Their diagnoses were ridiculous. One doctor claimed it had something to do with her urine, which I knew didn’t make a wick of sense. I’m still mad at that one doctor who completely dismissed Sheryl. We had travelled essentially the length of New England to see this guy, so we thought he’d be good. The only answer we got was essentially that she should be an adult about it and stop being dramatic. The whole drive home we sat in silence. He made Sheryl cry! That doctor had lost any sensitivity training he learned in med school. It was so wrong.

Eventually, Sheryl decided that enough was enough and we stopped seeing doctors. From 2011 to 2014 she basically just lived her life. I did, too, but she just kept getting sick. That same year, 2014, Sheryl agreed to return to our original hematologist. The original hematologist tested her for cyclical neutropenia because at this point we had noticed some patterns and did our own research via Google. Sheryl didn’t have the right markers for cyclical neutropenia, but she did indeed get diagnosed with idiopathic neutropenia.

Soon after Sheryl received her official diagnosis, our hematologist connected us to a Boston medical fellow who helped us get on the Registry. Now, here we are. Hopefully, we can get this doctor to listen to us and lower her dose. The Conference has been great so far in helping us navigate adulthood neutropenia, so things are looking up it seems.

Filed Under: Personal Stories

Beth

My daughter was diagnosed in 2006 with Cyclic Neutropenia. In 2009 her hematologist suggested we get her tested for Cohen Syndrome. She came back positive. Her Cyclic turned to Congenital. I uploaded a picture from our Cohen Syndrome Family Meeting this past June. We are the ones on the far left. All the children in the picture have some level of Neutropenia. If it wasn’t for the Neutropenia diagnose I may never have known about the Cohen Syndrome. I waited 14 years for that.

My daughters ANC went to 120 and in 2010 we started Neupogen daily. She gets a CBC every month. She seems to stay around 1200-1500. We did a trial in May of 3 times a week. Her ANC went straight down. My daughter doesn’t speak so it’s up to me to be really aware of how she feels. She has a clean diet, she exercises and goes to school and I let her rest as much as possible.

I always worry but am really cautious. I am on the board of the Cohen Syndrome Association as the Family Liaison for neutropenia. I have registered families at our conference from all over the world. Currently we have about 500 diagnosed and about 35 families registered with the SCNIR. I have worked with Audrey Anna to do this.

I tell it like it is and everyone involved with my daughter knows to contact me immediately.

Neutropenia changed our lives in the biggest way when it led to my daughters Cohen Syndrome diagnoses. I waited 14 years for a diagnosis. Everything I do is to keep my daughter healthy, happy and comfortable. My recommendation is to learn everything you can. And to network with other families. There is nothing worse than feeling alone.

Filed Under: Personal Stories

Taylor

Written by Taylor and Amanda LaClaire

Taylor was a healthy, active kid… until middle school. Around 12 years old, he contracted a severe eye infection that caused his whole life to change. The doctors treated the infection aggressively- instead of focusing on his grades and social life, Taylor was reduced to visiting the nurse’s office hourly for eyedrops. At night, he was waking up every other hour to continue treatment. In the end, Taylor had to have a cornea transplant to save his eye. Afterwards, the doctors discovered Taylor had contracted a common water born infection, one that his body should have been able to fight off. As he would later discover, the infection was not the only culprit.

Soon after dealing with the eye infection, Taylor’s CVC started crashing every few weeks. Doctors would say “some people are just sick”- a response he would hear frequently for several years. By now, Taylor was entering high school. The medical struggle which began in sixth grade seemed to be never-ending. That was until the light at the end of the tunnel appeared. Taylor’s pediatrician happened to attend a conference where he learned about neutropenia, and afterwards suggested this could be the cause of Taylor’s issues. Soon after, his mother came in contact with a woman who knew of The Registry and signed Taylor up immediately. By Taylor’s sophomore year of high school, his dosing of Neupogen as well as his health were finally under control, and things were beginning to turn around.

With his neutropenia in check, Taylor resumed living his life with complete freedom. While in high school, he went on a week-long mission trip to a remote part of Mexico. After graduating, he attended college at the University of Georgia, a thousand miles from home and a trusted doctor. It was a scary moment for his parents, but Taylor managed his medicine well for several years and eventually found a hematologist nearby who would run periodic blood tests. After making it through college without a single neutropenia-related illness, he moved to crowded, bustling New York City. There, he found a well-versed blood doctor who helped him wean off Neupogen completely.

