Hi Shama,
Congratulations on your wedding!
Don’t let any doctor tell you it is impossible for a woman have a child because they have CML. That’s not always true although sometimes it is. Some doctors who are old fashioned and not up on most recent developments sometimes say that.
Since you have been taking imatinib for 6 years, you are probably in a pretty good place to be able to have a baby. It’s concerning when someone is only a few months or a year into treatment and then is pregnant - that can be very difficult to manage.
Do you know your most recent PCR figure? If it was MR4 (0.01%) or below, or even if it is a bit higher than that you stand a very good chance. The usual process goes like this:
- You stop taking imatinib, and wait a few weeks for it to “wash out” of your system, then start trying for a baby. Hopefully you can conceive quickly, though that is of course not a given.
- Your bloods should be tested more frequently to monitor for any CML recurrence. At this point let’s imagine you become pregnant.
- Your bloods continue to be tested more frequently while you are pregnant. Hopefully your BCR-Abl % remains low. If so, all good. If your BCR-Abl starts to rise, interferon can be given which will help control the CML for a while. It’s safe for the baby.
- Once you deliver your baby, you then re-start imatinib. But if your BCR-Abl has not risen throughout your pregnancy when you were not taking imatinib, you might decide not to start taking it again and see if you can remain in treatment free remission.
The most important thing in all of this is the result of your most recent PCR test to measure your BCR-Abl. Do you know most recent results?
David.