Taylor considers himself very fortunate and referred to the Registry and National Neutropenia Network as “the only reason I’ve able to live a normal and healthy life.” It is this sense of indebtedness, and his awareness of the many people still struggling with neutropenia daily that led him to become a board member.

When Taylor looks back at his teenage years and the roller coaster ride of being diagnosed with neutropenia, he summarizes his experience with a word: perspective. He admits that while in middle school, he thought that everyone else was fine and healthy while he had to carry this burden, but he now recognizes that everyone “has their neutropenia” (their own personal challenge). Despite the difficulties he experienced in the beginning, neutropenia has taught him to persevere and make the most of every situation with the goal of improving it.

Taylor is frequently approached by others regarding his “weaning off” of Neupogen. For a little more background, after many years of taking Neupogen, Taylor’s doctors thought his counts might have leveled off on their own. He underwent several years of close monitoring and regular blood draws, at which point his doctors determined that his counts had in fact normalized and Neupogen was no longer necessary. Taylor’s outcome will not be the case for most people with cyclic neutropenia, and everyone with questions about their own diagnosis and treatment is encouraged to speak with their doctors.

His message to those with neutropenia: Keep your head up and stay focused on your “light at the end of the tunnel”, even though every day can be a rollercoaster. While everyone’s path is different, know you aren’t alone, and the Registry and Neutropenia Network are there to help you along the way.

Filed Under: Personal Stories

Amanda

I have lived with diagnosed chronic neutropenia since 2006. The first signs were fatigue and repeated infections, where I was hospitalized due to infection spreading rapidly.

I currently manage my neutropenia through 1-2 injections of G-CSF per week. I have been on this therapy since around 2015 and it has been life changing, being able to manage my neutrophil count which sits at around 1, which for folks with chronic neutropenia is better than 0.04! I can tell when my counts are dropping as I become faint, very sleepy, and just don’t feel right. I have regular blood work as well as a bone marrow biopsy every 3-5 years. If I do not feel well, I go to hospital.

Rest, eating well, and walking are things I do to try to stay healthy. I also focus less on me and more on being a ray of light in the world through meaningful work, friends, and motherhood.  I have a supportive husband, close friends, and family- all of which helps greatly. My family is supportive.

Pain can be an issue due to the side effects of G-CSF injections. Taking the injection at night helps some hat to sleep while pain is active. In addition, taking Panadol if needed since I also have arthritis to manage.

Fatigue can be an issue. I am a coffee fan, so that helps- even if just pretend! I have learnt not to try and be too perfect-just do your best. I can’t get rid of chronic neutropenia but it’s managed.

I mostly don’t talk {about my Neutropenia} too much. When I was unwell, it was harder as I was off work, sick at short notice, and it was stressful. Then, I felt really sick a great deal of the time.

It can be confusing as I look well, even when I have been very ill and in the hospital.  I can look glowing with health. Explaining it to my daughter was particularly important when not well managed as it meant I needed to sleep a great deal when not working just to have enough energy.

Having neutropenia can at times make me think about death more than others especially when it wasn’t well managed I didn’t think I would live this long! Now 42.

 There were times when I was close to the edge due to severe infections attacking organs. Since having G-CSF it has seriously improved my quality of life.  I am working full time and engaged in my career.

 I went on to have a second child in 2021 and took G-CSF throughout the pregnancy. Although I was ill and considered high risk I went to 37 weeks.  I didn’t have as many fears of infection at birth as I took G-CSF on the day of birth and gave birth naturally. Both my children thus far haven’t inherited chronic neutropenia although my daughter does have an autoimmune disease.

I have learnt I thrive best when I’m sick of my own story, to be interested in the story of others. I am interested and focused on bringing support, kindness, and improvement to others.

I am at a point where I am dreaming again having another child. I feel less like I have a short time to live which means I’m thinking longer term and have plans such as making a garden and wanting to plan for the future with my family which is exciting. Now I try to manage my chronic neutropenia rather than it taking up the main stage.

Filed Under: Personal Stories

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